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      The Project Gutenberg eBook of A Journey To The Centre Of The Earth, by Jules Verne.
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<aside class="toc-sidebar"><nav class="epub-toc"><ul><li><a href="/eread/book/index.php?dir=pg18857-images-3_6897313e84d89&amp;file=OEBPS%2Fwrap0000.xhtml">A Journey to the Centre of the Earth - 1</a></li><li><a href="/eread/book/index.php?dir=pg18857-images-3_6897313e84d89&amp;file=OEBPS%2F1187296021194714223_18857-h-0.htm.xhtml">A Journey to the Centre of the Earth - 2</a></li><li><a href="/eread/book/index.php?dir=pg18857-images-3_6897313e84d89&amp;file=OEBPS%2F1187296021194714223_18857-h-1.htm.xhtml">A Journey to the Centre of the Earth - 3</a></li><li><a href="/eread/book/index.php?dir=pg18857-images-3_6897313e84d89&amp;file=OEBPS%2F1187296021194714223_18857-h-2.htm.xhtml">A Journey to the Centre of the Earth - 4</a></li><li><a href="/eread/book/index.php?dir=pg18857-images-3_6897313e84d89&amp;file=OEBPS%2F1187296021194714223_18857-h-3.htm.xhtml">A Journey to the Centre of the Earth - 5</a></li><li><a href="/eread/book/index.php?dir=pg18857-images-3_6897313e84d89&amp;file=OEBPS%2F1187296021194714223_18857-h-4.htm.xhtml">A Journey to the Centre of the Earth - 6</a></li></ul></nav></aside>
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<p>"A. S.!" cried my uncle. "You see, I was right. Arne Saknussemm, always
Arne Saknussemm!"</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;"/>
<h2 id="pgepubid00076"><a id="CHAPTER_38"/>CHAPTER 38</h2>
<h4 id="pgepubid00077">NO OUTLET—BLASTING THE ROCK</h4>
<p>Ever since the commencement of our marvelous journey, I had experienced
many surprises, had suffered from many illusions. I thought that I was
case-hardened against all surprises and could neither see nor hear
anything to amaze me again.</p>
<p>I was like a many who, having been round the world, finds himself wholly
blase and proof against the marvelous.</p>
<p>When, however, I saw these two letters, which had been engraven three
hundred years before, I stood fixed in an attitude of mute surprise.</p>
<p>Not only was there the signature of the learned and enterprising
alchemist written in the rock, but I held in my hand the very identical
instrument with which he had laboriously engraved it.</p>
<p>It was impossible, without showing an amount of incredulity scarcely
becoming a sane man, to deny the existence of the traveler, and the
reality of that voyage which I believed all along to have been a
myth—the mystification of some fertile brain.</p>
<p>While these reflections were passing through my mind, my uncle, the
Professor, gave way to an access of feverish and poetical excitement.</p>
<p>"Wonderful and glorious genius, great Saknussemm," he cried, "you have
left no stone unturned, no resource omitted, to show to other mortals
the way into the interior of our mighty globe, and your fellow creatures
can find the trail left by your illustrious footsteps, three hundred
years ago, at the bottom of these obscure subterranean abodes. You have
been careful to secure for others the contemplation of these wonders and
marvels of creation. Your name engraved at every important stage of your
glorious journey leads the hopeful traveler direct to the great and
mighty discovery to which you devoted such energy and courage. The
audacious traveler, who shall follow your footsteps to the last, will
doubtless find your initials engraved with your own hand upon the centre
of the earth. I will be that audacious traveler—I, too, will sign my
name upon the very same spot, upon the central granite stone of this
wondrous work of the Creator. But in justice to your devotion, to your
courage, and to your being the first to indicate the road, let this
cape, seen by you upon the shores of this sea discovered by you, be
called, of all time, Cape Saknussemm."</p>
<p>This is what I heard, and I began to be roused to the pitch of
enthusiasm indicated by those words. A fierce excitement roused me. I
forgot everything. The dangers of the voyage and the perils of the
return journey were now as nothing!</p>
<p>What another man had done in ages past could, I felt, be done again; I
was determined to do it myself, and now nothing that man had
accomplished appeared to me impossible.</p>
<p>"Forward—forward," I cried in a burst of genuine and hearty enthusiasm.</p>
<p>I had already started in the direction of the somber and gloomy gallery
when the Professor stopped me; he, the man so rash and hasty, he, the
man so easily roused to the highest pitch of enthusiasm, checked me, and
asked me to be patient and show more calm.</p>
<p>"Let us return to our good friend, Hans," he said; "we will then bring
the raft down to this place."</p>
<p>I must say that though I at once yielded to my uncle's request, it was
not without dissatisfaction, and I hastened along the rocks of that
wonderful coast.</p>
<p>"Do you know, my dear uncle," I said, as we walked along, "that we have
been singularly helped by a concurrence of circumstances, right up to
this very moment."</p>
<p>"So you begin to see it, do you, Harry?" said the Professor with a
smile.</p>
<p>"Doubtless," I responded, "and strangely enough, even the tempest has
been the means of putting us on the right road. Blessings on the
tempest! It brought us safely back to the very spot from which fine
weather would have driven us forever. Supposing we had succeeded in
reaching the southern and distant shores of this extraordinary sea, what
would have become of us? The name of Saknussemm would never have
appeared to us, and at this moment we should have been cast away upon an
inhospitable coast, probably without an outlet."</p>
<p>"Yes, Harry, my boy, there is certainly something providential in that
wandering at the mercy of wind and waves towards the south: we have come
back exactly north; and what is better still, we fall upon this great
discovery of Cape Saknussemm. I mean to say, that it is more than
surprising; there is something in it which is far beyond my
comprehension. The coincidence is unheard of, marvelous!"</p>
<p>"What matter! It is not our duty to explain facts, but to make the best
possible use of them."</p>
<p>"Doubtless, my boy; but if you will allow me—" said the really
delighted Professor.</p>
<p>"Excuse me, sir, but I see exactly how it will be; we shall take the
northern route; we shall pass under the northern regions of Europe,
under Sweden, under Russia, under Siberia, and who knows where—instead
of burying ourselves under the burning plains and deserts of Africa, or
beneath the mighty waves of the ocean; and that is all, at this stage of
our journey, that I care to know. Let us advance, and Heaven will be our
guide!"</p>
<p>"Yes, Harry, you are right, quite right; all is for the best. Let us
abandon this horizontal sea, which could never have led to anything
satisfactory. We shall descend, descend, and everlastingly descend. Do
you know, my dear boy, that to reach the interior of the earth we have
only five thousand miles to travel!"</p>
<p>"Bah!" I cried, carried away by a burst of enthusiasm, "the distance is
scarcely worth speaking about. The thing is to make a start."</p>
<p>My wild, mad, and incoherent speeches continued until we rejoined our
patient and phlegmatic guide. All was, we found, prepared for an
immediate departure. There was not a single parcel but what was in its
proper place. We all took up our posts on the raft, and the sail being
hoisted, Hans received his directions, and guided the frail bark towards
Cape Saknussemm, as we had definitely named it.</p>
<p>The wind was very unfavorable to a craft that was unable to sail close
to the wind. It was constructed to go before the blast. We were
continually reduced to pushing ourselves forward by means of poles. On
several occasions the rocks ran far out into deep water and we were
compelled to make a long round. At last, after three long and weary
hours of navigation, that is to say, about six o'clock in the evening,
we found a place at which we could land.</p>
<p>I jumped on shore first. In my present state of excitement and
enthusiasm, I was always first. My uncle and the Icelander followed. The
voyage from the port to this point of the sea had by no means calmed me.
It had rather produced the opposite effect. I even proposed to burn our
vessel, that is, to destroy our raft, in order to completely cut off our
retreat. But my uncle sternly opposed this wild project. I began to
think him particularly lukewarm and unenthusiastic.</p>
<p>"At any rate, my dear uncle," I said, "let us start without delay."</p>
<p>"Yes, my boy, I am quite as eager to do so as you can be. But, in the
first place, let us examine this mysterious gallery, in order to find if
we shall need to prepare and mend our ladders."</p>
<p>My uncle now began to see to the efficiency of our Ruhmkorff coil, which
would doubtless soon be needed; the raft, securely fastened to a rock,
was left alone. Moreover, the opening into the new gallery was not
twenty paces distant from the spot. Our little troop, with myself at the
head, advanced.</p>
<p>The orifice, which was almost circular, presented a diameter of about
five feet; the somber tunnel was cut in the living rock, and coated on
the inside by the different material which had once passed through it in
a state of fusion. The lower part was about level with the water, so
that we were able to penetrate to the interior without difficulty.</p>
<p>We followed an almost horizontal direction; when, at the end of about a
dozen paces, our further advance was checked by the interposition of an
enormous block of granite rock.</p>
<p>"Accursed stone!" I cried furiously, on perceiving that we were stopped
by what seemed an insurmountable obstacle.</p>
<p>In vain we looked to the right, in vain we looked to the left; in vain
examined it above and below. There existed no passage, no sign of any
other tunnel. I experienced the most bitter and painful disappointment.
So enraged was I that I would not admit the reality of any obstacle. I
stooped to my knees; I looked under the mass of stone. No hole, no
interstice. I then looked above. The same barrier of granite! Hans, with
the lamp, examined the sides of the tunnel in every direction.</p>
<p>But all in vain! It was necessary to renounce all hope of passing
through.</p>
<p>I had seated myself upon the ground. My uncle walked angrily and
hopelessly up and down. He was evidently desperate.</p>
<p>"But," I cried, after some moments' thought, "what about Arne
Saknussemm?"</p>
<p>"You are right," replied my uncle, "he can never have been checked by a
lump of rock."</p>
<p>"No—ten thousand times no," I cried, with extreme vivacity. "This huge
lump of rock, in consequence of some singular concussion, or process,
one of those magnetic phenomena which have so often shaken the
terrestrial crust, has in some unexpected way closed up the passage.
Many and many years have passed away since the return of Saknussemm, and
the fall of this huge block of granite. Is it not quite evident that
this gallery was formerly the outlet for the pent-up lava in the
interior of the earth, and that these eruptive matters then circulated
freely? Look at these recent fissures in the granite roof; it is
evidently formed of pieces of enormous stone, placed here as if by the
hand of a giant, who had worked to make a strong and substantial arch.
One day, after an unusually strong shock, the vast rock which stands in
our way, and which was doubtless the key of a kind of arch, fell through
to a level with the soil and has barred our further progress. We are
right, then, in thinking that this is an unexpected obstacle, with which
Saknussemm did not meet; and if we do not upset it in some way, we are
unworthy of following in the footsteps of the great discoverer; and
incapable of finding our way to the centre of the earth!"</p>
<p>In this wild way I addressed my uncle. The zeal of the Professor, his
earnest longing for success, had become part and parcel of my being. I
wholly forgot the past; I utterly despised the future. Nothing existed
for me upon the surface of this spheroid in the bosom of which I was
engulfed, no towns, no country, no Hamburg, no Koenigstrasse, not even
my poor Gretchen, who by this time would believe me utterly lost in the
interior of the earth!</p>
<p>"Well," cried my uncle, roused to enthusiasm by my words, "Let us go to
work with pickaxes, with crowbars, with anything that comes to hand—but
down with these terrible walls."</p>
<p>"It is far too tough and too big to be destroyed by a pickax or
crowbar," I replied.</p>
<p>"What then?"</p>
<p>"As I said, it is useless to think of overcoming such a difficulty by
means of ordinary tools."</p>
<p>"What then?"</p>
<p>"What else but gunpowder, a subterranean mine? Let us blow up the
obstacle that stands in our way."</p>
<p>"Gunpowder!"</p>
<p>"Yes; all we have to do is to get rid of this paltry obstacle."</p>
<p>"To work, Hans, to work!" cried the Professor.</p>
<p>The Icelander went back to the raft, and soon returned with a huge
crowbar, with which he began to dig a hole in the rock, which was to
serve as a mine. It was by no means a slight task. It was necessary for
our purpose to make a cavity large enough to hold fifty pounds of
fulminating gun cotton, the expansive power of which is four times as
great as that of ordinary gunpowder.</p>
<p>I had now roused myself to an almost miraculous state of excitement.
While Hans was at work, I actively assisted my uncle to prepare a long
wick, made from damp gunpowder, the mass of which we finally enclosed in
a bag of linen.</p>
<p>"We are bound to go through," I cried, enthusiastically.</p>
<p>"We are bound to go through," responded the Professor, tapping me on the
back.</p>
<p>At midnight, our work as miners was completely finished; the charge of
fulminating cotton was thrust into the hollow, and the match, which we
had made of considerable length, was ready.</p>
<p>A spark was now sufficient to ignite this formidable engine, and to blow
the rock to atoms!</p>
<p>"We will now rest until tomorrow."</p>
<p>It was absolutely necessary to resign myself to my fate, and to consent
to wait for the explosion for six weary hours!</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;"/>
<h2 id="pgepubid00078"><a id="CHAPTER_39"/>CHAPTER 39</h2>
<h4 id="pgepubid00079">THE EXPLOSION AND ITS RESULTS</h4>
<p>The next day, which was the twenty-seventh of August, was a date
celebrated in our wondrous subterranean journey. I never think of it
even now, but I shudder with horror. My heart beats wildly at the very
memory of that awful day.</p>
<p>From this time forward, our reason, our judgment, our human ingenuity,
have nothing to do with the course of events. We are about to become the
plaything of the great phenomena of the earth!</p>
<p>At six o'clock we were all up and ready. The dreaded moment was arriving
when we were about to seek an opening into the interior of the earth by
means of gunpowder. What would be the consequences of breaking through
the crust of the earth?</p>
<p>I begged that it might be my duty to set fire to the mine. I looked upon
it as an honor. This task once performed, I could rejoin my friends upon
the raft, which had not been unloaded. As soon as we were all ready, we
were to sail away to some distance to avoid the consequences of the
explosion, the effects of which would certainly not be concentrated in
the interior of the earth.</p>
<p>The slow match we calculated to burn for about ten minutes, more or
less, before it reached the chamber in which the great body of powder
was confined. I should therefore have plenty of time to reach the raft
and put off to a safe distance.</p>
<p>I prepared to execute my self-allotted task—not, it must be confessed,
without considerable emotion.</p>
<p>After a hearty repast, my uncle and the hunter-guide embarked on board
the raft, while I remained alone upon the desolate shore.</p>
<p>I was provided with a lantern which was to enable me to set fire to the
wick of the infernal machine.</p>
<p>"Go, my boy," said my uncle, "and Heaven be with you. But come back as
soon as you can. I shall be all impatience."</p>
<p>"Be easy on that matter," I replied, "there is no fear of my delaying on
the road."</p>
<p>Having said this, I advanced toward the opening of the somber gallery.
My heart beat wildly. I opened my lantern and seized the extremity of
the wick.</p>
<p>The Professor, who was looking on, held his chronometer in his hand.</p>
<p>"Are you ready?" cried he.</p>
<p>"Quite ready."</p>
<p>"Well, then, fire away!"</p>
<p>I hastened to put the light to the wick, which crackled and sparkled,
hissing and spitting like a serpent; then, running as fast as I could, I
returned to the shore.</p>
<p>"Get on board, my lad, and you, Hans, shove off," cried my uncle.</p>
<p>By a vigorous application of his pole Hans sent us flying over the
water. The raft was quite twenty fathoms distant.</p>
<p>It was a moment of palpitating interest, of deep anxiety. My uncle, the
Professor, never took his eyes off the chronometer.</p>
<p>"Only five minutes more," he said in a low tone, "only four, only
three."</p>
<p>My pulse went a hundred to the minute. I could hear my heart beating.</p>
<p>"Only two, one! Now, then, mountains of granite, crumble beneath the
power of man!"</p>
<p>What happened after that? As to the terrific roar of the explosion, I do
not think I heard it. But the form of the rocks completely changed in my
eyes—they seemed to be drawn aside like a curtain. I saw a fathomless,
a bottomless abyss, which yawned beneath the turgid waves. The sea,
which seemed suddenly to have gone mad, then became one great
mountainous mass, upon the top of which the raft rose perpendicularly.</p>
<p>We were all thrown down. In less than a second the light gave place to
the most profound obscurity. Then I felt all solid support give way not
to my feet, but to the raft itself. I thought it was going bodily down a
tremendous well. I tried to speak, to question my uncle. Nothing could
be heard but the roaring of the mighty waves. We clung together in utter
silence.</p>
<p>Despite the awful darkness, despite the noise, the surprise, the
emotion, I thoroughly understood what had happened.</p>
<p>Beyond the rock which had been blown up, there existed a mighty abyss.
The explosion had caused a kind of earthquake in this soil, broken by
fissures and rents. The gulf, thus suddenly thrown open, was about to
swallow the inland sea which, transformed into a mighty torrent, was
dragging us with it.</p>
<p>Only one idea filled my mind. We were utterly and completely lost!</p>
<p>One hour, two hours—what more I cannot say, passed in this manner. We
sat close together, elbow touching elbow, knee touching knee! We held
one another's hands not to be thrown off the raft. We were subjected to
the most violent shocks, whenever our sole dependence, a frail wooden
raft, struck against the rocky sides of the channel. Fortunately for us,
these concussions became less and less frequent, which made me fancy
that the gallery was getting wider and wider. There could be now no
doubt that we had chanced upon the road once followed by Saknussemm, but
instead of going down in a proper manner, we had, through our own
imprudence, drawn a whole sea with us!</p>
<p>These ideas presented themselves to my mind in a very vague and obscure
manner. I felt rather than reasoned. I put my ideas together only
confusedly, while spinning along like a man going down a waterfall. To
judge by the air which, as it were, whipped my face, we must have been
rushing at a perfectly lightning rate.</p>
<p>To attempt under these circumstances to light a torch was simply
impossible, and the last remains of our electric machine, of our
Ruhmkorff coil, had been destroyed during the fearful explosion.</p>
<p>I was therefore very much confused to see at last a bright light shining
close to me. The calm countenance of the guide seemed to gleam upon me.
The clever and patient hunter had succeeded in lighting the lantern; and
though, in the keen and thorough draft, the flame flickered and
vacillated and was nearly put out, it served partially to dissipate the
awful obscurity.</p>
<p>The gallery into which we had entered was very wide. I was, therefore,
quite right in that part of my conjecture. The insufficient light did
not allow us to see both of the walls at the same time. The slope of
waters, which was carrying us away, was far greater than that of the
most rapid river of America. The whole surface of the stream seemed to
be composed of liquid arrows, darted forward with extreme violence and
power. I can give no idea of the impression it made upon me.</p>
<p>The raft, at times, caught in certain whirlpools, and rushed forward,
yet turned on itself all the time. How it did not upset I shall never be
able to understand. When it approached the sides of the gallery, I took
care to throw upon them the light of the lantern, and I was able to
judge of the rapidity of motion by looking at the projecting masses of
rock, which as soon as seen were again invisible. So rapid was our
progress that points of rock at a considerable distance one from the
other appeared like portions of transverse lines, which enclosed us in a
kind of net, like that of a line of telegraphic wires.</p>
<p>I believe we were now going at a rate of not less than a hundred miles
an hour.</p>
<p>My uncle and I looked at one another with wild and haggard eyes; we
clung convulsively to the stump of the mast, which, at the moment when
the catastrophe took place, had snapped short off. We turned our backs
as much as possible to the wind, in order not to be stifled by a
rapidity of motion which nothing human could face and live.</p>
<p>And still the long monotonous hours went on. The situation did not
change in the least, though a discovery I suddenly made seemed to
complicate it very much.</p>
<p>When we had slightly recovered our equilibrium, I proceeded to examine
our cargo. I then made the unsatisfactory discovery that the greater
part of it had utterly disappeared.</p>
<p>I became alarmed, and determined to discover what were our resources. My
heart beat at the idea, but it was absolutely necessary to know on what
we had to depend. With this view, I took the lantern and looked around.</p>
<p>Of all our former collection of nautical and philosophical instruments,
there remained only the chronometer and the compass. The ladders and
ropes were reduced to a small piece of rope fastened to the stump of the
mast. Not a pickax, not a crowbar, not a hammer, and, far worse than
all, no food—not enough for one day!</p>
<p>This discovery was a prelude to a certain and horrible death.</p>
<p>Seated gloomily on the raft, clasping the stump of the mast
mechanically, I thought of all I had read as to sufferings from
starvation.</p>
<p>I remembered everything that history had taught me on the subject, and I
shuddered at the remembrance of the agonies to be endured.</p>
<p>Maddened at the prospects of enduring the miseries of starvation, I
persuaded myself that I must be mistaken. I examined the cracks in the
raft; I poked between the joints and beams; I examined every possible
hole and corner. The result was—simply nothing!</p>
<p>Our stock of provisions consisted of nothing but a piece of dry meat and
some soaked and half-moldy biscuits.</p>
<p>I gazed around me scared and frightened. I could not understand the
awful truth. And yet of what consequence was it in regard to any new
danger? Supposing that we had had provisions for months, and even for
years, how could we ever get out of the awful abyss into which we were
being hurled by the irresistible torrent we had let loose?</p>
<p>Why should we trouble ourselves about the sufferings and tortures to be
endured from hunger when death stared us in the face under so many other
swifter and perhaps even more horrid forms?</p>
<p>It was very doubtful, under the circumstances in which we were placed,
if we should have time to die of inanition.</p>
<p>But the human frame is singularly constituted.</p>
<p>I know not how it was; but, from some singular hallucination of the
mind, I forgot the real, serious, and immediate danger to which we were
exposed, to think of the menaces of the future, which appeared before us
in all their naked terror. Besides, after all, suggested Hope, perhaps
we might finally escape the fury of the raging torrent, and once more
revisit the glimpses of the moon, on the surface of our beautiful Mother
Earth.</p>
<p>How was it to be done? I had not the remotest idea. Where were we to
come out? No matter, so that we did.</p>
<p>One chance in a thousand is always a chance, while death from hunger
gave us not even the faintest glimpse of hope. It left to the
imagination nothing but blank horror, without the faintest chance of
escape!</p>
<p>I had the greatest mind to reveal all to my uncle, to explain to him the
extraordinary and wretched position to which we were reduced, in order
that, between the two, we might make a calculation as to the exact space
of time which remained for us to live.</p>
<p>It was, it appeared to me, the only thing to be done. But I had the
courage to hold my tongue, to gnaw at my entrails like the Spartan boy.
I wished to leave him all his coolness.</p>
<p>At this moment, the light of the lantern slowly fell, and at last went
out!</p>
<p>The wick had wholly burnt to an end. The obscurity became absolute. It
was no longer possible to see through the impenetrable darkness! There
was one torch left, but it was impossible to keep it alight. Then, like
a child, I shut my eyes, that I might not see the darkness.</p>
<p>After a great lapse of time, the rapidity of our journey increased. I
could feel it by the rush of air upon my face. The slope of the waters
was excessive. I began to feel that we were no longer going down a
slope; we were falling. I felt as one does in a dream, going down
bodily—falling; falling; falling!</p>
<p>I felt that the hands of my uncle and Hans were vigorously clasping my
arms.</p>
<p>Suddenly, after a lapse of time scarcely appreciable, I felt something
like a shock. The raft had not struck a hard body, but had suddenly been
checked in its course. A waterspout, a liquid column of water, fell upon
us. I felt suffocating. I was being drowned.</p>
<p>Still the sudden inundation did not last. In a few seconds I felt myself
once more able to breathe. My uncle and Hans pressed my arms, and the
raft carried us all three away.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;"/>
<h2 id="pgepubid00080"><a id="CHAPTER_40"/>CHAPTER 40</h2>
<h4 id="pgepubid00081">THE APE GIGANS</h4>
<p>It is difficult for me to determine what was the real time, but I should
suppose, by after calculation, that it must have been ten at night.</p>
<p>I lay in a stupor, a half dream, during which I saw visions of
astounding character. Monsters of the deep were side by side with the
mighty elephantine shepherd. Gigantic fish and animals seemed to form
strange conjunctions.</p>
<p>The raft took a sudden turn, whirled round, entered another tunnel—this
time illumined in a most singular manner. The roof was formed of porous
stalactite, through which a moonlit vapor appeared to pass, casting its
brilliant light upon our gaunt and haggard figures. The light increased
as we advanced, while the roof ascended; until at last, we were once
more in a kind of water cavern, the lofty dome of which disappeared in a
luminous cloud!</p>
<p>A rugged cavern of small extent appeared to offer a halting place to our
weary bodies.</p>
<p>My uncle and the guide moved as men in a dream. I was afraid to waken
them, knowing the danger of such a sudden start. I seated myself beside
them to watch.</p>
<p>As I did so, I became aware of something moving in the distance, which
at once fascinated my eyes. It was floating, apparently, upon the
surface of the water, advancing by means of what at first appeared
paddles. I looked with glaring eyes. One glance told me that it was
something monstrous.</p>
<p>But what?</p>
<p>It was the great "shark-crocodile" of the early writers on geology.
About the size of an ordinary whale, with hideous jaws and two gigantic
eyes, it advanced. Its eyes fixed on me with terrible sternness. Some
indefinite warning told me that it had marked me for its own.</p>
<p>I attempted to rise—to escape, no matter where, but my knees shook
under me; my limbs trembled violently; I almost lost my senses. And
still the mighty monster advanced. My uncle and the guide made no effort
to save themselves.</p>
<p>With a strange noise, like none other I had ever heard, the beast came
on. His jaws were at least seven feet apart, and his distended mouth
looked large enough to have swallowed a boatful of men.</p>
<p>We were about ten feet distant when I discovered that much as his body
resembled that of a crocodile, his mouth was wholly that of a shark.</p>
<p>His twofold nature now became apparent. To snatch us up at a mouthful it
was necessary for him to turn on his back, which motion necessarily
caused his legs to kick up helplessly in the air.</p>
<p>I actually laughed even in the very jaws of death!</p>
<p>But next minute, with a wild cry, I darted away into the interior of the
cave, leaving my unhappy comrades to their fate! This cavern was deep
and dreary. After about a hundred yards, I paused and looked around.</p>
<p>The whole floor, composed of sand and malachite, was strewn with bones,
freshly gnawed bones of reptiles and fish, with a mixture of mammalia.
My very soul grew sick as my body shuddered with horror. I had truly,
according to the old proverb, fallen out of the frying pan into the
fire. Some beast larger and more ferocious even than the shark-crocodile
inhabited this den.</p>
<p>What could I do? The mouth of the cave was guarded by one ferocious
monster, the interior was inhabited by something too hideous to
contemplate. Flight was impossible!</p>
<p>Only one resource remained, and that was to find some small hiding place
to which the fearful denizens of the cavern could not penetrate. I gazed
wildly around, and at last discovered a fissure in the rock, to which I
rushed in the hope of recovering my scattered senses.</p>
<p>Crouching down, I waited shivering as in an ague fit. No man is brave in
presence of an earthquake, or a bursting boiler, or an exploding
torpedo. I could not be expected to feel much courage in presence of the
fearful fate that appeared to await me.</p>
<p>An hour passed. I heard all the time a strange rumbling outside the
cave.</p>
<p>What was the fate of my unhappy companions? It was impossible for me to
pause to inquire. My own wretched existence was all I could think of.</p>
<p>Suddenly a groaning, as of fifty bears in a fight, fell upon my
ears—hisses, spitting, moaning, hideous to hear—and then I saw—</p>
<p>Never, were ages to pass over my head, shall I forget the horrible
apparition.</p>
<p>It was the Ape Gigans!</p>
<p>Fourteen feet high, covered with coarse hair, of a blackish brown, the
hair on the arms, from the shoulder to the elbow joints, pointing
downwards, while that from the wrist to the elbow pointed upwards, it
advanced. Its arms were as long as its body, while its legs were
prodigious. It had thick, long, and sharply pointed teeth—like a
mammoth saw.</p>
<p>It struck its breast as it came on smelling and sniffing, reminding me
of the stories we read in our early childhood of giants who ate the
Flesh of men and little boys!</p>
<p>Suddenly it stopped. My heart beat wildly, for I was conscious that,
somehow or other, the fearful monster had smelled me out and was peering
about with his hideous eyes to try and discover my whereabouts.</p>
<p>My reading, which as a rule is a blessing, but which on this occasion,
seemed momentarily to prove a curse, told me the real truth. It was the
Ape Gigans, the antediluvian gorilla.</p>
<p>Yes! This awful monster, confined by good fortune to the interior of the
earth, was the progenitor of the hideous monster of Africa.</p>
<p>He glared wildly about, seeking something—doubtless myself. I gave
myself up for lost. No hope of safety or escape seemed to remain.</p>
<p>At this moment, just as my eyes appeared to close in death, there came a
strange noise from the entrance of the cave; and turning, the gorilla
evidently recognized some enemy more worthy his prodigious size and
strength. It was the huge shark-crocodile, which perhaps having disposed
of my friends, was coming in search of further prey.</p>
<p>The gorilla placed himself on the defensive, and clutching a bone some
seven or eight feet in length, a perfect club, aimed a deadly blow at
the hideous beast, which reared upwards and fell with all its weight
upon its adversary.</p>
<p>A terrible combat, the details of which it is impossible to give, now
ensued. The struggle was awful and ferocious, I, however, did not wait
to witness the result. Regarding myself as the object of contention, I
determined to remove from the presence of the victor. I slid down from
my hiding place, reached the ground, and gliding against the wall,
strove to gain the open mouth of the cavern.</p>
<p>But I had not taken many steps when the fearful clamor ceased, to be
followed by a mumbling and groaning which appeared to be indicative of
victory.</p>
<p>I looked back and saw the huge ape, gory with blood, coming after me
with glaring eyes, with dilated nostrils that gave forth two columns of
heated vapor. I could feel his hot and fetid breath on my neck; and with
a horrid jump—awoke from my nightmare sleep.</p>
<p>Yes—it was all a dream. I was still on the raft with my uncle and the
guide.</p>
<p>The relief was not instantaneous, for under the influence of the hideous
nightmare my senses had become numbed. After a while, however, my
feelings were tranquilized. The first of my perceptions which returned
in full force was that of hearing. I listened with acute and attentive
ears. All was still as death. All I comprehended was silence. To the
roaring of the waters, which had filled the gallery with awful
reverberations, succeeded perfect peace.</p>
<p>After some little time my uncle spoke, in a low and scarcely audible
tone: "Harry, boy, where are you?"</p>
<p>"I am here," was my faint rejoinder.</p>
<p>"Well, don't you see what has happened? We are going upwards."</p>
<p>"My dear uncle, what can you mean?" was my half-delirious reply.</p>
<p>"Yes, I tell you we are ascending rapidly. Our downward journey is quite
checked."</p>
<p>I held out my hand, and, after some little difficulty, succeeded in
touching the wall. My hand was in an instant covered with blood. The
skin was torn from the flesh. We were ascending with extraordinary
rapidity.</p>
<p>"The torch—the torch!" cried the Professor, wildly; "it must be
lighted."</p>
<p>Hans, the guide, after many vain efforts, at last succeeded in lighting
it, and the flame, having now nothing to prevent its burning, shed a
tolerably clear light. We were enabled to form an approximate idea of
the truth.</p>
<p>"It is just as I thought," said my uncle, after a moment or two of
silent attention. "We are in a narrow well about four fathoms square.
The waters of the great inland sea, having reached the bottom of the
gulf are now forcing themselves up the mighty shaft. As a natural
consequence, we are being cast upon the summit of the waters."</p>
<p>"That I can see," was my lugubrious reply; "but where will this shaft
end, and to what fall are we likely to be exposed?"</p>
<p>"Of that I am as ignorant as yourself. All I know is, that we should be
prepared for the worst. We are going up at a fearfully rapid rate. As
far as I can judge, we are ascending at the rate of two fathoms a
second, of a hundred and twenty fathoms a minute, or rather more than
three and a half leagues an hour. At this rate, our fate will soon be a
matter of certainty."</p>
<p>"No doubt of it," was my reply. "The great concern I have now, however,
is to know whether this shaft has any issue. It may end in a granite
roof—in which case we shall be suffocated by compressed air, or dashed
to atoms against the top. I fancy, already, that the air is beginning to
be close and condensed. I have a difficulty in breathing."</p>
<p>This might be fancy, or it might be the effect of our rapid motion, but
I certainly felt a great oppression of the chest.</p>
<p>"Henry," said the Professor, "I do believe that the situation is to a
certain extent desperate. There remain, however, many chances of
ultimate safety, and I have, in my own mind, been revolving them over,
during your heavy but agitated sleep. I have come to this logical
conclusion—whereas we may at any moment perish, so at any moment we may
be saved! We need, therefore, prepare ourselves for whatever may turn up
in the great chapter of accidents."</p>
<p>"But what would you have us do?" I cried. "Are we not utterly helpless?"</p>
<p>"No! While there is life there is hope. At all events, there is one
thing we can do—eat, and thus obtain strength to face victory or
death."</p>
<p>As he spoke, I looked at my uncle with a haggard glance. I had put off
the fatal communication as long as possible. It was now forced upon me,
and I must tell him the truth.</p>
<p>Still I hesitated.</p>
<p>"Eat," I said, in a deprecating tone as if there were no hurry.</p>
<p>"Yes, and at once. I feel like a starving prisoner," he said, rubbing
his yellow and shivering hands together.</p>
<p>And, turning round to the guide, he spoke some hearty, cheering words,
as I judged from his tone, in Danish. Hans shook his head in a terribly
significant manner. I tried to look unconcerned.</p>
<p>"What!" cried the Professor, "you do not mean to say that all our
provisions are lost?"</p>
<p>"Yes," was my lowly spoken reply, as I held out something in my hand,
"this morsel of dried meat is all that remains for us three."</p>
<p>My uncle gazed at me as if he could not fully appreciate the meaning of
my words. The blow seemed to stun him by its severity. I allowed him to
reflect for some moments.</p>
<p>"Well," said I, after a short pause, "what do you think now? Is there
any chance of our escaping from our horrible subterranean dangers? Are
we not doomed to perish in the great hollows of the centre of the
earth?"</p>
<p>But my pertinent questions brought no answer. My uncle either heard me
not, or appeared not to do so.</p>
<p>And in this way a whole hour passed. Neither of us cared to speak. For
myself, I began to feel the most fearful and devouring hunger. My
companions, doubtless, felt the same horrible tortures, but neither of
them would touch the wretched morsel of meat that remained. It lay
there, a last remnant of all our great preparations for the mad and
senseless journey!</p>
<p>I looked back, with wonderment, to my own folly. Fully was I aware that,
despite his enthusiasm, and the ever-to-be-hated scroll of Saknussemm,
my uncle should never have started on his perilous voyage. What memories
of the happy past, what previsions of the horrible future, now filled my
brain!</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;"/>
<h2 id="pgepubid00082"><a id="CHAPTER_41"/>CHAPTER 41</h2>
<h4 id="pgepubid00083">HUNGER</h4>
<p>Hunger, prolonged, is temporary madness! The brain is at work without
its required food, and the most fantastic notions fill the mind.
Hitherto I had never known what hunger really meant. I was likely to
understand it now.</p>
<p>And yet, three months before I could tell my terrible story of
starvation, as I thought it. As a boy I used to make frequent excursions
in the neighborhood of the Professor's house.</p>
<p>My uncle always acted on system, and he believed that, in addition to
the day of rest and worship, there should be a day of recreation. In
consequence, I was always free to do as I liked on a Wednesday.</p>
<p>Now, as I had a notion to combine the useful and the agreeable, my
favorite pastime was birds' nesting. I had one of the best collections
of eggs in all the town. They were classified, and under glass cases.</p>
<p>There was a certain wood, which, by rising at early morn, and taking the
cheap train, I could reach at eleven in the morning. Here I would
botanize or geologize at my will. My uncle was always glad of specimens
for his herbarium, and stones to examine. When I had filled my wallet, I
proceeded to search for nests.</p>
<p>After about two hours of hard work, I, one day, sat down by a stream to
eat my humble but copious lunch. How the remembrance of the spiced
sausage, the wheaten loaf, and the beer, made my mouth water now! I
would have given every prospect of worldly wealth for such a meal. But
to my story.</p>
<p>While seated thus at my leisure, I looked up at the ruins of an old
castle, at no great distance. It was the remains of an historical
dwelling, ivy-clad, and now falling to pieces.</p>
<p>While looking, I saw two eagles circling about the summit of a lofty
tower. I soon became satisfied that there was a nest. Now, in all my
collection, I lacked eggs of the native eagle and the large owl.</p>
<p>My mind was made up. I would reach the summit of that tower, or perish
in the attempt. I went nearer, and surveyed the ruins. The old
staircase, years before, had fallen in. The outer walls were, however,
intact. There was no chance that way, unless I looked to the ivy solely
for support. This was, as I soon found out, futile.</p>
<p>There remained the chimney, which still went up to the top, and had once
served to carry off the smoke from every story of the tower.</p>
<p>Up this I determined to venture. It was narrow, rough, and therefore the
more easily climbed. I took off my coat and crept into the chimney.
Looking up, I saw a small, light opening, proclaiming the summit of the
chimney.</p>
<p>Up—up I went, for some time using my hands and knees, after the fashion
of a chimney sweep. It was slow work, but, there being continual
projections, the task was comparatively easy. In this way, I reached
halfway. The chimney now became narrower. The atmosphere was close, and,
at last, to end the matter, I stuck fast. I could ascend no higher.</p>
<p>There could be no doubt of this, and there remained no resource but to
descend, and give up my glorious prey in despair. I yielded to fate and
endeavored to descend. But I could not move. Some unseen and mysterious
obstacle intervened and stopped me. In an instant the full horror of my
situation seized me.</p>
<p>I was unable to move either way, and was doomed to a terrible and
horrible death, that of starvation. In a boy's mind, however, there is
an extraordinary amount of elasticity and hope, and I began to think of
all sorts of plans to escape my gloomy fate.</p>
<p>In the first place, I required no food just at present, having had an
excellent meal, and was therefore allowed time for reflection. My first
thought was to try and move the mortar with my hand. Had I possessed a
knife, something might have been done, but that useful instrument I had
left in my coat pocket.</p>
<p>I soon found that all efforts of this kind were vain and useless, and
that all I could hope to do was to wriggle downwards.</p>
<p>But though I jerked and struggled, and strove to turn, it was all in
vain. I could not move an inch, one way or the other. And time flew
rapidly. My early rising probably contributed to the fact that I felt
sleepy, and gradually gave way to the sensation of drowsiness.</p>
<p>I slept, and awoke in darkness, ravenously hungry.</p>
<p>Night had come, and still I could not move. I was tight bound, and did
not succeed in changing my position an inch. I groaned aloud. Never
since the days of my happy childhood, when it was a hardship to go from
meal to meal without eating, had I really experienced hunger. The
sensation was as novel as it was painful. I began now to lose my head
and to scream and cry out in my agony. Something appeared, startled by
my noise. It was a harmless lizard, but it appeared to me a loathsome
reptile. Again I made the old ruins resound with my cries, and finally
so exhausted myself that I fainted.</p>
<p>How long I lay in a kind of trance or sleep I cannot say, but when again
I recovered consciousness it was day. How ill I felt, how hunger still
gnawed at me, it would be hard to say. I was too weak to scream now, far
too weak to struggle.</p>
<p>Suddenly I was startled by a roar.</p>
<p>"Are you there, Henry?" said the voice of my uncle; "are you there, my
boy?"</p>
<p>I could only faintly respond, but I also made a desperate effort to
turn. Some mortar fell. To this I owed my being discovered. When the
search took place, it was easily seen that mortar and small pieces of
stone had recently fallen from above. Hence my uncle's cry.</p>
<p>"Be calm," he cried, "if we pull down the whole ruin, you shall be
saved."</p>
<p>They were delicious words, but I had little hope.</p>
<p>Soon however, about a quarter of an hour later I heard a voice above me,
at one of the upper fireplaces.</p>
<p>"Are you below or above?"</p>
<p>"Below," was my reply.</p>
<p>In an instant a basket was lowered with milk, a biscuit, and an egg. My
uncle was fearful to be too ready with his supply of food. I drank the
milk first, for thirst had nearly deadened hunger. I then, much
refreshed, ate my bread and hard egg.</p>
<p>They were now at work at the wall. I could hear a pickax. Wishing to
escape all danger from this terrible weapon I made a desperate struggle,
and the belt, which surrounded my waist and which had been hitched on a
stone, gave way. I was free, and only escaped falling down by a rapid
motion of my hands and knees.</p>
<p>In ten minutes more I was in my uncle's arms, after being two days and
nights in that horrible prison. My occasional delirium prevented me from
counting time.</p>
<p>I was weeks recovering from that awful starvation adventure; and yet
what was that to the hideous sufferings I now endured?</p>
<p>After dreaming for some time, and thinking of this and other matters, I
once more looked around me. We were still ascending with fearful
rapidity. Every now and then the air appeared to check our respiration
as it does that of aeronauts when the ascension of the balloon is too
rapid. But if they feel a degree of cold in proportion to the elevation
they attain in the atmosphere, we experienced quite a contrary effect.
The heat began to increase in a most threatening and exceptional manner.
I cannot tell exactly the mean, but I think it must have reached one
hundred twenty-two degrees Fahrenheit.</p>
<p>What was the meaning of this extraordinary change in the temperature? As
far as we had hitherto gone, facts had proved the theories of Davy and
of Lidenbrock to be correct. Until now, all the peculiar conditions of
refractory rocks, of electricity, of magnetism, had modified the general
laws of nature, and had created for us a moderate temperature; for the
theory of the central fire, remained, in my eyes, the only explainable
one.</p>
<p>Were we, then, going to reach a position in which these phenomena were
to be carried out in all their rigor, and in which the heat would reduce
the rocks to a state of fusion?</p>
<p>Such was my not unnatural fear, and I did not conceal the fact from my
uncle. My way of doing so might be cold and heartless, but I could not
help it.</p>
<p>"If we are not drowned, or smashed into pancakes, and if we do not die
of starvation, we have the satisfaction of knowing that we must be
burned alive."</p>
<p>My uncle, in presence of this brusque attack, simply shrugged his
shoulders, and resumed his reflections—whatever they might be.</p>
<p>An hour passed away, and except that there was a slight increase in the
temperature no incident modified the situation.</p>
<p>My uncle at last, of his own accord, broke silence.</p>
<p>"Well, Henry, my boy," he said, in a cheerful way, "we must make up our
minds."</p>
<p>"Make up our minds to what?" I asked, in considerable surprise.</p>
<p>"Well—to something. We must at whatever risk recruit our physical
strength. If we make the fatal mistake of husbanding our little remnant
of food, we may probably prolong our wretched existence a few hours—but
we shall remain weak to the end."</p>
<p>"Yes," I growled, "to the end. That, however, will not keep us long
waiting."</p>
<p>"Well, only let a chance of safety present itself—only allow that a
moment of action be necessary—where shall we find the means of action
if we allow ourselves to be reduced to physical weakness by inanition?"</p>
<p>"When this piece of meat is devoured, Uncle, what hope will there remain
unto us?"</p>
<p>"None, my dear Henry, none. But will it do you any good to devour it
with your eyes? You appear to me to reason like one without will or
decision, like a being without energy."</p>
<p>"Then," cried I, exasperated to a degree which is scarcely to be
explained, "you do not mean to tell me—that you—that you—have not
lost all hope."</p>
<p>"Certainly not," replied the Professor with consummate coolness.</p>
<p>"You mean to tell me, Uncle, that we shall get out of this monstrous
subterranean shaft?"</p>
<p>"While there is life there is hope. I beg to assert, Henry, that as long
as a man's heart beats, as long as a man's flesh quivers, I do not allow
that a being gifted with thought and will can allow himself to despair."</p>
<p>What a nerve! The man placed in a position like that we occupied must
have been very brave to speak like this.</p>
<p>"Well," I cried, "what do you mean to do?"</p>
<p>"Eat what remains of the food we have in our hands; let us swallow the
last crumb. It will bel Heaven willing, our last repast. Well, never
mind—instead of being exhausted skeletons, we shall be men."</p>
<p>"True," muttered I in a despairing tone, "let us take our fill."</p>
<p>"We must," replied my uncle, with a deep sigh, "call it what you will."</p>
<p>My uncle took a piece of the meat that remained, and some crusts of
biscuit which had escaped the wreck. He divided the whole into three
parts.</p>
<p>Each had one pound of food to last him as long as he remained in the
interior of the earth.</p>
<p>Each now acted in accordance with his own private character.</p>
<p>My uncle, the Professor, ate greedily, but evidently without appetite,
eating simply from some mechanical motion. I put the food inside my
lips, and hungry as I was, chewed my morsel without pleasure, and
without satisfaction.</p>
<p>Hans, the guide, just as if he had been eider-down hunting, swallowed
every mouthful, as though it were a usual affair. He looked like a man
equally prepared to enjoy superfluity or total want.</p>
<p>Hans, in all probability, was no more used to starvation than ourselves,
but his hardy Icelandic nature had prepared him for many sufferings. As
long as he received his three rix-dollars every Saturday night, he was
prepared for anything.</p>
<p>The fact was, Hans never troubled himself about much except his money.
He had undertaken to serve a certain man at so much per week, and no
matter what evils befell his employer or himself, he never found fault
or grumbled, so long as his wages were duly paid.</p>
<p>Suddenly my uncle roused himself. He had seen a smile on the face of our
guide. I could not make it out.</p>
<p>"What is the matter?" said my uncle.</p>
<p>"Schiedam," said the guide, producing a bottle of this precious fluid.</p>
<p>We drank. My uncle and myself will own to our dying day that hence we
derived strength to exist until the last bitter moment. That precious
bottle of Hollands was in reality only half full; but, under the
circumstances, it was nectar.</p>
<p>It took some minutes for myself and my uncle to form a decided opinion
on the subject. The worthy Professor swallowed about half a pint and did
not seem able to drink any more.</p>
<p>"<i>Fortrafflig</i>," said Hans, swallowing nearly all that was left.</p>
<p>"Excellent—very good," said my uncle, with as much gusto as if he had
just left the steps of the club at Hamburg.</p>
<p>I had begun to feel as if there had been one gleam of hope. Now all
thought of the future vanished!</p>
<p>We had consumed our last ounce of food, and it was five o'clock in the
morning!</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;"/>
<h2 id="pgepubid00084"><a id="CHAPTER_42"/>CHAPTER 42</h2>
<h4 id="pgepubid00085">THE VOLCANIC SHAFT</h4>
<p>Man's constitution is so peculiar that his health is purely a negative
matter. No sooner is the rage of hunger appeased than it becomes
difficult to comprehend the meaning of starvation. It is only when you
suffer that you really understand.</p>
<p>As to anyone who has not endured privation having any notion of the
matter, it is simply absurd.</p>
<p>With us, after a long fast, some mouthfuls of bread and meat, a little
moldy biscuit and salt beef triumphed over all our previous gloomy and
saturnine thoughts.</p>
<p>Nevertheless, after this repast each gave way to his own reflections. I
wondered what were those of Hans—the man of the extreme north, who was
yet gifted with the fatalistic resignation of Oriental character. But
the utmost stretch of the imagination would not allow me to realize the
truth. As for my individual self, my thoughts had ceased to be anything
but memories of the past, and were all connected with that upper world
which I never should have left. I saw it all now, the beautiful house in
the Konigstrasse, my poor Gretchen, the good Martha; they all passed
before my mind like visions of the past. Every time any of the
lugubrious groanings which were to be distinguished in the hollows
around fell upon my ears, I fancied I heard the distant murmur of the
great cities above my head.</p>
<p>As for my uncle, always thinking of his science, he examined the nature
of the shaft by means of a torch. He closely examined the different
strata one above the other, in order to recognize his situation by
geological theory. This calculation, or rather this estimation, could by
no means be anything but approximate. But a learned man, a philosopher,
is nothing if not a philosopher, when he keeps his ideas calm and
collected; and certainly the Professor possessed this quality to
perfection.</p>
<p>I heard him, as I sat in silence, murmuring words of geological science.
As I understood his object and his meaning, I could not but interest
myself despite my preoccupation in that terrible hour.</p>
<p>"Eruptive granite," he said to himself, "we are still in the primitive
epoch. But we are going up—going up, still going up. But who knows? Who
knows?"</p>
<p>Then he still hoped. He felt along the vertical sides of the shaft with
his hand, and some few minutes later, he would go on again in the
following style:</p>
<p>"This is gneiss. This is mica schist—siliceous mineral. Good again;
this is the epoch of transition, at all events, we are close to
them—and then, and then—"</p>
<p>What could the Professor mean? Could he, by any conceivable means,
measure the thickness of the crust of the earth suspended above our
heads? Did he possess any possible means of making any approximation to
this calculation? No.</p>
<p>The manometer was wanting, and no summary estimation could take the
place of it.</p>
<p>And yet, as we progressed, the temperature increased in the most
extraordinary degree, and I began to feel as if I were bathed in a hot
and burning atmosphere. Never before had I felt anything like it. I
could only compare it to the hot vapor from an iron foundry, when the
liquid iron is in a state of ebullition and runs over. By degrees, and
one after the other, Hans, my uncle, and myself had taken off our coats
and waistcoats. They were unbearable. Even the slightest garment was not
only uncomfortable, but the cause of extreme suffering.</p>
<p>"Are we ascending to a living fire?" I cried; when, to my horror and
astonishment, the heat became greater than before.</p>
<p>"No, no," said my uncle, "it is simply impossible, quite impossible."</p>
<p>"And yet," said I, touching the side of the shaft with my naked hand,
"this wall is literally burning."</p>
<p>At this moment, feeling as I did that the sides of this extraordinary
wall were red hot, I plunged my hands into the water to cool them. I
drew them back with a cry of despair.</p>
<p>"The water is boiling!" I cried.</p>
<p>My uncle, the Professor, made no reply other than a gesture of rage and
despair.</p>
<p>Something very like the truth had probably struck his imagination.</p>
<p>But I could take no share in either what was going on, or in his
speculations. An invincible dread had taken possession of my brain and
soul. I could only look forward to an immediate catastrophe, such a
catastrophe as not even the most vivid imagination could have thought
of. An idea, at first vague and uncertain, was gradually being changed
into certainty.</p>
<p>I tremulously rejected it at first, but it forced itself upon me by
degrees with extreme obstinacy. It was so terrible an idea that I
scarcely dared to whisper it to myself.</p>
<p>And yet all the while certain, and as it were, involuntary observations
determined my convictions. By the doubtful glare of the torch, I could
make out some singular changes in the granitic strata; a strange and
terrible phenomenon was about to be produced, in which electricity
played a part.</p>
<p>Then this boiling water, this terrible and excessive heat? I determined
as a last resource to examine the compass.</p>
<p>The compass had gone mad!</p>
<p>Yes, wholly stark staring mad. The needle jumped from pole to pole with
sudden and surprising jerks, ran round, or as it is said, boxed the
compass, and then ran suddenly back again as if it had the vertigo.</p>
<p>I was aware that, according to the best acknowledged theories, it was a
received notion that the mineral crust of the globe is never, and never
has been, in a state of complete repose.</p>
<p>It is perpetually undergoing the modifications caused by the
decomposition of internal matter, the agitation consequent on the
flowing of extensive liquid currents, the excessive action of magnetism
which tends to shake it incessantly, at a time when even the
multitudinous beings on its surface do not suspect the seething process
to be going on.</p>
<p>Still this phenomenon would not have alarmed me alone; it would not have
aroused in my mind a terrible, an awful idea.</p>
<p>But other facts could not allow my self-delusion to last.</p>
<p>Terrible detonations, like Heaven's artillery, began to multiply
themselves with fearful intensity. I could only compare them with the
noise made by hundreds of heavily laden chariots being madly driven over
a stone pavement. It was a continuous roll of heavy thunder.</p>
<p>And then the mad compass, shaken by the wild electric phenomena,
confirmed me in my rapidly formed opinion. The mineral crust was about
to burst, the heavy granite masses were about to rejoin, the fissure was
about to close, the void was about to be filled up, and we poor atoms to
be crushed in its awful embrace!</p>
<p>"Uncle, Uncle!" I cried, "we are wholly, irretrievably lost!"</p>
<p>"What, then, my young friend, is your new cause of terror and alarm?" he
said in his calmest manner. "What fear you now?"</p>
<p>"What do I fear now!" I cried in fierce and angry tones. "Do you not see
that the walls of the shaft are in motion? Do you not see that the solid
granite masses are cracking? Do you not feel the terrible, torrid heat?
Do you not observe the awful boiling water on which we float? Do you not
remark this mad needle? Every sign and portent of an awful earthquake!"</p>
<p>My uncle coolly shook his head.</p>
<p>"An earthquake," he replied in the most calm and provoking tone.</p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>"My nephew, I tell you that you are utterly mistaken," he continued.</p>
<p>"Do you not, can you not, recognize all the well-known symtons—"</p>
<p>"Of an earthquake? By no means. I am expecting something far more
important."</p>
<p>"My brain is strained beyond endurance—what, what do you mean?" I
cried.</p>
<p>"An eruption, Harry."</p>
<p>"An eruption," I gasped. "We are, then, in the volcanic shaft of a
crater in full action and vigor."</p>
<p>"I have every reason to think so," said the Professor in a smiling tone,
"and I beg to tell you that it is the most fortunate thing that could
happen to us."</p>
<p>The most fortunate thing! Had my uncle really and truly gone mad? What
did he mean by these awful words—what did he mean by this terrible
calm, this solemn smile?</p>
<p>"What!" cried I, in the height of my exasperation, "we are on the way to
an eruption, are we? Fatality has cast us into a well of burning and
boiling lava, of rocks on fire, of boiling water, in a word, filled with
every kind of eruptive matter? We are about to be expelled, thrown up,
vomited, spit out of the interior of the earth, in common with huge
blocks of granite, with showers of cinders and scoriae, in a wild
whirlwind of flame, and you say—the most fortunate thing which could
happen to us."</p>
<p>"Yes," replied the Professor, looking at me calmly from under his
spectacles, "it is the only chance which remains to us of ever escaping
from the interior of the earth to the light of day."</p>
<p>It is quite impossible that I can put on paper the thousand strange,
wild thoughts which followed this extraordinary announcement.</p>
<p>But my uncle was right, quite right, and never had he appeared to me so
audacious and so convinced as when he looked me calmly in the face and
spoke of the chances of an eruption—of our being cast upon Mother Earth
once more through the gaping crater of a volcano!</p>
<p>Nevertheless, while we were speaking we were still ascending; we passed
the whole night going up, or to speak more scientifically, in an
ascensional motion. The fearful noise redoubled; I was ready to
suffocate. I seriously believed that my last hour was approaching, and
yet, so strange is imagination, all I thought of was some childish
hypothesis or other. In such circumstances you do not choose your own
thoughts. They overcome you.</p>
<p>It was quite evident that we were being cast upwards by eruptive matter;
under the raft there was a mass of boiling water, and under this was a
heavier mass of lava, and an aggregate of rocks which, on reaching the
summit of the water, would be dispersed in every direction.</p>
<p>That we were inside the chimney of a volcano there could no longer be
the shadow of a doubt. Nothing more terrible could be conceived!</p>
<p>But on this occasion, instead of Sneffels, an old and extinct volcano,
we were inside a mountain of fire in full activity. Several times I
found myself asking, what mountain was it, and on what part of the world
we should be shot out. As if it were of any consequence!</p>
<p>In the northern regions, there could be no reasonable doubt about that.
Before it went decidedly mad, the compass had never made the slightest
mistake. From the cape of Saknussemm, we had been swept away to the
northward many hundreds of leagues. Now the question was, were we once
more under Iceland—should we be belched forth on to the earth through
the crater of Mount Hecla, or should we reappear through one of the
other seven fire funnels of the island? Taking in my mental vision a
radius of five hundred leagues to the westward, I could see under this
parallel only the little-known volcanoes of the northwest coast of
America.</p>
<p>To the east one only existed somewhere about the eightieth degree of
latitude, the Esk, upon the island of Jan Mayen, not far from the frozen
regions of Spitsbergen.</p>
<p>It was not craters that were wanting, and many of them were big enough
to vomit a whole army; all I wished to know was the particular one
towards which we were making with such fearful velocity.</p>
<p>I often think now of my folly: as if I should ever have expected to
escape!</p>
<p>Towards morning, the ascending motion became greater and greater. If the
degree of heat increased instead of decreasing, as we approached the
surface of the earth, it was simply because the causes were local and
wholly due to volcanic influence. Our very style of locomotion left in
my mind no doubt upon the subject. An enormous force, a force of several
hundreds of atmospheres produced by the vapors accumulated and long
compressed in the interior of the earth, was hoisting us upwards with
irresistible power.</p>
<p>But though we were approaching the light of day, to what fearful dangers
were we about to be exposed?</p>
<p>Instant death appeared the only fate which we could expect or
contemplate.</p>
<p>Soon a dim, sepulchral light penetrated the vertical gallery, which
became wider and wider. I could make out to the right and left long dark
corridors like immense tunnels, from which awful and horrid vapors
poured out. Tongues of fire, sparkling and crackling, appeared about to
lick us up.</p>
<p>The hour had come!</p>
<p>"Look, Uncle, look!" I cried.</p>
<p>"Well, what you see are the great sulphurous flames. Nothing more common
in connection with an eruption."</p>
<p>"But if they lap us round!" I angrily replied.</p>
<p>"They will not lap us round," was his quiet and serene answer.</p>
<p>"But it will be all the same in the end if they stifle us," I cried.</p>
<p>"We shall not be stifled. The gallery is rapidly becoming wider and
wider, and if it be necessary, we will presently leave the raft and take
refuge in some fissure in the rock."</p>
<p>"But the water, the water, which is continually ascending?" I
despairingly replied.</p>
<p>"There is no longer any water, Harry," he answered, "but a kind of lava
paste, which is heaving us up, in company with itself, to the mouth of
the crater."</p>
<p>In truth, the liquid column of water had wholly disappeared to give
place to dense masses of boiling eruptive matter. The temperature was
becoming utterly insupportable, and a thermometer exposed to this
atmosphere would have marked between one hundred and eighty-nine and one
hundred ninety degrees Fahrenheit.</p>
<p>Perspiration rushed from every pore. But for the extraordinary rapidity
of our ascent we should have been stifled.</p>
<p>Nevertheless, the Professor did not carry out his proposition of
abandoning the raft; and he did quite wisely. Those few ill-joined beams
offered, anyway, a solid surface—a support which elsewhere must have
utterly failed us.</p>
<p>Towards eight o'clock in the morning a new incident startled us. The
ascensional movement suddenly ceased. The raft became still and
motionless.</p>
<p>"What is the matter now?" I said, querulously, very much startled by
this change.</p>
<p>"A simple halt," replied my uncle.</p>
<p>"Is the eruption about to fail?" I asked.</p>
<p>"I hope not."</p>
<p>Without making any reply, I rose. I tried to look around me. Perhaps the
raft, checked by some projecting rock, opposed a momentary resistance to
the eruptive mass. In this case, it was absolutely necessary to release
it as quickly as possible.</p>
<p>Nothing of the kind had occurred. The column of cinders, of scoriae, of
broken rocks and earth, had wholly ceased to ascend.</p>
<p>"I tell you, Uncle, that the eruption has stopped," was my oracular
decision.</p>
<p>"Ah," said my uncle, "you think so, my boy. You are wrong. Do not be in
the least alarmed; this sudden moment of calm will not last long, be
assured. It has already endured five minutes, and before we are many
minutes older we shall be continuing our journey to the mouth of the
crater."</p>
<p>All the time he was speaking the Professor continued to consult his
chronometer, and he was probably right in his prognostics. Soon the raft
resumed its motion, in a very rapid and disorderly way, which lasted two
minutes or thereabout; and then again it stopped as suddenly as before.</p>
<p>"Good," said my uncle, observing the hour, "in ten we shall start
again."</p>
<p>"In ten minutes?"</p>
<p>"Yes—precisely. We have to do with a volcano, the eruption of which is
intermittent. We are compelled to breathe just as it does."</p>
<p>Nothing could be more true. At the exact minute he had indicated, we
were again launched on high with extreme rapidity. Not to be cast off
the raft, it was necessary to hold on to the beams. Then the hoist again
ceased.</p>
<p>Many times since have I thought of this singular phenomenon without
being able to find for it any satisfactory explanation. Nevertheless, it
appeared quite clear to me, that we were not in the principal chimney of
the volcano, but in an accessory conduit, where we felt the counter
shock of the great and principal tunnel filled by burning lava.</p>
<p>It is impossible for me to say how many times this maneuver was
repeated. All that I can remember is, that on every ascensional motion,
we were hoisted up with ever increasing velocity, as if we had been
launched from a huge projectile. During the sudden halts we were nearly
stifled; during the moments of projection the hot air took away our
breath.</p>
<p>I thought for a moment of the voluptuous joy of suddenly finding myself
in the hyperborean regions with the cold thirty degrees below zero!</p>
<p>My exalted imagination pictured to itself the vast snowy plains of the
arctic regions, and I was impatient to roll myself on the icy carpet of
the North Pole.</p>
<p>By degrees my head, utterly overcome by a series of violent emotions,
began to give way to hallucination. I was delirious. Had it not been for
the powerful arms of Hans, the guide, I should have broken my head
against the granite masses of the shaft.</p>
<p>I have, in consequence, kept no account of what followed for many hours.
I have a vague and confused remembrance of continual detonations, of the
shaking of the huge granitic mass, and of the raft going round like a
spinning top. It floated on the stream of hot lava, amidst a falling
cloud of cinders. The huge flames roaring, wrapped us around.</p>
<p>A storm of wind which appeared to be cast forth from an immense
ventilator roused up the interior fires of the earth. It was a hot,
incandescent blast!</p>
<p>At last I saw the figure of Hans as if enveloped in the huge halo of
burning blaze, and no other sense remained to me but that sinister dread
which the condemned victim may be supposed to feel when led to the mouth
of a cannon, at the supreme moment when the shot is fired and his limbs
are dispersed into empty space.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;"/>
<h2 id="pgepubid00086"><a id="CHAPTER_43"/>CHAPTER 43</h2>
<h4 id="pgepubid00087">DAYLIGHT AT LAST</h4>
<p>When I opened my eyes I felt the hand of the guide clutching me firmly
by the belt. With his other hand he supported my uncle. I was not
grievously wounded, but bruised all over in the most remarkable manner.</p>
<p>After a moment I looked around, and found that I was lying down on the
slope of a mountain not two yards from a yawning gulf into which I
should have fallen had I made the slightest false step. Hans had saved
me from death, while I rolled insensible on the flanks of the crater.</p>
<p>"Where are we?" dreamily asked my uncle, who literally appeared to be
disgusted at having returned to earth.</p>
<p>The eider-down hunter simply shrugged his shoulders as a mark of total
ignorance.</p>
<p>"In Iceland?" said I, not positively but interrogatively.</p>
<p>"Nej," said Hans.</p>
<p>"How do you mean?" cried the Professor; "no—what are your reasons?"</p>
<p>"Hans is wrong," said I, rising.</p>
<p>After all the innumerable surprises of this journey, a yet more singular
one was reserved to us. I expected to see a cone covered by snow, by
extensive and widespread glaciers, in the midst of the arid deserts of
the extreme northern regions, beneath the full rays of a polar sky,
beyond the highest latitudes.</p>
<p>But contrary to all our expectations, I, my uncle, and the Icelander,
were cast upon the slope of a mountain calcined by the burning rays of a
sun which was literally baking us with its fires.</p>
<p>I could not believe my eyes, but the actual heat which affected my body
allowed me no chance of doubting. We came out of the crater half naked,
and the radiant star from which we had asked nothing for two months, was
good enough to be prodigal to us of light and warmth—a light and warmth
we could easily have dispensed with.</p>
<p>When our eyes were accustomed to the light we had lost sight of so long,
I used them to rectify the errors of my imagination. Whatever happened,
we should have been at Spitsbergen, and I was in no humor to yield to
anything but the most absolute proof.</p>
<p>After some delay, the Professor spoke.</p>
<p>"Hem!" he said, in a hesitating kind of way, "it really does not look
like Iceland."</p>
<p>"But supposing it were the island of Jan Mayen?" I ventured to observe.</p>
<p>"Not in the least, my boy. This is not one of the volcanoes of the
north, with its hills of granite and its crown of snow."</p>
<p>"Nevertheless—"</p>
<p>"Look, look, my boy," said the Professor, as dogmatically as usual.</p>
<p>Right above our heads, at a great height, opened the crater of a volcano
from which escaped, from one quarter of an hour to the other, with a
very loud explosion, a lofty jet of flame mingled with pumice stone,
cinders, and lava. I could feel the convulsions of nature in the
mountain, which breathed like a huge whale, throwing up from time to
time fire and air through its enormous vents.</p>
<p>Below, and floating along a slope of considerable angularity, the stream
of eruptive matter spread away to a depth which did not give the volcano
a height of three hundred fathoms.</p>
<p>Its base disappeared in a perfect forest of green trees, among which I
perceived olives, fig trees, and vines loaded with rich grapes.</p>
<p>Certainly this was not the ordinary aspect of the arctic regions. About
that there could not be the slightest doubt.</p>
<p>When the eye was satisfied at its glimpse of this verdant expanse, it
fell upon the waters of a lovely sea or beautiful lake, which made of
this enchanted land an island of not many leagues in extent.</p>
<p>On the side of the rising sun was to be seen a little port, crowded with
houses, and near which the boats and vessels of peculiar build were
floating upon azure waves.</p>
<p>Beyond, groups of islands rose above the liquid plain, so numerous and
close together as to resemble a vast beehive.</p>
<p>Towards the setting sun, some distant shores were to be made out on the
edge of the horizon. Some presented the appearance of blue mountains of
harmonious conformation; upon others, much more distant, there appeared
a prodigiously lofty cone, above the summit of which hung dark and heavy
clouds.</p>
<p>Towards the north, an immense expanse of water sparkled beneath the
solar rays, occasionally allowing the extremity of a mast or the
convexity of a sail bellying to the wind, to be seen.</p>
<p>The unexpected character of such a scene added a hundredfold to its
marvelous beauties.</p>
<p>"Where can we be?" I asked, speaking in a low and solemn voice.</p>
<p>Hans shut his eyes with an air of indifference, and my uncle looked on
without clearly understanding.</p>
<p>"Whatever this mountain may be," he said, at last, "I must confess it is
rather warm. The explosions do not leave off, and I do not think it is
worthwhile to have left the interior of a volcano and remain here to
receive a huge piece of rock upon one's head. Let us carefully descend
the mountain and discover the real state of the case. To confess the
truth, I am dying of hunger and thirst."</p>
<p>Decidedly the Professor was no longer a truly reflective character. For
myself, forgetting all my necessities, ignoring my fatigues and
sufferings, I should have remained still for several hours longer—but
it was necessary to follow my companions.</p>
<p>The slope of the volcano was very steep and slippery; we slid over piles
of ashes, avoiding the streams of hot lava which glided about like fiery
serpents. Still, while we were advancing, I spoke with extreme
volubility, for my imagination was too full not to explode in words.</p>
<p>"We are in Asia!" I exclaimed; "we are on the coast of India, in the
great Malay islands, in the centre of Oceania. We have crossed the one
half of the globe to come out right at the antipodes of Europe!"</p>
<p>"But the compass!" exclaimed my uncle; "explain that to me!"</p>
<p>"Yes—the compass," I said with considerable hesitation. "I grant that
is a difficulty. According to it, we have always been going northward."</p>
<p>"Then it lied."</p>
<p>"Hem—to say it lied is rather a harsh word," was my answer.</p>
<p>"Then we are at the North Pole—"</p>
<p>"The Pole—no—well—well I give it up," was my reply.</p>
<p>The plain truth was, that there was no explanation possible. I could
make nothing of it.</p>
<p>And all the while we were approaching this beautiful verdure, hunger and
thirst tormented me fearfully. Happily, after two long hours' march, a
beautiful country spread out before us, covered by olives, pomegranates,
and vines, which appeared to belong to anybody and everybody. In any
event, in the state of destitution into which we had fallen, we were not
in a mood to ponder too scrupulously.</p>
<p>What delight it was to press these delicious fruits to our lips, and to
bite at grapes and pomegranates fresh from the vine.</p>
<p>Not far off, near some fresh and mossy grass, under the delicious shade
of some trees, I discovered a spring of fresh water, in which we
voluptuously laved our faces, hands, and feet.</p>
<p>While we were all giving way to the delights of new-found pleasures, a
little child appeared between two tufted olive trees.</p>
<p>"Ah," cried I, "an inhabitant of this happy country."</p>
<p>The little fellow was poorly dressed, weak, and suffering, and appeared
terribly alarmed at our appearance. Half-naked, with tangled, matted and
ragged beards, we did look supremely ill-favored; and unless the country
was a bandit land, we were not likely to alarm the inhabitants!</p>
<p>Just as the boy was about to take to his heels, Hans ran after him, and
brought him back, despite his cries and kicks.</p>
<p>My uncle tried to look as gentle as possible, and then spoke in German.</p>
<p>"What is the name of this mountain, my friend?"</p>
<p>The child made no reply.</p>
<p>"Good," said my uncle, with a very positive air of conviction, "we are
not in Germany."</p>
<p>He then made the same demand in English, of which language he was an
excellent scholar.</p>
<p>The child shook its head and made no reply. I began to be considerably
puzzled.</p>
<p>"Is he dumb?" cried the Professor, who was rather proud of his polyglot
knowledge of languages, and made the same demand in French.</p>
<p>The boy only stared in his face.</p>
<p>"I must perforce try him in Italian," said my uncle, with a shrug.</p>
<p>"<i>Dove noi siamo</i>?"</p>
<p>"Yes, tell me where we are?" I added impatiently and eagerly.</p>
<p>Again the boy remained silent.</p>
<p>"My fine fellow, do you or do you not mean to speak?" cried my uncle,
who began to get angry. He shook him, and spoke another dialect of the
Italian language.</p>
<p>"<i>Come si noma questa isola</i>?"—"What is the name of this island?"</p>
<p>"Stromboli," replied the rickety little shepherd, dashing away from Hans
and disappearing in the olive groves.</p>
<p>We thought little enough about him.</p>
<p>Stromboli! What effect on the imagination did these few words produce!
We were in the centre of the Mediterranean, amidst the eastern
archipelago of mythological memory, in the ancient Strongylos, where
AEolus kept the wind and the tempest chained up. And those blue
mountains, which rose towards the rising sun, were the mountains of
Calabria.</p>
<p>And that mighty volcano which rose on the southern horizon was Etna, the
fierce and celebrated Etna!</p>
<p>"Stromboli! Stromboli!" I repeated to myself.</p>
<p>My uncle played a regular accompaniment to my gestures and words. We
were singing together like an ancient chorus.</p>
<p>Ah—what a journey—what a marvelous and extraordinary journey! Here we
had entered the earth by one volcano, and we had come out by another.
And this other was situated more than twelve hundred leagues from
Sneffels from that drear country of Iceland cast away on the confines of
the earth. The wondrous changes of this expedition had transported us to
the most harmonious and beautiful of earthly lands. We had abandoned the
region of eternal snows for that of infinite verdure, and had left over
our heads the gray fog of the icy regions to come back to the azure sky
of Sicily!</p>
<p>After a delicious repast of fruits and fresh water, we again continued
our journey in order to reach the port of Stromboli. To say how we had
reached the island would scarcely have been prudent. The superstitious
character of the Italians would have been at work, and we should have
been called demons vomited from the infernal regions. It was therefore
necessary to pass for humble and unfortunate shipwrecked travelers. It
was certainly less striking and romantic, but it was decidedly safer.</p>
<p>As we advanced, I could hear my worthy uncle muttering to himself:</p>
<p>"But the compass. The compass most certainly marked north. This is a
fact I cannot explain in any way."</p>
<p>"Well, the fact is," said I, with an air of disdain, "we must not
explain anything. It will be much more easy."</p>
<p>"I should like to see a professor of the Johanneum Institution who is
unable to explain a cosmic phenomenon—it would indeed be strange."</p>
<p>And speaking thus, my uncle, half-naked, his leathern purse round his
loins, and his spectacles upon his nose, became once more the terrible
Professor of Mineralogy.</p>
<p>An hour after leaving the wood of olives, we reached the fort of San
Vicenza, where Hans demanded the price of his thirteenth week of
service. My uncle paid him, with very many warm shakes of the hand.</p>
<p>At that moment, if he did not indeed quite share our natural emotion, he
allowed his feelings so far to give way as to indulge in an
extraordinary expression for him.</p>
<p>With the tips of two fingers he gently pressed our hands and smiled.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;"/>
<h2 id="pgepubid00088"><a id="CHAPTER_44"/>CHAPTER 44</h2>
<h4 id="pgepubid00089">THE JOURNEY ENDED</h4>
<p>This is the final conclusion of a narrative which will be probably
disbelieved even by people who are astonished at nothing. I am, however,
armed at all points against human incredulity.</p>
<p>We were kindly received by the Strombolite fishermen, who treated us as
shipwrecked travelers. They gave us clothes and food. After a delay of
forty-eight hours, on the 30th of September a little vessel took us to
Messina, where a few days of delightful and complete repose restored us
to ourselves.</p>
<p>On Friday, the 4th of October, we embarked in the Volturne, one of the
postal packets of the Imperial Messageries of France; and three days
later we landed at Marseilles, having no other care on our minds but
that of our precious but erratic compass. This inexplicable circumstance
tormented me terribly. On the 9th of October, in the evening, we reached
Hamburg.</p>
<p>What was the astonishment of Martha, what the joy of Gretchen! I will
not attempt to define it.</p>
<p>"Now then, Harry, that you really are a hero," she said, "there is no
reason why you should ever leave me again."</p>
<p>I looked at her. She was weeping tears of joy.</p>
<p>I leave it to be imagined if the return of Professor Hardwigg made or
did not make a sensation in Hamburg. Thanks to the indiscretion of
Martha, the news of his departure for the interior of the earth had been
spread over the whole world.</p>
<p>No one would believe it—and when they saw him come back in safety they
believed it all the less.</p>
<p>But the presence of Hans and many stray scraps of information by degrees
modified public opinion.</p>
<p>Then my uncle became a great man and I the nephew of a great man, which,
at all events, is something. Hamburg gave a festival in our honor. A
public meeting of the Johanneum Institution was held, at which the
Professor related the whole story of his adventures, omitting only the
facts in connection with the compass.</p>
<p>That same day he deposited in the archives of the town the document he
had found written by Saknussemm, and he expressed his great regret that
circumstances, stronger than his will, did not allow him to follow the
Icelandic traveler's track into the very centre of the earth. He was
modest in his glory, but his reputation only increased.</p>
<p>So much honor necessarily created for him many envious enemies. Of
course they existed, and as his theories, supported by certain facts,
contradicted the system of science upon the question of central heat, he
maintained his own views both with pen and speech against the learned of
every country. Although I still believe in the theory of central heat, I
confess that certain circumstances, hitherto very ill defined, may
modify the laws of such natural phenomena.</p>
<p>At the moment when these questions were being discussed with interest,
my uncle received a rude shock—one that he felt very much. Hans,
despite everything he could say to the contrary, quitted Hamburg; the
man to whom we owed so much would not allow us to pay our deep debt of
gratitude. He was taken with nostalgia; a love for his Icelandic home.</p>
<p>"Farval," said he, one day, and with this one short word of adieu, he
started for Reykjavik, which he soon reached in safety.</p>
<p>We were deeply attached to our brave eider-duck hunter. His absence will
never cause him to be forgotten by those whose lives he saved, and I
hope, at some not distant day, to see him again.</p>
<p>To conclude, I may say that our journey into the interior of the earth
created an enormous sensation throughout the civilized world. It was
translated and printed in many languages. All the leading journals
published extracts from it, which were commentated, discussed, attacked,
and supported with equal animation by those who believed in its
episodes, and by those who were utterly incredulous.</p>
<p>Wonderful! My uncle enjoyed during his lifetime all the glory he
deserved; and he was even offered a large sum of money, by Mr. Barnum,
to exhibit himself in the United States; while I am credibly informed by
a traveler that he is to be seen in waxwork at Madame Tussaud's!</p>
<p>But one care preyed upon his mind, a care which rendered him very
unhappy. One fact remained inexplicable—that of the compass. For a
learned man to be baffled by such an inexplicable phenomenon was very
aggravating. But Heaven was merciful, and in the end my uncle was happy.</p>
<p>One day, while he put some minerals belonging to his collection in
order, I fell upon the famous compass and examined it keenly.</p>
<p>For six months it had lain unnoticed and untouched.</p>
<p>I looked at it with curiosity, which soon became surprise. I gave a loud
cry. The Professor, who was at hand, soon joined me.</p>
<p>"What is the matter?" he cried.</p>
<p>"The compass!"</p>
<p>"What then?"</p>
<p>"Why its needle points to the south and not to the north."</p>
<p>"My dear boy, you must be dreaming."</p>
<p>"I am not dreaming. See—the poles are changed."</p>
<p>"Changed!"</p>
<p>My uncle put on his spectacles, examined the instrument, and leaped with
joy, shaking the whole house.</p>
<p>A clear light fell upon our minds.</p>
<p>"Here it is!" he cried, as soon as he had recovered the use of his
speech, "after we had once passed Cape Saknussemm, the needle of this
compass pointed to the southward instead of the northward."</p>
<p>"Evidently."</p>
<p>"Our error is now easily explained. But to what phenomenon do we owe
this alteration in the needle?"</p>
<p>"Nothing more simple."</p>
<p>"Explain yourself, my boy. I am on thorns."</p>
<p>"During the storm, upon the Central Sea, the ball of fire which made a
magnet of the iron in our raft, turned our compass topsy-turvy."</p>
<p>"Ah!" cried the Professor, with a loud and ringing laugh, "it was a
trick of that inexplicable electricity."</p>
<p>From that hour my uncle was the happiest of learned men, and I the
happiest of ordinary mortals. For my pretty Virland girl, abdicating her
position as ward, took her place in the house in the Konigstrasse in the
double quality of niece and wife.</p>
<p>We need scarcely mention that her uncle was the illustrious Professor
Hardwigg, corresponding member of all the scientific, geographical,
mineralogical, and geological societies of the five parts of the globe.</p>
<p>End of the Voyage Extraordinaire</p>
<pre/>
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