登陆注册
20060000000042

第42章 CHAPTER XVI(1)

A FINAL THREAT

ON that day, in the colliery of New Aberfoyle, work was going on in the usual regular way. In the distance could be heard the crash of great charges of dynamite, by which the carboniferous rocks were blasted.

Here masses of coal were loosened by pick-ax and crowbar; there the perforating machines, with their harsh grating, bored through the masses of sandstone and schist.

Hollow, cavernous noises resounded on all sides.

Draughts of air rushed along the ventilating galleries, and the wooden swing-doors slammed beneath their violent gusts.

In the lower tunnels, trains of trucks kept passing along at the rate of fifteen miles an hour, while at their approach electric bells warned the workmen to cower down in the refuge places.

Lifts went incessantly up and down, worked by powerful engines on the surface of the soil. Coal Town was throughout brilliantly lighted by the electric lamps at full power.

Mining operations were being carried on with the greatest activity; coal was being piled incessantly into the trucks, which went in hundreds to empty themselves into the corves at the bottom of the shaft.

While parties of miners who had labored during the night were taking needful rest, the others worked without wasting an hour.

Old Simon Ford and Madge, having finished their dinner, were resting at the door of their cottage. Simon smoked a good pipe of tobacco, and from time to time the old couple spoke of Nell, of their boy, of Mr. Starr, and wondered how they liked their trip to the surface of the earth. Where would they be now? What would they be doing?

How could they stay so long away from the mine without feeling homesick?

Just then a terrific roaring noise was heard. It was like the sound of a mighty cataract rushing down into the mine. The old people rose hastily.

They perceived at once that the waters of Loch Malcolm were rising.

A great wave, unfurling like a billow, swept up the bank and broke against the walls of the cottage. Simon caught his wife in his arms, and carried her to the upper part of their dwelling.

At the same moment, cries arose from all parts of Coal Town, which was threatened by a sudden inundation. The inhabitants fled for safety to the top of the schist rocks bordering the lake; terror spread in all directions; whole families in frantic haste rushed towards the tunnel in order to reach the upper regions of the pit.

It was feared that the sea had burst into the colliery, for its galleries and passages penetrated as far as the Caledonian Canal. In that case the entire excavation, vast as it was, would be completely flooded.

Not a single inhabitant of New Aberfoyle would escape death.

But when the foremost fugitives reached the entrance to the tunnel, they encountered Simon Ford, who had quitted his cottage.

"Stop, my friends, stop!" shouted the old man; "if our town is to be overwhelmed, the floods will rush faster than you can; no one can possibly escape. But see! the waters are rising no further! it appears to me the danger is over."

"And our comrades at the far end of the works--what about them?" cried some of the miners.

"There is nothing to fear for them," replied Simon; "they are working on a higher level than the bed of the loch."

It was soon evident that the old man was in the right.

The sudden influx of water had rushed to the very lowest bed of the vast mine, and its only ultimate effect was to raise the level of Loch Malcolm a few feet. Coal Town was uninjured, and it was reasonable to hope that no one had perished in the flood of water which had descended to the depths of the mine never yet penetrated by the workmen.

Simon and his men could not decide whether this inundation was owing to the overflow of a subterranean sheet of water penetrating fissures in the solid rock, or to some underground torrent breaking through its worn bed, and precipitating itself to the lowest level of the mine.

But that very same evening they knew what to think about it, for the local papers published an account of the marvelous phenomenon which Loch Katrine had exhibited.

The surprising news was soon after confirmed by the four travelers, who, returning with all possible speed to the cottage, learned with extreme satisfaction that no serious damage was done in New Aberfoyle.

The bed of Loch Katrine had fairly given way. The waters had suddenly broken through by an enormous fissure into the mine beneath.

Of Sir Walter Scott's favorite loch there was not left enough to wet the pretty foot of the Lady of the Lake; all that remained was a pond of a few acres at the further extremity.

This singular event made a profound sensation in the country.

It was a thing unheard of that a lake should in the space of a few minutes empty itself, and disappear into the bowels of the earth.

There was nothing for it but to erase Loch Katrine from the map of Scotland until (by public subscription) it could be refilled, care being of course taken, in the first place, to stop the rent up tight.

This catastrophe would have been the death of Sir Walter Scott, had he still been in the world.

The accident was explicable when it was ascertained that, between the bed of the lake and the vast cavity beneath, the geological strata had become reduced to a thin layer, incapable of longer sustaining the weight of water.

Now, although to most people this event seemed plainly due to natural causes, yet to James Starr and his friends, Simon and Harry Ford, the question constantly recurred, was it not rather to be attributed to malevolence?

Uneasy suspicions continually harassed their minds.

Was their evil genius about to renew his persecution of those who ventured to work this rich mine?

At the cottage, some days later, James Starr thus discussed the matter with the old man and his son: "Well, Simon," said he, "to my thinking we must class this circumstance with the others for which we still seek elucidation, although it is no doubt possible to explain it by natural causes."

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 金刚顶瑜伽经文殊师利菩萨仪轨

    金刚顶瑜伽经文殊师利菩萨仪轨

    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。
  • 暗屋

    暗屋

    我躲在一个黑屋子里面,幽暗昏红的灯光,让我始终觉得有些压抑。有一个人,他是我的学生,今天我才发现,她也住在这里。可是她是怎么住进来的呢?当我发现忽然我的床变成了上下铺时,才发现,我的这个学生睡在了我的上铺。她很害怕,蜷缩在被窝里,幽暗的灯光,让我看不清她的脸庞,只看出她那惊恐的眼神。她看到我一把抓住我,撞进我的怀里,口中喃喃道:“我害怕,我害怕……”“别怕,别怕……”“咚咚咚……”忽然外面传来敲门声。我失声叫道:“啊……”我那个学生却坐起来,拍了拍我的肩膀:“老师别怕……”而我分明看到外面一个奇形怪状的,形似怪物般的身影,露出那凶恶,有些空洞的眼神,透过窗缝一边敲打,一边向里望着……
  • 鸿鹄生活

    鸿鹄生活

    个人散文集,创作之中,可堪指点一二,涵盖哲学、人生多方面话题。
  • 九焱煅魂

    九焱煅魂

    神魂大陆,每个人天生只有一个灵魂。人们就靠修炼魂之力并将其修至极致,才能在这片弱肉强食的大陆上生存。大唐帝国的小皇子天生封穴锁魂,面对残酷大唐皇室残酷的择君规则,面对未来他将如何作择?是远躲山村做一个无忧无虑的野子?是浑浑噩噩做一个外强内弱的纨绔世子?还是,强突桎梏逆破天道做世之巅峰?修魂之路,逆天之道,重生之灵,逍遥之生!本故事纯属虚构,如有雷同,纯属巧合!
  • 画江湖之鬼王

    画江湖之鬼王

    《不良人》是北京若森数字科技有限公司继动画连续剧《侠岚》在获取了巨大的市场成功之后推出的又一部大型三维成人武侠动画连续剧。这部动画巨制以一种前所未有的方式描述了交织着战乱与黑暗的五代十国时期,黄巢起义、朱温篡位、李氏族诛、友珪弑父、沙陀争霸等著名的历史事件和民间传说贯穿于其中。几位主角同群雄侠隐仗剑高歌江湖,于历史漩涡中的乱世里经历了青春与爱情、背叛与忠诚的沧桑变幻、悲喜轮回,最终成为了终结这个时代、开创新纪元的决定性力量,也堪称是一段浪漫辉煌的中国式武侠历史传奇。《畫江湖之鬼王》是《不良人》续集。
  • 心的历险

    心的历险

    地震中,昏倒的两个少女,在不一般的世界里,开始了她们的历险……只有勇往直前!
  • 英雄蜕变

    英雄蜕变

    陈云飞,一个在校园里的男生,如何变得如此暴力?血腥?是什么改变了他?一个普通人走向世界巅峰路上的辛酸,一个普通人怎么能让世界风起云涌。
  • 贤婿

    贤婿

    简介:前世的左墨享尽荣华,阅尽富贵,唯独生命短暂难逃病魔的侵袭,钱财再无力!本已一切皆已经烟消云散,但左墨醒来之时却发现老天重新给了自己一段生命。只是不等他欣喜欲狂,接踵而来的信息让他苦笑不已。他不再叫左墨,而是叫韩宗元,身份是柳家赘婿,一个在户籍上处在社会最底层的赘婿!
  • 势均力敌的爱情

    势均力敌的爱情

    在姜妍的爱情观里,爱情从来都不是敌强我弱祈求式的,也不是敌弱我强强取式的,而是应当势均力敌。
  • 人心不古

    人心不古

    做过县重点中学校长的贺世普退休后,被贺家湾丰寸村主任隆重地请回老家,担任矛盾纠纷调解小组组长。贺世普一心想把现代法制观念引入村民心中,让村民懂法、守法并自觉遵法守纪,减少纠纷。可在自己小姨妹因家暴喝农药自尽后,他想依照法律,把小姨妹的丈夫、自己的远房兄弟、邻居贺世国送进监狱,却遭到了来自村庄“就活人不就死人”的习惯法的阻挠,最后弄得自己十分尴尬。然后,他又遇到了一桩涉及自己的建房纠纷。贺世国在建房时,将二层楼房建成三层,并且还要在上面盖人字形的屋顶。这样严重影响了贺世普房屋的采光。贺世普拿起了法律武器维权,将贺世国告上法庭。官司虽然打赢了,贺世普却被村人普遍疏远,最后不得不离开村庄……