登陆注册
5302100000044

第44章 BOOK II.(20)

CHAPTER X.

CHANGING LANDSCAPES.

On reaching the Callisto,Ayrault worked the lock he had had placed on the lower door,which,to avoid carrying a key,was opened by a combination.The car's interior was exactly as they had left it,and they were glad to be in it again.

"Now,"said Bearwarden,"we can have a sound and undisturbed sleep,which is what I want more than anything else.No prowlers can trouble us here,and we shall not need the protection-wires."They then opened a window in each side--for the large glass plates,admitting the sun when closed,made the Callisto rather warm--and placed a stout wire netting within them to keep out birds and bats,and then,though it was but little past noon,got into their comfortable beds and slept nine hours at a stretch.

Their strong metal house was securely at rest,receiving the sunlight and shedding the rain and dew as it might have done on earth.No winds or storms,lightnings or floods,could trouble it,while the multiformed monsters of antiquity and mythology restored in life,with which the terrestrials had been thrown into such close contact,roamed about its polished walls.Not even the fiercest could affect them,and they would but see themselves reflected in any vain assaults.The domed symmetrical cylinder stood there as a monument to human ingenuity and skill,and the travellers'last thought as they fell asleep was,"Man is really lord of creation."The following day at about noon they awoke,and had a bath in the warm pool.They saw the armoured mass of the great ant evidently undisturbed,while the bodies of its victims were already shining skeletons,and raised a small cairn of stones in memory of the struggle they had had there.

"We should name this place Kentucky,"said Bearwarden,"for it is indeed a dark and bloody ground,"and,seeing the aptness of the appellation,they entered it so on their charts.While Ayrault got the batteries in shape for resuming work.Bearwarden prepared a substantial breakfast.This consisted of oatmeal and cream kept hermetically sealed in glass,a dish of roast grouse,coffee,pilot bread,a bottle of Sauterne,and another of Rhine wine.

"This is the last meal we shall take hereabouts,"said their cook,as they plied their knives and forks beneath the trees,"so here is a toast to our adventures,and to all the game we have killed."They drained their glasses in drinking this,after which Bearwarden regaled them with the latest concert-hall song which he had at his tongue's end.

About an hour before dark they re-entered their projectile,and,as a mark of respect to their little ship,named the great branch of the continent on which they had alighted Callisto Point.They then got under way.The batteries had to develop almost their maximum power to overcome Jupiter's attraction;but they were equal to the task,and the Callisto was soon in the air.

Directing their apergy to the mountains towards the interior of the continent,and applying repulsion to any ridge or hill over which they passed,thereby easing the work of the batteries engaged in supporting the Callisto,they were soon sweeping along at seventy-five to one hundred miles an hour.By keeping the projectile just strongly enough charged to neutralize gravitation,they remained for the most part within two hundred feet of the ground,seldom rising to an altitude of more than a mile,and were therefore able to keep the windows at the sides open and so obtain an unobstructed view.If,however,at any time they felt oppressed by Jupiter's high barometric pressure,and preferred the terrestrial conditions,they had but to rise till the barometer fell to thirty.Then,if an object of interest recalled them to sea-level,they could keep the Callisto's inside pressure at what they found on the Jovian mountains,by screwing up the windows.On account of the distance of sixty-four thousand miles from Jupiter's equator to the pole,they calculated that going at the speed of a hundred miles an hour,night and day,it would take them twenty-five terrestrial days to reach the pole even from latitude two degrees at which they started.But they knew that,if pressed for time,they could rise above the limits of the atmosphere,and move with planetary speed;while,if they wished a still easier method of pursuing their observation,they had but to remain poised between the sun and Jupiter,beyond the latter's upper air,and photograph or map it as it revolved before them.

By sunset they had gone a hundred miles.Wishing to push along,they closed the windows,rose higher to avoid any mountain-tops that might be invisible in the moonlight,and increased their speed.The air made a gentle humming sound as they shot through it,and towards morning they saw several bright points of light in which they recognized,by the aid of their glasses,sheets of flame and torrents of molten glowing lava,bursting at intervals or pouring steadily from several volcanoes.From this they concluded they were again near an ocean,since volcanoes need the presence of a large body of water to provide steam for their eruptions.

With the rising sun they found the scene of the day before entirely changed.They were over the shore of a vast ocean that extended to the left as far as they could see,for the range of vision often exceeded the power of sight.The coast-line ran almost due north and south,while the volcanoes that dotted it,and that had been luminous during the night,now revealed their nature only by lines of smoke and vapours.They were struck by the boldness and abruptness of the scenery.The mountains and cliffs had been but little cut down by water and frost action,and seemed in the full vigour of their youth,which was what the travellers had a right to expect on a globe that was still cooling and shrinking,and consequently throwing up ridges in the shape of mountains far more rapidly than a planet as matured and quiescent as the earth.The absence of lakes also showed them that there had been no Glacial period,in the latitudes they were crossing,for a very long time.

同类推荐
  • 禅林疏语考证

    禅林疏语考证

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 分别缘起初胜法门经

    分别缘起初胜法门经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 炎徼纪闻

    炎徼纪闻

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 三异笔谈

    三异笔谈

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 洞玄灵宝道学科仪

    洞玄灵宝道学科仪

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 异界编年纪

    异界编年纪

    不之何故,得到一次前往异世界的机会,不过既然机会上门,那么自然就不能错过,在异世界过上一段精彩的人生是不错的选择。不过到底是谁给予的这个机会呢!——炎表示疑惑。
  • 刀剑吟春秋

    刀剑吟春秋

    醉酒提刀,自此血色染风流。折笔狂歌,青衣敢令江湖客。马踏春秋,劣马当知为何死?剑起昆仑,万千风流藏何处?世道破军最无情,情仇止于枪断处。五十年庙算,敌不过麦酒一壶。八万里山河,吾寸土不让。
  • 慈悲地藏菩萨忏法

    慈悲地藏菩萨忏法

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 茅台故事365天

    茅台故事365天

    本书艺术地记录了茅台酒的千年史,从不同的侧面,以讲述故事的方式全维呈现了茅台酒的成长和发展。所收故事成稿以三种方式构成:一是作家自己的故事,二是从公开征集的茅台酒故事中择优选取的别人的故事,三是从茅台酒集团公司获取和从网络上搜索到的与茅台酒相关的民间传说、外交轶闻等历史的故事。
  • 冰山王子遇上冷酷女王

    冰山王子遇上冷酷女王

    女帝千羽冰寒,千羽家族遗失的小姐,冰冷无情,高智商,高情商,护短,修灵鬼才都是她的代名词,却是爱情白痴。帝王帝少瞳,冷酷无双,杀伐果断,高智商,高情商,天才都是属于他的代名词,却也是爱情白痴。两座冰山撞在一起,会擦出怎样的火花?温柔体贴,玩劣不羁,冰冷无双…冰寒会何去何从?
  • 无量钱途

    无量钱途

    阵斩铜兄铜弟、手刃钢铁巨人、袭杀原油巨鳄、打劫金融寡头、抢掠农牧酋长、横扫货币联盟!一路奋进一路歌,少年壮志不言愁;步步艰难疑无路,硬闯出无量钱途!
  • 锟铻记

    锟铻记

    一次失误使备受瞩目的雕刻师成为了等死的阶下囚;一场意外,使富可敌国的陆家一夜之间被灭满门;一场蓄谋已久的阴谋悄然来临......
  • 杨灼灼成长记

    杨灼灼成长记

    我爱你的时候是真的,不爱你的时候也是真的,从来没有过背叛,也没有过虚情假意。
  • 男人一生要做的50件事

    男人一生要做的50件事

    如果你现在还没有生活的目标,还不确定自己的责任所在,那就拿出纸写下你的梦想和计划,为自己的人生列出一份清单,然后照着这份清单去努力地实现自己的梦想、完成自己设定的计划。
  • 来不及对你说

    来不及对你说

    对不起!或许我这辈子都来不及对你说“我爱你”