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The Essential Jules Verne: 29 Greatest Sci-Fi & Adventure Books in One Edition. Jules VerneЧитать онлайн книгу.

The Essential Jules Verne: 29 Greatest Sci-Fi & Adventure Books in One Edition - Jules Verne


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the doctor, mentally.

      In the mean while, Kennedy and Joe had strolled away a few paces, looking up a proper spot for the grave. The heat was extreme in this ravine, shut in as it was like a sort of furnace. The noonday sun poured down its rays perpendicularly into it.

      The first thing to be done was to clear the surface of the fragments of rock that encumbered it, and then a quite deep grave had to be dug, so that the wild animals should not be able to disinter the corpse.

      The body of the martyred missionary was then solemnly placed in it. The earth was thrown in over his remains, and above it masses of rock were deposited, in rude resemblance to a tomb.

      The doctor, however, remained motionless, and lost in his reflections. He did not even heed the call of his companions, nor did he return with them to seek a shelter from the heat of the day.

      “What are you thinking about, doctor?” asked Kennedy.

      “About a singular freak of Nature, a curious effect of chance. Do you know, now, in what kind of soil that man of self-denial, that poor one in spirit, has just been buried?”

      “No! what do you mean, doctor?”

      “That priest, who took the oath of perpetual poverty, now reposes in a gold-mine!”

      “A gold-mine!” exclaimed Kennedy and Joe in one breath.

      “Yes, a gold-mine,” said the doctor, quietly. “Those blocks which you are trampling under foot, like worthless stones, contain gold-ore of great purity.”

      “Impossible! impossible!” repeated Joe.

      “You would not have to look long among those fissures of slaty schist without finding peptites of considerable value.”

      Joe at once rushed like a crazy man among the scattered fragments, and Kennedy was not long in following his example.

      “Keep cool, Joe,” said his master.

      “Why, doctor, you speak of the thing quite at your ease.”

      “What! a philosopher of your mettle—”

      “Ah, master, no philosophy holds good in this case!”

      “Come! come! Let us reflect a little. What good would all this wealth do you? We cannot carry any of it away with us.”

      “We can’t take any of it with us, indeed?”

      “It’s rather too heavy for our car! I even hesitated to tell you any thing about it, for fear of exciting your regret!”

      “What!” said Joe, again, “abandon these treasures —a fortune for us!—really for us—our own—leave it behind!”

      “Take care, my friend! Would you yield to the thirst for gold? Has not this dead man whom you have just helped to bury, taught you the vanity of human affairs?”

      “All that is true,” replied Joe, “but gold! Mr. Kennedy, won’t you help to gather up a trifle of all these millions?”

      “What could we do with them, Joe?” said the hunter, unable to repress a smile. “We did not come hither in search of fortune, and we cannot take one home with us.”

      “The millions are rather heavy, you know,” resumed the doctor, “and cannot very easily be put into one’s pocket.”

      “But, at least,” said Joe, driven to his last defences, “couldn’t we take some of that ore for ballast, instead of sand?”

      “Very good! I consent,” said the doctor, “but you must not make too many wry faces when we come to throw some thousands of crowns’ worth overboard.”

      “Thousands of crowns!” echoed Joe; “is it possible that there is so much gold in them, and that all this is the same?”

      “Yes, my friend, this is a reservoir in which Nature has been heaping up her wealth for centuries! There is enough here to enrich whole nations! An Australia and a California both together in the midst of the wilderness!”

      “And the whole of it is to remain useless!”

      “Perhaps! but at all events, here’s what I’ll do to console you.”

      “That would be rather difficult to do!” said Joe, with a contrite air.

      “Listen! I will take the exact bearings of this spot, and give them to you, so that, upon your return to England, you can tell our countrymen about it, and let them have a share, if you think that so much gold would make them happy.”

      “Ah! master, I give up; I see that you are right, and that there is nothing else to be done. Let us fill our car with the precious mineral, and what remains at the end of the trip will be so much made.”

      And Joe went to work. He did so, too, with all his might, and soon had collected more than a thousand pieces of quartz, which contained gold enclosed as though in an extremely hard crystal casket.

      The doctor watched him with a smile; and, while Joe went on, he took the bearings, and found that the missionary’s grave lay in twenty-two degrees twenty-three minutes east longitude, and four degrees fifty-five minutes north latitude.

      Then, casting one glance at the swelling of the soil, beneath which the body of the poor Frenchman reposed, he went back to his car.

      He would have erected a plain, rude cross over the tomb, left solitary thus in the midst of the African deserts, but not a tree was to be seen in the environs.

      “God will recognize it!” said Kennedy.

      An anxiety of another sort now began to steal over the doctor’s mind. He would have given much of the gold before him for a little water—for he had to replace what had been thrown overboard when the negro was carried up into the air. But it was impossible to find it in these arid regions; and this reflection gave him great uneasiness. He had to feed his cylinder continually; and he even began to find that he had not enough to quench the thirst of his party. Therefore he determined to lose no opportunity of replenishing his supply.

      Upon getting back to the car, he found it burdened with the quartz-blocks that Joe’s greed had heaped in it. He got in, however, without saying any thing. Kennedy took his customary place, and Joe followed, but not without casting a covetous glance at the treasures in the ravine.

      The doctor rekindled the light in the cylinder; the spiral became heated; the current of hydrogen came in a few minutes, and the gas dilated; but the balloon did not stir an inch.

      Joe looked on uneasily, but kept silent.

      “Joe!” said the doctor.

      Joe made no reply.

      “Joe! Don’t you hear me?”

      Joe made a sign that he heard; but he would not understand.

      “Do me the kindness to throw out some of that quartz!”

      “But, doctor, you gave me leave—”

      “I gave you leave to replace the ballast; that was all!”

      “But—”

      “Do you want to stay forever in this desert?”

      Joe cast a despairing look at Kennedy; but the hunter put on the air of a man who could do nothing in the matter.

      “Well, Joe?”

      “Then your cylinder don’t work,” said the obstinate fellow.

      “My cylinder? It is lit, as you perceive. But the balloon will not rise until you have thrown off a little ballast.”

      Joe scratched his ear, picked up a piece of quartz, the smallest in the lot, weighed and reweighed it, and tossed it up and down in his hand. It was a fragment of about three or four pounds. At last he threw it out.

      But


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