登陆注册
15481000000001

第1章

Part 1 - Dropped from the Clouds

"Are we rising again?" "No. On the contrary." "Are we descending?" "Worse than that, captain! we are falling!" "For Heaven's sake heave out the ballast!" "There! the last sack is empty!" "Does the balloon rise?" "No!" "I hear a noise like the dashing of waves. The sea is below the car! It cannot be more than 500 feet from us!" "Overboard with every weight! ...everything!"

Such were the loud and startling words which resounded through the air, above the vast watery desert of the Pacific, about four o'clock in the evening of the 23rd of March, 1865.

Few can possibly have forgotten the terrible storm from the northeast, in the middle of the equinox of that year. The tempest raged without intermission from the 18th to the 26th of March. Its ravages were terrible in America, Europe, and Asia, covering a distance of eighteen hundred miles, and extending obliquely to the equator from the thirty-fifth north parallel to the fortieth south parallel. Towns were overthrown, forests uprooted, coasts devastated by the mountains of water which were precipitated on them, vessels cast on the shore, which the published accounts numbered by hundreds, whole districts leveled by waterspouts which destroyed everything they passed over, several thousand people crushed on land or drowned at sea; such were the traces of its fury, left by this devastating tempest. It surpassed in disasters those which so frightfully ravaged Havana and Guadalupe, one on the 25th of October, 1810, the other on the 26th of July, 1825.

But while so many catastrophes were taking place on land and at sea, a drama not less exciting was being enacted in the agitated air.

In fact, a balloon, as a ball might be carried on the summit of a waterspout, had been taken into the circling movement of a column of air and had traversed space at the rate of ninety miles an hour, turning round and round as if seized by some aerial maelstrom.

Beneath the lower point of the balloon swung a car, containing five passengers, scarcely visible in the midst of the thick vapor mingled with spray which hung over the surface of the ocean. Whence, it may be asked, had come that plaything of the tempest? From what part of the world it rise? It surely could not have started during the storm. But the storm had raged five days

and the first symptoms were manifested on the 18th. It cannot be doubted that the balloon from

a great distance, for it could not have traveled less than two thousand miles in twenty-four hours.

At any rate the passengers, destitute of all marks for their guidance, could not have possessed the means of reckoning the route traversed since their departure. It was a remarkable fact that, although in the very midst of the furious tempest, they did not suffer from it. They were thrown about and whirled round and round without feeling the rotation in the slightest degree, or being sensible that they were removed from a horizontal position.

Their eyes could not pierce through the thick mist which had gathered beneath the car. Dark vapor was all around them. Such was the density of the atmosphere that they could not be certain whether it was day or night. No reflection of light, no sound from inhabited land, no roaring of th ocean could have reached them, through the obscurity, while suspended in those elevated zones. Their rapid descent alone had informed them of the dangers which they ran from the waves. However, the balloon, lightened of heavy articles, such as ammunition, arms, and provisions, had risen into the higher layers of the atmosphere, to a height of 4,500 feet. The voyagers, after having discovered that the sea extended beneath them, and thinking the dangers above less dreadful than those below, did not hesitate to throw overboard even their most useful articles, while they endeavored to lose no more of that fluid, the life of their enterprise, which sustained them above the abyss.

The night passed in the midst of alarms which would have been death to less energetic souls. Again the day appeared and with it the tempest began to moderate. From the beginning of that day, the 24th of March, it showed symptoms of abating. At dawn, some of the lighter clouds had risen into the more lofty regions of the air. In a few hours the wind had changed from a hurricane to a fresh breeze, that is to say, the rate of the transit of the atmospheric layers was diminished by half. It was still what sailors call "a close-reefed topsail breeze," but the commotion in the elements had none the less considerably diminished.

Towards eleven o'clock, the lower region of the air was sensibly clearer. The atmosphere threw off that chilly dampness which is felt after the passage of a great meteor. The storm did not seem to have gone farther to the west. It appeared to have exhausted itself. Could it have passed away in electric sheets, as is sometimes the case with regard to the typhoons of the Indian Ocean?

But at the same time, it was also evident that the balloon was again slowly descending with a regular movement. It appeared as if it were, little by little, collapsing, and that its case was lengthening and extending, passing from a spherical to an oval form. Towards midday the balloon was hovering above the sea at a height of only 2,000 feet. It contained 50,000 cubic feet of gas, and, thanks to its capacity, it could maintain itself a long time in the air, although it should reach a great altitude or might be thrown into a horizontal position.

Perceiving their danger, the passengers cast away the last articles which still weighed down the car, the few provisions they had kept, everything, even to their pocket-knives, and one of them, having hoisted himself on to the circles which united the cords of the net, tried to secure more firmly the lower point of the balloon.

It was, however, evident to the voyagers that the gas was failing, and that the balloon could longer be sustained in the higher regions. They must infallibly perish!

There was not a continent, nor even an island, visible beneath them. The watery expanse did not present a single speck of land, not a solid surface upon which their anchor could hold.It was the open sea, whose waves were still dashing with tremendous violence! It was the ocean, without any visible limits, even for those whose gaze, from their commanding position, extended over a radius of forty miles. The vast liquid plain, lashed without mercy by the storm, appeared as if covered with herds of furious chargers, whose white and disheveled crests were streaming in the wind. No land was in sight, not a solitary ship could be seen. It was necessary at any cost to arrest their downward course, and to prevent the balloon from being engulfed in the waves. The voyagers directed all their energies to this urgent work. But, notwithstanding their efforts, the balloon still fell, and at the same time shifted with the greatest rapidity, following the direction of the wind, that is to say, from the northeast to the southwest.

Frightful indeed was the situation of these unfortunate men. They were evidently no longer masters of the machine. All their attempts were useless. The case of the balloon collapsed more and more. The gas escaped without any possibility of retaining it. Their descent was visibly accelerated, and soon after midday the car hung within 600 feet of the ocean.

It was impossible to prevent the escape of gas, which rushed through a large rent in the silk. By lightening the car of all the articles which it contained, the passengers had been able to prolong their suspension in the air for a few hours. But the inevitable catastrophe could only be retarded, and if land did not appear before night, voyagers, car, and balloon must to a certainty vanish beneath the waves.

They now resorted to the only remaining expedient. They were truly dauntless men, who knew how to look death in the face. Not a single murmur escaped from their lips. They were determined to struggle to the last minute, to do anything to retard their fall. The car was only a sort of willow basket, unable to float, and there was not the slightest possibility of maintaining it on the surface of the sea.

Two more hours passed and the balloon was scarcely 400 feet above the water.

At that moment a loud voice, the voice of a man whose heart was inaccessible to fear, was heard. To this voice responded others not less determined. "Is everything thrown out?" "No, here are still 2,000 dollars in gold." A heavy bag immediately plunged into the sea. "Does the balloon rise?" "A little, but it will not be long before it falls again." "What still remains to be thrown out?"

"Nothing." "Yes! the car!" "Let us catch hold of the net, and into the sea with the car."

This was, in fact, the last and only mode of lightening the balloon. The ropes which held the car were cut, and the balloon, after its fall, mounted 2,000 feet. The five voyagers had hoisted themselves into the net, and clung to the meshes, gazing at the abyss.

The delicate sensibility of balloons is well known. It is sufficient to throw out the lightest article to produce a difference in its vertical position. The apparatus in the air is like a balance of mathematical precision. It can be thus easily understood that when it is lightened of any considerable weight its movement will be impetuous and sudden. So it happened on this occasion. But after being suspended for an instant aloft, the balloon began to redescend, the gas escaping by the rent which it was impossible to repair.

The men had done all that men could do. No human efforts could save them now.

They must trust to the mercy of Him who rules the elements.

At four o'clock the balloon was only 500 feet above the surface of the water.

A loud barking was heard. A dog accompanied the voyagers, and was held pressed close to his master in the meshes of the net.

"Top has seen something," cried one of the men. Then immediately a loud voice shouted, "Land! land!" The balloon, which the wind still drove towards the southwest, had since daybreak gone a considerable distance, which might be reckoned by hundreds of miles, and a tolerably high land had, in fact, appeared in that direction. But this land was still thirty miles off. It would not take less than an hour to get to it, and then there was the chance of falling to leeward.

An hour! Might not the balloon before that be emptied of all the fluid it yet retained?

Such was the terrible question! The voyagers could distinctly see that solid spot which they must reach at any cost. They were ignorant of what it was, whether an island or a continent, for they did not know to what part of the world the hurricane had driven them. But they must reach this land, whether inhabited or desolate, whether hospitable or not.

It was evident that the balloon could no longer support itself! Several times already had the crests of the enormous billows licked the bottom of the net, making it still heavier, and the balloon only half rose, like a bird with a wounded wing. Half an hour later the land was not more than a mile off, but the balloon, exhausted, flabby, hanging in great folds, had gas in its upper part alone. The voyagers, clinging to the net, were still too heavy for it, and soon, half plunged into the sea, they were beaten by the furious waves. The balloon-case bulged out again, and the wind, taking it, drove it along like a vessel. Might it not possibly thus reach the land?

But, when only two fathoms off, terrible cries resounded from four pairs of lungs at once. The balloon, which had appeared as if it would never again rise, suddenly made an unexpected bound, after having been struck by a tremendous sea. As if it had been at that instant relieved of a new part of its weight, it mounted to a height of 1,500 feet, and here it met a current of wind, which instead of taking it directly to the coast, carried it in a nearly parallel direction.

At last, two minutes later, it reproached obliquely, and finally fell on a sandy beach, out of the reach of the waves.

The voyagers, aiding each other, managed to disengage themselves from the meshes of the net. The balloon, relieved of their weight, was taken by the wind, and like a wounded bird which revives for an instant, disappeared into space.

But the car had contained five passengers, with a dog, and the balloon only left four on the shore. The missing person had evidently been swept off by the sea, which had just struck the net, and it was owing to this circumstance that the lightened balloon rose the last time, and then soon after reached the land. Scarcely had the four castaways set foot on firm ground, than they all, thinking of the absent one, simultaneously exclaimed, "Perhaps he will try to swim to land! Let us save him! let us save him!"

同类推荐
  • Malone Dies

    Malone Dies

    'Malone', writes Malone, 'is what I am called now.' On his deathbed, and wiling away the time with stories, the octogenarian Malone's account of his condition is intermittent and contradictory, shifting with the vagaries of the passing days: without mellowness, without elegiacs; wittier, jauntier, and capable of wilder rages than Molloy. The sound I liked best had nothing noble about it. It was the barking of the dogs, at night, in the clusters of hovels up in the hills, where the stone-cutters lived, like generations of stone-cutters before them. it came down to me where I lay, in the house in the plain, wild and soft, at the limit of earshot, soon weary. The dogs of the valley replied with their gross bay all fangs and jaws and foam…
  • You, Unstuck

    You, Unstuck

    This book combats a destructive mind-set that we all sometimes fall into: I can't change.I am the victim of my circumstances, and I am confined by my personal pgsk.com philosophy, though intangible, destroys more dreams and limits more lives than any actual, physical obstacle.
  • 士兵、兄弟和术士 (皇冠和荣耀—第五部)

    士兵、兄弟和术士 (皇冠和荣耀—第五部)

    《士兵、兄弟和术士》是摩根·莱斯畅销史诗幻想系列小说《皇冠和荣耀》系列的第五部。这系列丛书的第一部是《奴隶、战士与女王》。西瑞斯,17岁。一个帝国首都提洛斯城中的美丽而贫穷的女孩。她已经赢得了提洛斯城的战斗,但是,她还需要去赢得一个完整的胜利。叛军把她看作新的领导人,西瑞斯必须找到方法来推翻帝国的皇室,并保护提防洛斯城免受一个前所未有的强大军队的袭击。她必须在行刑之前释放萨诺斯,并帮助他洗清弑父的罪名。萨诺斯决心横跨大海追捕路西斯。他要为他父亲的报仇,并杀死罪魁祸首——他的兄弟,然后阻止军队入侵提洛斯城。这将是一个危险的旅程。去到敌人的土地上,面对最凶恶的险境。他知道,他将为此付出生命的代价。但是,他决心为了他的国家而牺牲他的生命。然而,所有的事情都未能按计划进行。斯蒂芬尼娅找到了一个住在遥远的地方的巫师。这个巫师有能力杀死西瑞斯。她决心背弃故国,杀死西瑞斯,并将自己和她未出生的孩子送上皇位。《士兵、兄弟和术士》讲述了一个悲剧性的爱情、复仇、背叛、野心和命运的史诗故事。充满了令人难忘的人物和令人心悸的动作情节,它将我们带入一个永远难忘的世界,让我们再次爱上幻想。
  • The Rainbow Serpent (A Kulipari Novel #2)
  • Federal Procurement Ethics

    Federal Procurement Ethics

    A Comprehensive and Easy-to-Use Guide to the Federal Procurement Ethics Requirements! Revised to include recent changes in procurement ethics rules, such as the significant additions to the False Claims Act made by Congress in 2009, this book is a complete, all-in-one resource.
热门推荐
  • 网游三国之命运天下

    网游三国之命运天下

    世间轮回谁能明其本意,万凡千灵谁能知晓命运,一个名为一款名为《命运》的游戏,能够给予你掌握命运的能力,本来游戏里混的并不如意的苏阳,偶然间竟回到三年前的游戏之初,王侯将相宁有种乎?谁说这天下,就没有我等的一席之地?
  • 亡国的宗诏

    亡国的宗诏

    “师傅,往事书究竟是个什么东西。”“往事书啊,对于不同的人来说是不同的东西。对于我们来说,往事书就是时间”“那么师傅,我什么时候才能成为宗政诏啊”“就在今天,你将成为旧时代的最后一位和新时代的第一位宗政诏。”
  • 大理石色的爱

    大理石色的爱

    军舰如脱缰的野马一样在海上驰骋,江硕民和海伦拿着望眼镜看着远方,然后互相对视起来,江硕民笑了笑,把海伦紧紧的抱在了怀里……
  • 且愿时光长相安

    且愿时光长相安

    “团团”是童佳珺会说的第一句词,后来成了温昱的小名。自有记忆以来,她一直追随温昱的脚步。直到有一天,她选择了另一条路。好在那些不可言说的别扭与脆弱,温昱都能懂。那个爱逞强的小哭包,他要用一生来守候。这一生有你,时光长相安。
  • 京师坊巷志稿

    京师坊巷志稿

    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。
  • 重生剩女逆袭记

    重生剩女逆袭记

    水桶腰,白头发,胃溃疡,近视眼,还平板的身材~三叶这辈子是,做啥啥不行,吃啥啥不剩。结果,一朝重生了。。。。当学霸、修身材、发家致富,太忙!某男:媳妇儿,带我混!别人重生是秀内涵,她是秀身材,咳!
  • 立夏

    立夏

    2014年立夏节,丁家埠立夏节起义纪念馆——大王庙来了一批游客,操一口京腔。其中一个腰板挺直的老人久久地立在一幅相片前凝视。相片里的男子戴八角帽,国字型脸,双目炯炯有神。众人见状纷纷围了上来。丁首长,这是你父亲?不是。他是我父亲的教官,也是父亲革命的领路人。这个纪念馆里有你父亲的记载吗?有。老人颤抖的手指着牌子上一行字:“除一名团丁要求回家外,其余的都拥护起义,参加了革命队伍。”我父亲就是那名回家的团丁。老人说。
  • 满目星辰皆似你

    满目星辰皆似你

    黎晰在遇到车祸时,爱了段瑾瑜五年。两年后醒来时,一个陌生男人出现在了她的世界里,处处护着她。后来恢复了记忆,她才知道段瑾瑜早已爱她入骨,甚至比自己对他的深爱还深爱。---黎晰:“段瑾瑜,你对于我爱了你那么多年,你有什么想说的吗?”段瑾瑜:”娶你。“只见男人从书桌里拿出了两张红色的本子,打开一看,却发现是两人已经领的证。 段瑾瑜:“还有什么要求?” 黎晰:“……” 算了,这辈子满足了。
  • 独宠无盐悍妻

    独宠无盐悍妻

    (本文一对一,男女主角绝对干净不容插足。)她,容貌太“出众”,却是丑的。长得太美不容易,但丑成那样也不容易。不过,老天爷是公平的,给了她聪明的头脑。他,才智太“出众”,却是笨的。聪明绝顶不容易,但笨成那样也不容易。不过,老天爷是公平的,给了他绝世的容貌。一个是王府嚣张的丫鬟偏偏没人敢惹。一个是将军府高贵的嫡子过得还不如个丫鬟。偏偏他们却自小一起长大,彼此熟悉的不行。装吧,看谁更能装。一夜好眠,睁眼一看,坑爹的谁把她塞花轿里了?自此,丑丫鬟成了将军府少夫人。再一回头,艾玛,郡主主子怎的从庶弟院子冲出来了?自此,郡主成了弟妹。说我嚣张?那就嚣张吧。敢算计我?那就来吧。反正我长得丑,温良恭俭让一条也沾不上。喜欢斗,那就斗个天翻地覆。欺我者,我必千倍奉还。毁我家园?我便夺你江山。管你什么皇帝妃子,皇孙郡主,将军后母的,惹恼了老娘,只有一句话奉上“打你丫的。童叟无欺。”片段一某男在某女面前喋喋不休。某女斜睨他一样。“你眼睛有问题?”“并无。”“脑子有问题?”“没有。”某女刷的掀开自己宽大的衣袖。“仙女若是都长这样,这世界上恐怕没人希望有仙女。”滑落的衣袖下,一截如玉似藕的手臂晶莹的散发着淡淡地光晕,怎么看怎么诱人。如果,你可以忽略覆盖在它上面那蝴蝶斑的狰狞青紫痕迹。长孙元轶却好似并没有被她吓到,低语道:“阿奴若是再脱下去,我就必须得娶了你了。实际上当年你在我面前肆无忌惮的沐浴,我就想这么做了。”“长孙元轶,你给我滚。”片段二“少将军,新夫人把您院子里的侍妾丫鬟全给打跑了。”某男呲牙一笑,雪白的牙齿在阳光下闪着耀眼的光“这么彪悍?天生就该嫁进将军府。”本文不小白,不慢热,斗争激烈,情节精彩坑品良好,欢迎来跳。记得收藏哦,么么哒。
  • 叛逆与觉醒:青少年心理教育影视漫画作品分析集

    叛逆与觉醒:青少年心理教育影视漫画作品分析集

    电影和电视是青少年成长生活中的一个重要因素,青少年教育面临着新的危机和挑战。如何更好地吸收影视剧中富含的精神营养,同时避免带给我们负面效应,是每一位教育工作者值得思考的问题。本书对相关的经典或流行影视剧进行专业的心理分析,意在帮助在学校、家庭和社会这些领域中从事青少年教育的工作者,在新形势下更好地应付新的挑战和危机。