登陆注册
20790500000021

第21章 Fiat Lux!

The Vorloper and his little band had been gone nine days.What couldhave delayed them?Had men or animals formed an insurmountable obstacle?Why their delay?Was it to be concluded that Michel Zorn and William Emery had been completely stopped?Their friends hardly dared think they might be lost altogether.

The dread,the alternate feelings of hope and fear felt hour to hour by the astronomers imprisoned on the Scorzef,may well be imagined.Their colleagues had been gone for nine days,when in six or at most in seven they should have arrived at their destination.They were active,brave,and devoted to the cause of science.The success of the whole enterprise depended on their reaching the Volquiria peak;they knew it:they must have neglected no means of success.They could not be to blame for the delay.So if after nine days no beacon blazed out from the summit of the Volquiria,they must be either dead or the prisoners of some wandering tribe.

Such were the depressing reflections,the painful conjectures,formed in the minds of Colonel Everest and his companions.How impatiently they waited for the sun to disappear below the horizon,so as to renew their nightly watch!How careful they were!

All their hopes were centred on the eyepiece of the telescope which was to announce the presence of the distant light:their whole lives concentrated on its field of view.The whole of 3rd March they wandered up and down the mountain hardly exchanging a word,all impressed with the same idea,and suffering as they had never suffered before.No,neither the excessive heat of the desert,nor the fatigues of a daily march under the rays of a tropical sun,nor the agonies of thirst,had reduced them to such distress.

They had finished the last of the ant-eater,and they were now reduced to the insufficient nourishment supplied by the ant-hill.

Night came at last:there was no moon,the sky was clear,and very favourable for taking observations,but not a gleam,could be seen on the Volquiria.Colonel Everest and Matthew Strux took it by turns to watch until dawn,but nothing was visible,and the sun soon made observations impossible.

There still seemed to be nothing to fear from the natives.The Makololos seemed determined to reduce the garrison by famine,and they could not fail to succeed.On 4th March the prisoners on the Scorzef suffered torments from hunger,and their only resource was to chew the few bulbous roots growing in the fissures of the rocks on the mountainside.

Prisoners!No,not prisoners—for they could not be prisoners while the steam launch lay at anchor in the little bay,and could,at aword,take them across the Ngami to a fertile country where there was no lack of game,fruit,or vegetables!They had often thought of sending the hunter to the north shore to hunt for food,but the attempt would be seen by the natives,and it would be risking the launch,and consequently the safety of them all,should any other tribes happen to bar that shore.So this proposal was rejected:they must all retreat or all stay together.As to leaving the Scorzef without completing their task,such a suggestion had never been made.They must wait until every chance of success had disappeared.It was only a question of patience.They would be patient.

Colonel Everest reminded his companions‘When Arago,Biot and Rodriguez,’when they went to extend the meridian of Dunkirk to the Isle of Ivica,these savants were almost in a situation similar to ours.The question was how to connect the island with the Spanish coast by a triangle whose sides exceeded a hundred and twenty miles in length.The astronomer Rodriguez took up his lodging in one of the peaks on the island and kept the lamps alight,while the French savants lived under a tent more than a hundred miles away in the middle of the Las Palmas desert.‘For sixty nights Arago and Biot watched for the light,whose bearings they were anxious to ascertain.Discouraged,they were about to give up when,on the sixty-first night,a speck of light,which only its fixity kept from being mistaken for a star of the sixth magnitude,could be seen in the field of the telescope.Wait,for sixty-one nights!Well,gentlemen,what two French astronomers have done in the cause of science,cannot English and Russian astronomers do?’

The answer of the savants was a cheer;and yet they might have told Colonel Everest that neither Arago nor Biot was starving during their weary stay in the Las Palmas desert.

There was a stir that day among the Makololos encamped at the foot of the Scorzef,and their frequent coming and going made the bushman uneasy.Were they about to renew their assault on the mountain that night,or were they about to raise the siege?

Mokoum,after watching them attentively,came to the conclusion that some hostile movement was intended.The Makololos were getting their weapons ready.The women and children who had joined them had left the camp and were making for the east,under the escort of several guides.So it was quite possible that the besiegers were about to make a last attempt to carry the fortress before finally retreating to their capital,Makete.

The bushman warned the Europeans,who decided to keep a stricter watch all night,and to keep their arms in readiness.The number of assailants must be great;nothing could prevent several hundreds from attacking the sides of the Scorzef at once;the broken wall round the fort would easily admit a band of natives.So it seemed prudent to Colonel Everest to make arrangements in case they should have to retreat,and to abandon their station for a time.The steam launch was kept ready to get under weigh at a moment’s notice,and her engineer received orders to keep steam up.But he was to wait till sunset,so that the natives might not realise the existence of the steam launch on those waters.

The evening meal consisted of nuts and roots—very poor food for men on the eve of fighting for their lives.But they were determined.They were above all weakness and they waited fearlessly for the moment to come.

About six in the evening,when it became dark with the rapidity peculiar to inter-tropical regions,the engineer crept down the slopes of the Scorzef and set about getting up steam.It need not be said that Colonel Everest intended to retreat only if it became impossible to stay.It grieved him to abandon his observatory,especially at night,for at any moment Emery and Zorn might light their beacon on the Volquiria peak.

The other seamen were posted at the foot of the outer wall with orders to defend it to the last.Their arms were all ready,the mitrailleuse loaded and,with an ample supply of cartridges beside it,it projected its formidable barrels through the embrasure.They waited for several hours.

The Colonel and the Russian,posted in the narrow tower,and mounting guard by turns,kept continual watch on the summit of the peak visible in the telescope.The horizon kept dark,while the most beautiful constellations in the firmament were glittering above their heads.Not a breath stirred the air.This complete stillness of nature was very impressive.

Standing on a projecting piece of rock,the bushman was listening to the sounds rising from the plain.By degrees they became more distinct.Mokoum was right;the Makololos were getting ready to assault the Scorzef for the last time.

Until ten the assailants,did not stir.Their fires had been put out,and camp and plain were alike indistinguishable.All at once the bushman saw figures crawling along the sides of the mountain;the assailants were not more than a hundred yards from the terrace on which the fort stood.

‘Look out!Look out!’he cried.

The little garrison at once rushed forward,and began a wellsupported fire on the assailants.The Makololos replied by shouting their war-cry,and in spite of the incessant firing they continued to gain ground.By the flashes of musketry one could distinguish a swarm of natives,so dense indeed that all resistance seemed impossible.The bullets,not one of which was wasted,must have caused a frightful slaughter among them:scores of the Makololos fell,rolling over one another down the mountain.In the short intervals between the reports the besieged could hear them howling like wild beasts.But nothing stopped them.They still continued to climb in close order,never drawing a bow-they gave themselves no time for it-but determined to reach the summit of the Scorzef at any price.

Colonel Everest was fighting at the head of his men;his companions seconded him bravely,not even excepting Palander,who was handling a rifle for the first time in his life.Sir John was here at one moment,there at another,sometimes kneeling,sometimes lying down,firing at the enemy till his rifle became almost too hot to hold.As for the bushman,in this bloody struggle he had once more become the cool,patient hunter he was before.

The crowd of besiegers was rapidly occupying not only the southern face of the Scorzef,but all its side slopes,and notwithstanding the courage of the besieged,the sureness of their aim,and the rapidity of their fire,they could do nothing against the human torrent which was rising against them.If one native fell,there were twenty to take his place,and that was too much for a dozen Europeans.After fighting for half-an-hour Colonel Everest saw he would be outflanked.The bodies of the dead served as steps for the living flood of natives.Some of them made shields of the dead bodies,and thus protected climbed to the assault.All this,only momentarily seen by the flash of a rifle,was frightful and discouraging.The garrison knew well they had no quarter to expect from such enemies.It was an attack by wild beasts,these plunderers thirsting for blood,and worse than the most savage brutes of all Africa.Their ferocity even rivalled that of the tiger,which their continent does not boast.

At half-past ten the first of the natives reached the summit.The besieged dared not come to close quarters with them,and thus lose the advantage their arms gave them;so they sought shelter behind the wall.Fortunately they were all unhurt,for the Makololos had made no use of arrows or assegais.

‘Back!’the Colonel’s voice rose above the tumult of the fight.

And after a last volley the besieged,followed by their leader,retreated behind the walls of the fort.

Their withdrawal was followed by formidable shouts,and the natives at once appeared in front of the breach in the wall.

But suddenly a fearful sound,an immense rending noise,like the multiplied reports of an electric discharge,could be heard.It was the mitrailleuse operated by Sir John—those twenty-five barrels,reloaded auto-matically,covered with lead a surface of more than a hundred feet,on which the natives had crowded themselves.In an instant it was swept clear of every living enemy.The explosions were replied to by a tumult of yells,accompanied by a shower of arrows,which could do the besieged no harm.

‘It behaved well then,the darling,’the bushman commented;‘when you’re tired of playing a tune on it—’

But the mitrailleuse was silent.The Makololos had disappeared in search of cover from the shower of bullets;they had scattered to the sides of the fort,leaving the space in front of it covered with their dead.

During this moment’s respite what were Colenel Everest and Matthew Strux doing?They had gone back to their post in the tower,and there they were watching the Volquiria peak with their eyes glued to the telescope.Neither the yells nor the danger could move them;and when,after a short rest,the shouts of the Makololos told them the fight had recommenced,they took it in turn to stand by the precious instrument.

The struggle had broken out again.The mitrailleuse could not reach every native who appeared,howling his war-cry,before every gap in the wall.Yet the fight continued,hand to hand,for more than half-an-hour;the besieged,protected by their firearms,had received only a few scratches from the assegais.

It was at about half-past eleven when the struggle was at the hottest,amidst the din of the rifles and the yells of the natives,that Matthew Strux appeared before Colonel Everest;he seemed both delighted and scared—an arrow had gone through his hat and was quivering just above his head.

‘The beacon!The beacon!’—his eyes were sparkling with joy.

‘What!’exclaimed Colonel Everest,reloading his gun.

‘Yes,the beacon!’

‘You’ve seen it?’

‘Yes!’

The Colonel again fired his rifle,gave a shout of triumph,and rushed into the tower,followed by his intrepid comrade.

There he stooped down,his heart beating,to the eye-piece of the telescope and as he looked all his life seemed summed up in that moment.Yes,there was the beacon shining on the summit of the Volquiria!Yes!The last triangle had just found its apex!

It was wonderful to see the two savants at their work amid the uproar of the battle.The natives had at last forced their way through the wall,though the defenders disputed the ground step by step.The bullets,replied to the arrows of the Makololos,and the axe turned the thrust of the assegai;yet there were Colonel Everest and Matthew Strux bending over their instruments and noting down their observations.They made and corrected their calculations while Nicolas Palander,as impassive as ever,stood by and set down the results in his register.More than once an arrow flew over their heads and stuck in the tower wall,but still they kept their eyes on the Volquiria beacon,compared one instrument with the other,and verified the results.

Just as Matthew Strux had said‘One more observation’an enormous stone knocked the register out of Palander’s hands,struck one of the instruments,and smashed it.

But the observations had been completed!The bearings of the beacon had been calculated to the thousandth part of a second!

And now it was time to retreat so as to preserve the results of these glorious and wonderful labours.The natives were already in the casemate and might at any moment force their way into the tower.Colonel Everest and his companions once more seized their arms,while Palander grasped the precious register,and they retreated through the gap.There their companions were all assembled,some of them slightly wounded,ready to cover their retreat.

But just as they were about to go down the north side of the Scorzef—‘Our own signal!’cried Matthew Strux.

And the beacon light must be answered so that the men on the new station might ascertain the direction of the Scorzef,and no doubt they were anxiously waiting for it.

‘One effort more,’cried the Colonel.And while his friends drove the Makololos back,he entered the tower.This was a complicated construction of wood,and the timber of which it was made was so very dry that a spark would set it ablaze.The Colonel touched it off with some gunpowder;the wood began to crackle,and the Colonel,leaving the tower at once,rejoined his companions.

A few minutes later the Europeans climbed down the precipitous side of the Scorzef under a shower of arrows,letting down before them the mitrailleuse,which they would not abandon.Having once more repulsed the natives by their murderous fire,they reached the launch.

The engineer had obeyed orders and had got up steam.The hawser was cast off,the screw began to turn,and the Queen and Czar moved swiftly over the dark waters of the lake.Soon she was far enough out for the travellers to see the summit of the Scorzef.The tower was in a blaze,and its brilliant light must have been easily distinguished from the peak of the Volquiria.

The English and Russians saluted this gigantic torch with a loud cheer,as its flames were widely reflected on the lake.

William Emery and Michel Zorn would have nothing to complain of.

They had displayed a star,and they were answered by a sun.

同类推荐
  • 幻梦(百花小说)

    幻梦(百花小说)

    百花文学的源头当有二:“一是汉初司马迁的《史记》中的游侠、刺客列传;二是魏晋、六朝间盛行的‘杂记体’神异、志怪小说。”如果说先秦两汉乃至魏晋志怪,为武侠小说的产生构筑了坚实的基础,为之前奏;那么唐传奇在文学史上一领风骚时,武侠小说即真正开始萌芽。
  • 三言二拍初刻拍案惊奇

    三言二拍初刻拍案惊奇

    冯梦龙编的“三言”,是《喻世明言》《警世通言》《醒世恒言》三部小说集的总称。《喻世明言》亦称《古今小说》,但“古今小说”实为“三言”的通称。 “三言”每集40篇,共120篇。分别刊于天启元年(1621)前后、天启四年(1624)、七年(1623)。这些作品有的是辑录了宋元明以来的旧本,但一般都做了不同程度的修改;也有的是据文言笔记、传奇小说、戏曲、历史故事,乃至社会传闻再创作而成,故“三言”包容了旧本的汇辑和新著的创作,是我国白话短篇小说在说唱艺术的基础上,经过文人的整理加工到文人进行独立创作的开始。
  • 找奶娘

    找奶娘

    杨袭,女,1976年出生于黄河口,08年始在《大家》《作品》《黄河文学》《飞天》《山东文学》等文学杂志发表小说。
  • 六十七个词

    六十七个词

    《六十七个词》通过六十六个碎片化的词语,讲述了一个城市孤独男人锦一的爱情故事。他在自我幻觉与现实生活里徘徊,在自己的爱情记忆中寻找真相。最后,他意识到,不管自己多么用力地把想象的画面还原为现实,现实却依旧模糊。档他整理好记忆,却错愕地发现,记忆里只有一个女人的名字,就是邵娅,只有一个女人的身体,却是田小溪……作者运用了大量加法,把不同的人的人生经历放在同一个人身上,试图还原一个人的记忆真相。他甚至往真实的生活里加入大量幻觉,尝试以幻觉打败真相。作品以另类的写法阐述了模糊主义的观点,爱情只是一种想象。
  • 我终于赢了

    我终于赢了

    本书是作者近年来创作的闪小说精选,内容丰富,反映出了形形色色人员光怪陆离的生活,文章短小精悍,大多在500字之内,或讽刺,或幽默,或诙谐,或夸张,或辛辣,无不深刻,让人在笑中有所思,有所想,有所悟,大多数在公开报刊发表,并有不少荣获全国各种奖励。特别是李二娃系列闪小说,以一个普普通通农民工李二娃在城市的五光十色、光怪陆离的生活为题材,每题一个主题,突出一个“奇”字,既独立成篇,又浑然一体,诙谐、幽默、深刻,做到既好看好玩,又让人深思!
热门推荐
  • 奥术与神明

    奥术与神明

    神灵,只不过是卑微的人类所虚构出的、最为完美的假象,是所有可悲的、绝望的信念凝聚而成的虚伪,是向着不可能之奇迹的祈祷。我一直都是如此认为的。无论何时,无论何地,我都不会相信神灵的存在——而退一步讲,如果说“他”是存在的,那么我的命运,又作何解呢?
  • 只为途中与你相见:仓央嘉措传与诗全集

    只为途中与你相见:仓央嘉措传与诗全集

    他像西西弗斯一样,被无法抗拒的命运困锁着,被高高在上的诸神无休无止地惩罚着,他是黄金囚笼里最高贵的犯人。虽然有芸芸众生对他顶礼膜拜,却没有一个人怜悯地抛给他囚笼的钥匙,诸神把世界托付给了他,他却只想要回他自己,要回那个最真的自己。
  • 蒙台梭利育儿丛书:幼儿保健常识

    蒙台梭利育儿丛书:幼儿保健常识

    玛利亚·蒙台梭利,意大利第一位女医学博士,20世纪赢得世界公认的推进科学和人类进步的最伟大科学家之一,玛利亚·蒙台梭利育儿的思想是公认的当代最科学、是完整的育儿体系,在育儿史上的贡献举世瞩目,以她的思想与法则建立的指导中心,遍布世界各地,被誉为“帮助世界的人士”十二位杰出人物之一。
  • 总裁大人的超级保镖

    总裁大人的超级保镖

    他的存在让那些号称高手中的杀手闻风丧胆,他的霸气回归成为都市的热点,帝爷却放弃万贯财富而隐退都市,这是为什么?本是帝王的存在的他,难道在都市会风平浪静吗?
  • 女总裁的修仙大圣

    女总裁的修仙大圣

    重生在纨绔富二代身上的孙大圣,为了变强,修长生仙诀,练不老仙功。赖上美女总裁后,寻找一条通往金仙的通天大道,从此,逆天改命,春风得意......
  • 巴西集

    巴西集

    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。
  • 笑我疯癫惧我魔

    笑我疯癫惧我魔

    世人笑我疯癫惧我魔!不一样的武侠小说!不一样的恩怨情仇!用心感受,这里就是我们的世界!
  • 挑逗恶魔王子

    挑逗恶魔王子

    “你说你在心里装着我的同时还和六个女人搞暧昧?这不公平,我也要去找六个极品帅哥搞暧昧,然后再答应你!”“你可以试试看,我保证他们见不到明天的太阳!”这是怎么回事,她暗恋了六年的完美王子,居然主动接近她,还向她告白。可恶的是,她居然发现,这个人不仅仅是帅的爆头,幽默又冷酷,温柔又邪魅,她还出的去吗?
  • 新股民炒股一定要会算计

    新股民炒股一定要会算计

    新股民炒股一定要会算计新股民炒股一定要会算计新股民炒股一定要会算计新股民炒股一定要会算计新股民炒股一定要会算计新股民炒股一定要会算计新股民炒股一定要会算计新股民炒股一定要会算计
  • 多情是罪:霸道王爷摊上妖孽妃

    多情是罪:霸道王爷摊上妖孽妃

    她,号称死神之女,特工组最强悍特工,在一次执行任务中,心灰意冷之下自尽欲重生为妹妹报仇。结果······穿越了!!还能随便穿!可是。。。。能随便穿的代价就是。。。收了这只腹黑的货么?!某腹黑笑嘻嘻:“清清,我可没有你说的腹黑哦,人家可是很乖的呦。”边说边眨了眨无辜的“大眼”。“心口不一的家伙!你不腹黑那你脱我衣服干嘛?!”言沐清紧咬贝齿,提醒自己别沦陷其中。尉迟哲斜挑嘴角,在耳边低语:“放松,清宝贝,让我们好好享受这时光吧~”。说完便放下帘帐,与她陷入温柔乡···