Kitabı oku: «Таинственный остров / The Mysterious Island. Уровень 3»
© Матвеев С.А., адаптация текста, комментарии и словарь, 2021
© ООО «Издательство, АСТ», 2021
Chapter I
– Are we going up again?
– Not at all; we are going down!
– Mr. Smith1, we are falling!
– Throw over all the ballast!
– The last sack is empty!
– Does the balloon rise again?
– No!
– I hear the waves, they are splashing!
– The sea is under us!
– Five hundred feet!
– God help us!2
These words rang through the air above the Pacific3, at 4 o’clock in the afternoon of the 23d of March, 1865.
The hurricane was lasting without intermission from the 18th to the 26th of March. It covered a space of 1,800 miles, it occasioned immense destruction in America and Europe and Asia. Cities were in ruins, forests were uprooted. Hundreds of shipwrecks, thousands of persons in the sea!
While these catastrophes were upon the land and the sea, something was in the heavens, too.
A balloon was spinning around as in some aerial whirlpool. It rushed through space with a velocity of ninety miles an hour. Below the balloon, there was a basket with five persons.
The storm was terrible. The balloon came from a great distance, the passengers were unable to determine the course. They could not calculate their position. They could not see anything, the thick fog was under the balloon. Around them everything was obscure. The clouds were very dense. No light, no sound, no roaring of the ocean penetrated that profound obscurity.
Meanwhile the balloon rose to a height of 4,500 feet, and the passengers discovered that the sea was beneath them. They realized that the dangers above were less formidable than below.
The night passed. At dawn, the clouds rose high into the heavens; and, in a few hours more, the whirlwind disappeared. Now, however, it became evident that the balloon was again sinking slowly. The voyagers threw overboard different articles, few provisions, and everything they had in their pockets. But the gas was escaping, and the voyagers were going down!
There was no land, not even an island, beneath them. It was a vast sea on which the waves were surging. It was the limitless ocean. Not even a ship was in sight.
In order to save themselves it was necessary to stop the downward movement. But the balloon continued to descend!
It was a terrible situation. These men were unfortunate. The gas continued to escape. They fell faster and faster. At 1 o’clock they were not more than 600 feet above the sea. The gas poured out. If no land appears before nightfall, voyagers, balloon, and basket will disappear beneath the waves.
It was evident that these men were strong. Not a murmur escaped their lips. They were ready to struggle to the last second. The basket was constructed of willow osiers, it could not float, and they could not support it on the surface of the water. It was 2 o’clock, and the balloon was only 400 feet above the waves.
Then they heard a voice. It was the voice of a man whose heart knew no fear.
– Is everything thrown out?4
– No, we yet have 10,000 francs in gold.
A heavy bag fell into the sea.
– Does the balloon rise?
– A little, but it will soon fall again.
– Is there anything else to throw out?
– Nothing.
– Yes there is; there is the basket! Let it go.
This was, indeed, the last means. They wanted to lighten the apparatus. The five passengers clambered into the net around the hoop, and looked into the abyss below.
The balloon went up. But soon it began to descend. It was impossible to repair the rent, through which the gas was rushing.
At 4 o’clock, when the balloon was only 500 feet above the sea, they heard the loud barking.
– Top5saw something! Land! Land!
They saw a land. But it is far, it takes an hour to reach it. An hour! They did not know whether it was an island or a continent. They do not know what part of the world the tempest brought them. How to reach that land?
At 4 o’clock they saw that the balloon could not sustain itself much longer. It grazed the surface of the sea.
A half hour later, and the land was a mile distant. The balloon jumped into the air. It rose 1,500 feet, and soon, however, it fell upon the sand. The passengers, assisting each other, hastened to the ground.
The basket contained five passengers and a dog. Four men were upon the shore. The fifth one, then, was in the water. His friends cried:
– Perhaps he is trying to swim ashore. Save him! Let us save him!
Chapter II
They were neither professional aeronauts nor amateurs. They were prisoners of war who succeeded to escape. Their aerial voyage lasted five days. How did it happen?
This same year, in the month of February, 1865, many officers were captured by the enemy. One of the most famous of them was Cyrus Smith6. Cyrus Smith was an engineer by profession, and a scientist, to whom the Government gave the direction of the railways.
He was thin, bony, lean, about forty-five years old, with heavy moustache7. His muscles showed remarkable firmness. He was highly educated, practical, and clear-headed, his temperament was superb. Cyrus Smith was also the personification of courage.
At the same time with Cyrus Smith another man fell into the hands of the Southerners8. This was Gideon Spilett9, reporter to the New York Herald10. Gideon Spilett obtained exact information and transmitted it to the journal. He was a well-known reporter.
A man of great merit; energetic, prompt, and ready; full of ideas; soldier and artist; resolute in action.
He also was in all the battles, revolver in one hand and notebook in the other. Gideon Spilett was tall. He was forty years old or more. Sandy-colored whiskers encircled his face. His eye was clear and lively.
Cyrus Smith had a devoted servant. This man was black, he was born of slave parents. Smith freed them, but the servant had no desire to leave his master. He was a man of thirty years, vigorous, agile, adroit, intelligent, quick, always smiling and honest. His name was Nebuchadnezzar11, but everybody called him Neb.
All these people were in Richmond12, and it was very difficult to get out. They were prisoners. The reporter wanted to get out of Richmond at any risk.
Meanwhile, the siege continued. Among the people in the town there was Jonathan Forster13, who was a violent Southerner. This Jonathan Forster conceived the idea of passing over the lines of the besiegers in a balloon.
So a balloon was made and placed at the disposal of Forster and five of his companions. They found arms and food. The departure of the balloon was on the 18th of March. On the morning of the 18th there were symptoms of a storm, and soon the tempest began.
The balloon was ready, but the weather was terrible. The night of the 19th and 20th passed, but in the morning the storm was hard, and departure was impossible.
On this day Cyrus Smith in one of the streets of Richmond met a man whom he did not know. It was a sailor named Pencroff14, aged from thirty-five to forty years, strongly built, his eyes were bright and glittering. Pencroff came to Richmond on business, he had with him Herbert Brown15, of New Jersey16, a lad fifteen years old, the son of Pencroff’s captain, and an orphan. Pencroff loved the boy as his own child. He also wanted to get out. He did not hesitate to address Mr. Smith without ceremony.
– Mr. Smith?
The engineer looked at the man who added in a low voice:
– Mr. Smith, do you want to escape?
– How? – answered the engineer, quickly. – Who are you? – he demanded, in a cold voice.
Pencroff told him about himself.
– Well, – replied Smith. – And how do you propose to escape?
– By this idle balloon which is doing nothing, and is ready to take us!
The engineer seized Pencroff by the arm and hurried him to his house. There the sailor explained his project, which was simple enough. The storm was terrible, it is true; but a skilful engineer like Smith knew well how to manage a balloon. He saw many storms in his life.
Cyrus Smith listened to the sailor and he was silent. This was the opportunity! The project was very dangerous, but it was real. During the night, in spite of the guards, they might reach the balloon, creep into the basket, and then cut the lines!
– I am not alone, – said Smith.
– How many people more? – demanded the sailor.
– Two; my friend Spilett, and my man Neb.
– Three, – replied Pencroff; – and, with Herbert and myself, five. Can the balloon carry six?
– Very well. We will go! – said the engineer.
– Tonight, then, – said Pencroff.
– Tonight, at ten o’clock, – replied Smith.
Pencroff returned to his lodging, where he found young Herbert Brown. This brave boy knew the plans of the sailor, and he was ready to go with him.
The storm did not abate. The engineer feared but one thing; that the balloon could be torn into a thousand pieces.
Evening arrived. Thick masses of fog passed over the earth. Rain mingled with snow fell. The weather was cold. The streets of the city were deserted. In such weather, no one guarded the square in which swung the balloon.
– Bad weather, – said Pencroff, holding his hat, which the wind was trying to take off, firmly to his head.
At half past 9, Cyrus Smith and his companions came together at the basket. Without saying a word, four of them took their places in the basket, while Pencroff, under the direction of the engineer, unfastened the bundles of ballast. Then the sailor joined his companions. At that moment, a dog leaped into the basket. It was Top, the dog of the engineer, who had followed his master.
Then the storm burst upon them. The engineer did not dare to descend during the night. It was not until five days later that they saw the sea below them.
So of these five men, who started on the 20th of March, four were thrown, four days later, on a desert coast, more than 6,000 miles from this country. And the one who was missing17was their leader, Cyrus Smith.
Chapter III
A wave swept away the engineer. His dog had disappeared at the same time. The faithful animal tried to rescue its master.
– Forward! – cried the reporter, and all four began their search. Poor Neb wept with grief and despair. But Smith’s companions hoped to find him.
– Look for him! – cried Neb.
– Yes, Neb, and we will find him, – replied Spilett.
– Alive?
– Alive!
– Can he swim? – demanded Pencroff.
– Oh, yes, – responded Neb. – And, besides, Top is with him.
The sailor looked at the roaring sea, and shook his head.
It was nearly 6 o’clock. The fog made the night very dark. The men went northward along the shore. Where are they? They could not guess their geographical situation. They walked upon a sandy soil, mixed with stones. The little party was searching all the corners.
After a walk of twenty minutes the four men were suddenly stopped by a rock. They found themselves18upon the extremity of a sharp point upon which the sea broke with fury.
– This is a promontory, – said the sailor, – we must turn back.
– But if he is there! – cried Neb.
– Well, let us call again.
And all together uttered a vigorous cry, but without response. They waited, and tried once more. And again there was no answer.
Then they turned back. They were following the opposite side of the promontory over ground equally sandy and rocky. However, Pencroff observed that the shore was bold there, and the birds were less numerous on this shore.
They were walking towards the south. Soon they found themselves again upon a high promontory of slippery rocks.
– We are on an island, – exclaimed Pencroff.
The words of the sailor were true. The castaways were not upon a continent, but upon an island not more than two miles long.
This desert isle, covered with stones, without vegetation, did it belong to a more important archipelago? They could not tell. It was necessary to wait until the next day to search for the engineer; who made no cry to signal his presence.
– The silence of Cyrus proves nothing, – said the reporter. He may be wounded, and unable to reply.
The reporter then offered to light a fire upon the point of the island. It can serve as a signal for the engineer. But they searched in vain19for wood or dry branches. Sand and stones were all they found.
One can understand the grief of Neb and his companions, who loved their brave comrade. It was evident that they could not help him now, and that they must wait till day. The engineer escaped. He was already safe upon the land, or he died. The hours were long and dreadful, the cold was intense. But the castaways did not think of sleep. They moved back and forth upon that arid island. They listened, they shouted, they tried to catch some call.
Once the cry of Neb was answered by an echo; and Herbert said:
– That proves that there is land not far to the west.
The sailor nodded; he knew his eyes could not deceive him. The land must be there! Meanwhile the sky was clearing slowly.
The night passed; and towards 5 o’clock in the morning the heavens began to brighten, though the horizon remained obscure.
– I feel the land, – said Pencroff, – it is there!
The fog soon rose. A clear sun warmed the sky. At half past 6, the sky was clear. Then the sea appeared. Yes, the land was there! The island and the main land were separated by a channel half a mile wide. Into this current one of the party precipitated himself. It was Neb. Pencroff called to him in vain. The reporter prepared to follow, but the sailor ran to him, and exclaimed:
– Do you want to cross this channel?
– Yes, I do, – replied Spilett.
– Well, then, listen to me a moment. Neb can rescue his master alone. If we throw ourselves into the channel we are in danger: this strong current can carry us away. You see the tide is going out. Wait, just wait a little.
– You are right, – answered the reporter.
Meantime, Neb was swimming vigorously in a diagonal direction, against the current. He was gaining towards the other shore. It took him more than half an hour to cross the half mile which separated the isle from the mainland.
Neb landed at the base of a high rocky wall, and clambered quickly up its side, and then disappeared behind a rock.
Neb’s companions looked upon that land. They ate some of the shellfish which they found upon the sands; it was a poor meal, but then it was better than nothing.
The opposite coast formed an immense bay, terminated to the south by a sharp point. This point at its junction with the shore was abutted by high granite rocks. Towards the north, on the contrary, the bay widened, with a shore more rounded. It was extending from the southwest to the northeast, and ending in a narrow cape. Between these two points, the distance was about eight miles. A half mile from the shore the island, like an enormous whale, lay upon the sea. Its width was about a quarter of a mile.
Before the Island, the shore began with a sandy beach with black rocks. Beyond this rose, like a curtain, a perpendicular granite wall, at least 300 feet high and terminated by a ragged edge. This extended for about three miles.
Upon the upper level of the coast not a tree was visible. To the right, however, and back of the smooth face of rock, some verdure appeared. Finally, distant towards the northwest about seven miles, shone a white summit. It was the snowy cap of a mountain.
It was not possible to say whether this land was an island or a part of a continent. Gideon Spilett, Pencroff, and Herbert looked upon this land.
– Well, – demanded Herbert, – what do you think of it, Pencroff?
– Well, replied the sailor, – there’s good and bad in it, as with everything else. But we will soon see. In three hours we can reach that shore, and we will see what we can do to find Mr. Smith.
Pencroff was not wrong in his predictions. Three hours later, at low tide, Spilett and his two companions waded through the water. Herbert, where the water was too deep, swam like a fish; and all arrived without difficulty at the other shore.
Chapter IV
The reporter walked along the coast. Herbert wished to go with him.
– Stay, my boy, – said the sailor. – We must pitch our camp for the night, and try to find something to eat. Our friends will need food when they come back.
– I am ready, Pencroff, – said Herbert.
– Good, said the sailor. – We are tired, cold, and hungry: we need shelter, fire, and food. There is plenty of wood in the forest, and we can get eggs from the nests; but we must find a house.
– Well, – said Herbert, – I will look for a cave in these rocks.
– Right, said Pencroff. – Let us start at once20.
They walked along the base of the rocky wall. Then they turned to the south. Pencroff noticed a narrow inlet in the coast. Now it was important to pitch the camp in the neighborhood of fresh water; in that part of the island, too, they could find Smith.
The rock rose 300 feet, smooth and massive. It was a sturdy wall of the hardest granite. About the summit hovered a host of aquatic birds, with long, narrow, pointed beaks.
Meanwhile Herbert soon noticed some rocks. On them lay hosts of bivalves. Herbert called to Pencroff.
– Ah, they are mussels, – said the sailor.
– They are not mussels, – said Herbert, examining the mollusks carefully, – they are lithodomes21.
– Can we eat them? – said Pencroff.
– Certainly.
– Then let us eat some lithodomes.
The sailor could rely on Herbert. Pencroff and Herbert made a good meal of them, they tasted like oysters.
Their hunger was allayed for the moment. The thing now was to find fresh water. Two hundred feet further on Pencroff and Herbert reached the inlet, through which a little river was flowing.
– Here is water, – said Pencroff, – and over there is wood. Well, Herbert, now we need the house.
The river water was clear. Pencroff and Herbert went down between the rocks, into sandy corridors.
– This is just what we want, – said Pencroff. – These Chimneys will be our house. But first we must get together some firing.
Herbert and Pencroff left the Chimneys, and walked up the left bank of the river. After a quarter of an hour’s walk, the two reached the elbow which the river made to the left. From this point they saw a forest of magnificent trees.
– Good, – said the sailor, – I do not know the name of these trees, but I know they will help us to make a fire, and that’s important.
It was easy to gather the firewood; plenty of dead branches lay at their feet. This dry wood burn rapidly. But how can two men carry such a load to the Chimneys? Herbert asked the question.
– My boy, – said the sailor, there’s a way to do everything.
– We have the river, – suggested Herbert.
– Exactly, said Pencroff. – The river will be our road and our carrier, too.
They looked at the ocean. The sea was a watery desert. The coast, too, was desolate.
– Something tells me, – said Herbert, – that Mr. Smith is a very energetic man. So he got to the shore; don’t you think so, Pencroff?
The sailor shook his head sadly.
– No doubt, – said he, – our engineer saved himself.
Pencroff and Herbert walked towards the west, they looked at the snowcapped mountain, which rose six or seven miles away. They saw a forest. Then from the edge of this forest to the coast stretched a plateau.
– Are we upon an island? – muttered the sailor.
– It is big enough, – said the boy.
– An island’s an island, – said Pencroff.
Chapter V
Pencroff made the Chimneys habitable. One narrow, winding passage was arranged to carry out the smoke and to quicken the draught of the fire. The Chimneys were divided into three or four chambers. They were dry, and they could stand up in them. The floor was covered with sand. Herbert and Pencroff chatted together.
– Perhaps, – said the boy, – our companions found a better place than ours.
– It is possible, – answered the sailor, – but don’t stop. Better have two houses than none at all!
– Oh, – said Herbert, – if they can only find Mr. Smith, and bring him back with them!
– Yes, – murmured Pencroff. – He was a good man.
– Was! – said Herbert. – Do you think we will not see him again?
– Never! – replied the sailor.
The work was rapidly accomplished, Pencroff was satisfied.
– Now, – said he, – our friends may return, and they will find a good shelter.
It was 5 o’clock when they returned again to the Chimneys. Towards 6 o’clock, Herbert, who was walking upon the shore, announced the return of Neb and of Gideon Spilett. They came back alone. The sailor was right: they could not find the engineer.
The reporter seated himself upon a rock. He was tired and very hungry, he was unable to utter a word. Neb’s eyes showed that he was weeping and lost all hope.
The reporter told about their search. Neb and he followed the coast for more than eight miles. The shore was deserted. Not a trace upon the sand, not a footprint, was upon the shore.
At that moment Neb raised his head, and exclaimed:
– No, he is not dead! It is impossible!
Herbert ran to him and cried:
– Neb, we will find him; God will give him back to us; but please eat something.
And the lad offered the poor servant some shell-fish. But Neb refused them. He wished no longer to live.
As to Gideon Spilett, he devoured the mollusks, and then laid down upon the sand at the foot of a rock. He was exhausted, but calm. Herbert took his hand.
– Mr. Spilett, – said he, – we have discovered a shelter where you will be more comfortable. The night is coming on; so come and rest there. Tomorrow we will see.
The reporter rose, and proceeded towards the Chimneys.
Pencroff took the match and made some fire. Herbert brought two dozen eggs and the reporter watched them. Did Cyrus still live? If alive, where was he?
In a few minutes the food was ready, and the sailor invited the reporter to eat. This was the first meal of the castaways upon this unknown coast. The eggs were excellent.
Thus passed the 25th of March. The reporter retired to a dark corner. Herbert fell asleep at once. The sailor passed the night by the fire. Neb wandered upon the sands. He was calling his master.