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THE MYSTERIOUS ISLAND. Jules VerneЧитать онлайн книгу.

THE MYSTERIOUS ISLAND - Jules Verne


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is easier, Neb,” replied Herbert. “We have only to turn the turtle on its back, and it cannot possibly get away. Take your spear and do as I do.”

      The reptile, aware of danger, had retired between its carapace and plastron. They no longer saw its head or feet, and it was motionless as a rock.

      Herbert and Neb then drove their sticks underneath the animal, and by their united efforts managed without difficulty to turn it on its back. The turtle, which was three feet in length, would have weighed at least four hundred pounds.

      “Capital!” cried Neb; “this is something which will rejoice friend Pencroft’s heart.”

      In fact, the heart of friend Pencroft could not fail to be rejoiced, for the flesh of the turtle, which feeds on wrack-grass, is extremely savory. At this moment the creature’s head could be seen, which was small, flat, but widened behind by the large temporal fossae hidden under the long roof.

      “And now, what shall we do with our prize?” said Neb. “We can’t drag it to Granite House!”

      “Leave it here, since it cannot turn over,” replied Herbert, “and we will come back with the cart to fetch it.”

      “That is the best plan.”

      However, for greater precaution, Herbert took the trouble, which Neb deemed superfluous, to wedge up the animal with great stones; after which the two hunters returned to Granite House, following the beach, which the tide had left uncovered. Herbert, wishing to surprise Pencroft, said nothing about the “superb specimen of a chelonian” which they had turned over on the sand; but, two hours later, he and Neb returned with the cart to the place where they had left it. The “superb specimen of a chelonian” was no longer there!

      Neb and Herbert stared at each other first; then they stared about them. It was just at this spot that the turtle had been left. The lad even found the stones which he had used, and therefore he was certain of not being mistaken.

      “Well!” said Neb, “these beasts can turn themselves over, then?”

      “It appears so,” replied Herbert, who could not understand it at all, and was gazing at the stones scattered on the sand.

      “Well, Pencroft will be disgusted!”

      “And Captain Harding will perhaps be very perplexed how to explain this disappearance,” thought Herbert.

      “Look here,” said Neb, who wished to hide his ill-luck, “we won’t speak about it.”

      “On the contrary, Neb, we must speak about it,” replied Herbert.

      And the two, taking the cart, which there was now no use for, returned to Granite House.

      Arrived at the dockyard, where the engineer and the sailor were working together, Herbert recounted what had happened.

      “Oh! the stupids!” cried the sailor, “to have let at least fifty meals escape!”

      “But, Pencroft,” replied Neb, “it wasn’t our fault that the beast got away; as I tell you, we had turned it over on its back!”

      “Then you didn’t turn it over enough!” returned the obstinate sailor.

      “Not enough!” cried Herbert.

      And he told how he had taken care to wedge up the turtle with stones.

      “It is a miracle, then!” replied Pencroft.

      “I thought, captain,” said Herbert, “that turtles, once placed on their backs, could not regain their feet, especially when they are of a large size?’

      “That is true, my boy,” replied Cyrus Harding.

      “Then how did it manage?”

      “At what distance from the sea did you leave this turtle?” asked the engineer, who, having suspended his work, was reflecting on this incident.

      “Fifteen feet at the most,” replied Herbert.

      “And the tide was low at the time?”

      “Yes, captain.”

      “Well,” replied the engineer, “what the turtle could not do on the sand it might have been able to do in the water. It turned over when the tide overtook it, and then quietly returned to the deep sea.”

      “Oh! what stupids we were!” cried Neb.

      “That is precisely what I had the honor of telling you before!” returned the sailor.

      Cyrus Harding had given this explanation, which, no doubt, was admissible. But was he himself convinced of the accuracy of this explanation? It cannot be said that he was.

      Table of Contents

      On the 9th of October the bark canoe was entirely finished. Pencroft had kept his promise, and a light boat, the shell of which was joined together by the flexible twigs of the crejimba, had been constructed in five days. A seat in the stern, a second seat in the middle to preserve the equilibrium, a third seat in the bows, rowlocks for the two oars, a scull to steer with, completed the little craft, which was twelve feet long, and did not weigh more than two hundred pounds. The operation of launching it was extremely simple. The canoe was carried to the beach and laid on the sand before Granite House, and the rising tide floated it. Pencroft, who leaped in directly, maneuvered it with the scull and declared it to be just the thing for the purpose to which they wished to put it.

      “Hurrah!” cried the sailor, who did not disdain to celebrate thus his own triumph. “With this we could go round—”

      “The world?” asked Gideon Spilett.

      “No, the island. Some stones for ballast, a mast and a sail, which the captain will make for us some day, and we shall go splendidly! Well, captain—and you, Mr. Spilett; and you, Herbert; and you, Neb—aren’t you coming to try our new vessel? Come along! we must see if it will carry all five of us!”

      This was certainly a trial which ought to be made. Pencroft soon brought the canoe to the shore by a narrow passage among the rocks, and it was agreed that they should make a trial of the boat that day by following the shore as far as the first point at which the rocks of the south ended.

      As they embarked, Neb cried,—

      “But your boat leaks rather, Pencroft.”

      “That’s nothing, Neb,” replied the sailor; “the wood will get seasoned. In two days there won’t be a single leak, and our boat will have no more water in her than there is in the stomach of a drunkard. Jump in!”

      They were soon all seated, and Pencroft shoved off. The weather was magnificent, the sea as calm as if its waters were contained within the narrow limits of a lake. Thus the boat could proceed with as much security as if it was ascending the tranquil current of the Mercy.

      Neb took one of the oars, Herbert the other, and Pencroft remained in the stern in order to use the scull.

      The sailor first crossed the channel, and steered close to the southern point of the islet. A light breeze blew from the south. No roughness was found either in the channel or the green sea. A long swell, which the canoe scarcely felt, as it was heavily laden, rolled regularly over the surface of the water. They pulled out about half a mile distant from the shore, that they might have a good view of Mount Franklin.

      Pencroft afterwards returned towards the mouth of the river. The boat then skirted the shore, which, extending to the extreme point, hid all Tadorn’s Fens.

      This point, of which the distance was increased by the irregularity of the coast, was nearly three miles from the Mercy. The settlers resolved to go to its extremity, and only go beyond it as much as was necessary to


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