Notable discovery at the spouting
cliffs—The mysterious green monster explained—We
are thrown into unutterable terror by the idea that
Jack is drowned—The Diamond Cave.
“Come, Jack,” cried Peterkin,
one morning about three weeks after our return from
our long excursion, “let’s be jolly to-day,
and do something vigorous. I’m quite tired
of hammering and hammering, hewing and screwing, cutting
and butting, at that little boat of ours, that seems
as hard to build as Noah’s ark. Let us go
on an excursion to the mountain-top, or have a hunt
after the wild-ducks, or make a dash at the pigs.
I’m quite flat—flat as bad ginger-beer—flat
as a pancake; in fact, I want something to rouse me,
to toss me up, as it were. Eh! what do you say
to it?”
“Well,” answered Jack,
throwing down the axe with which he was just about
to proceed towards the boat, “if that’s
what you want, I would recommend you to make an excursion
to the water-spouts. The last one we had to do
with tossed you up a considerable height; perhaps the
next will send you higher—who knows?—if
you’re at all reasonable or moderate in your
expectations!”
“Jack, my dear boy,” said
Peterkin gravely, “you are really becoming too
fond of jesting. It’s a thing I don’t
at all approve of, and if you don’t give it
up, I fear that, for our mutual good, we shall have
to part.”
“Well then, Peterkin,”
replied Jack with a smile, “what would you have?”
“Have?” said Peterkin;
“I would have nothing. I didn’t
say I wanted to have; I said that I wanted
to do.”
“By-the-bye,” said I,
interrupting their conversation, “I am reminded
by this that we have not yet discovered the nature
of yon curious appearance that we saw near the water-spouts,
on our journey round the island. Perhaps it would
be well to go for that purpose.”
“Humph!” ejaculated Peterkin,
“I know the nature of it well enough.”
“What was it?” said I.
“It was of a mysterious
nature to be sure!” said he, with a wave of
his hand, while he rose from the log on which he had
been sitting and buckled on his belt, into which he
thrust his enormous club.
“Well, then, let us away to
the water-spouts,” cried Jack, going up to the
bower for his bow and arrows; “and bring your
spear, Peterkin. It may be useful.”
We now, having made up our minds to
examine into this matter, sallied forth eagerly in
the direction of the water-spout rocks, which, as I
have before mentioned, were not far from our present
place of abode. On arriving there we hastened
down to the edge of the rocks and gazed over into
the sea, where we observed the pale-green object still
distinctly visible, moving its tail slowly to and
fro in the water.
“Most remarkable!” said Jack.
“Exceedingly curious!” said I.
“Beats everything!” said Peterkin.
“Now, Jack,” he added,
“you made such a poor figure in your last attempt
to stick that object, that I would advise you to let
me try it. If it has got a heart at all, I’ll
engage to send my spear right through the core of
it; if it hasn’t got a heart, I’ll send
it through the spot where its heart ought to be.”
“Fire away then, my boy,” replied Jack
with a laugh.
Peterkin immediately took the spear,
poised it for a second or two above his head, then
darted it like an arrow into the sea. Down it
went straight into the centre of the green object,
passed quite through it, and came up immediately afterwards,
pure and unsullied, while the mysterious tail moved
quietly as before!
“Now,” said Peterkin gravely,
“that brute is a heartless monster; I’ll
have nothing more to do with it.”
“I’m pretty sure now,”
said Jack, “that it is merely a phosphoric light;
but I must say, I’m puzzled at its staying always
in that exact spot.”
I also was much puzzled, and inclined
to think with Jack that it must be phosphoric light,
of which luminous appearance we had seen much while
on our voyage to these seas. “But,”
said I, “there is nothing to hinder us from
diving down to it, now that we are sure it is not a
shark.”
“True,” returned Jack,
stripping off his clothes; “I’ll go down,
Ralph, as I’m better at diving than you are.—Now
then, Peterkin, out o’ the road!” Jack
stepped forward, joined his hands above his head, bent
over the rocks, and plunged into the sea. For
a second or two the spray caused by his dive hid him
from view; then the water became still, and we saw
him swimming far down in the midst of the green object.
Suddenly he sank below it, and vanished altogether
from our sight! We gazed anxiously down at the
spot where he had disappeared for nearly a minute,
expecting every moment to see him rise again for breath;
but fully a minute appeared, and still he did not
reappear. Two minutes passed! and then a flood
of alarm rushed in upon my soul, when I considered
that, during all my acquaintance with him, Jack had
never stayed under water more than a minute at a time;
indeed, seldom so long.
“O Peterkin!” I said,
in a voice that trembled with increasing anxiety,
“something has happened. It is more than
three minutes now.” But Peterkin did not
answer, and I observed that he was gazing down into
the water with a look of intense fear mingled with
anxiety, while his face was overspread with a deadly
paleness. Suddenly he sprang to his feet and
rushed about in a frantic state, wringing his hands,
and exclaiming, “O Jack, Jack! he is gone!
It must have been a shark, and he is gone for ever!”
For the next five minutes I know not
what I did; the intensity of my feelings almost bereft
me of my senses. But I was recalled to myself
by Peterkin seizing me by the shoulders and staring
wildly into my face, while he exclaimed, “Ralph!
Ralph! perhaps he has only fainted. Dive for
him, Ralph!”
It seemed strange that this did not
occur to me sooner. In a moment I rushed to the
edge off the rocks, and without waiting to throw off
my garments, was on the point to spring into the waves,
when I observed something black rising up through
the green object. In another moment Jack’s
head rose to the surface, and he gave a wild shout,
flinging back the spray from his locks, as was his
wont after a dive. Now we were almost as much
amazed at seeing him reappear, well and strong, as
we had been at first at his non-appearance; for, to
the best of our judgment, he had been nearly ten minutes
under water, perhaps longer, and it required no exertion
of our reason to convince us that this was utterly
impossible for mortal man to do and retain his strength
and faculties. It was therefore with a feeling
akin to superstitious awe that I held down my hand
and assisted him to clamber up the steep rocks.
But no such feeling affected Peterkin. No sooner
did Jack gain the rocks and seat himself on one, panting
for breath, than he threw his arms round his neck
and burst into a flood of tears. “O Jack,
Jack!” said he, “where were you? What
kept you so long?”
After a few moments Peterkin became
composed enough to sit still and listen to Jack’s
explanation, although he could not restrain himself
from attempting to wink every two minutes at me, in
order to express his joy at Jack’s safety.
I say he attempted to wink, but I am bound to add
that he did not succeed, for his eyes were so much
swollen with weeping, that his frequent attempts only
resulted in a series of violent and altogether idiotical
contortions of the face, that were very far from expressing
what he intended. However, I knew what the poor
fellow meant by it, so I smiled to him in return, and
endeavoured to make believe that he was winking.
“Now, lads,” said Jack,
when we were composed enough to listen to him, “yon
green object is not a shark; it is a stream of light
issuing from a cave in the rocks. Just after
I made my dive, I observed that this light came from
the side of the rock above which we are now sitting;
so I struck out for it, and saw an opening into some
place or other that appeared to be luminous within.
For one instant I paused to think whether I ought
to venture. Then I made up my mind, and dashed
into it. For you see, Peterkin, although I take
some time to tell this, it happened in the space of
a few seconds, so that I knew I had wind enough in
me to serve to bring me out o’ the hole and up
to the surface again. Well, I was just on the
point of turning—for I began to feel a
little uncomfortable in such a place—when
it seemed to me as if there was a faint light right
above me. I darted upwards, and found my head
out of water. This relieved me greatly, for I
now felt that I could take in air enough to enable
me to return the way I came. Then it all at once
occurred to me that I might not be able to find the
way out again; but, on glancing downwards, my mind
was put quite at rest by seeing the green light below
me streaming into the cave, just like the light that
we had seen streaming out of it, only what I now saw
was much brighter.
“At first I could scarcely see
anything as I gazed around me, it was so dark; but
gradually my eyes became accustomed to it, and I found
that I was in a huge cave, part of the walls of which
I observed on each side of me. The ceiling just
above me was also visible, and I fancied that I could
perceive beautiful glittering objects there; but the
farther end of the cave was shrouded in darkness.
While I was looking around me in great wonder, it
came into my head that you two would think I was drowned;
so I plunged down through the passage again in a great
hurry, rose to the surface, and—here I
am!”
When Jack concluded his recital of
what he had seen in this remarkable cave, I could
not rest satisfied till I had dived down to see it:
which I did, but found it so dark, as Jack had said,
that I could scarcely see anything. When I returned,
we had a long conversation about it, during which
I observed that Peterkin had a most lugubrious expression
on his countenance.
“What’s the matter, Peterkin?” said
I.
“The matter?” he replied.
“It’s all very well for you two to be talking
away like mermaids about the wonders of this cave,
but you know I must be content to hear about it, while
you are enjoying yourselves down there like mad dolphins.
It’s really too bad.”
“I’m very sorry for you,
Peterkin, indeed I am,” said Jack, “but
we cannot help you. If you would only learn to
dive—”
“Learn to fly, you might as
well say!” retorted Peterkin in a very sulky
tone.
“If you would only consent to
keep still,” said I, “we would take you
down with us in ten seconds.”
“Hum!” returned Peterkin;
“suppose a salamander was to propose to you
‘only to keep still,’ and he would carry
you through a blazing fire in a few seconds, what
would you say?”
We both laughed and shook our heads,
for it was evident that nothing was to be made of
Peterkin in the water. But we could not rest
satisfied till we had seen more of this cave; so, after
further consultation, Jack and I determined to try
if we could take down a torch with us, and set fire
to it in the cavern. This we found to be an undertaking
of no small difficulty, but we accomplished it at last
by the following means: First, we made a torch
of a very inflammable nature out of the bark of a
certain tree, which we cut into strips, and, after
twisting, cemented together with a kind of resin or
gum, which we also obtained from another tree; neither
of which trees, however, was known by name to Jack.
This, when prepared, we wrapped up in a great number
of plies of cocoa-nut cloth, so that we were confident
it could not get wet during the short time it should
be under water. Then we took a small piece of
the tinder, which we had carefully treasured up lest
we should require it, as before said, when the sun
should fail us; also, we rolled up some dry grass and
a few chips, which, with a little bow and drill, like
those described before, we made into another bundle,
and wrapped it up in cocoa-nut cloth. When all
was ready, we laid aside our garments, with the exception
of our trousers, which, as we did not know what rough
scraping against the rocks we might be subjected to,
we kept on.
Then we advanced to the edge of the
rocks, Jack carrying one bundle, with the torch, I
the other, with the things for producing fire.
“Now don’t weary for us,
Peterkin, should we be gone some time,” said
Jack; “we’ll be sure to return in half-an-hour
at the very latest, however interesting the cave should
be, that we may relieve your mind.”
“Farewell!” said Peterkin,
coming up to us with a look of deep but pretended
solemnity, while he shook hands and kissed each of
us on the cheek. “Farewell! and while you
are gone I shall repose my weary limbs under the shelter
of this bush, and meditate on the changefulness of
all things earthly, with special reference to the forsaken
condition of a poor shipwrecked sailor boy!”
So saying, Peterkin waved his hand, turned from us,
and cast himself upon the ground with a look of melancholy
resignation, which was so well feigned that I would
have thought it genuine had he not accompanied it
with a gentle wink. We both laughed, and springing
from the rocks together, plunged head first into the
sea.
We gained the interior of the submarine
cave without difficulty, and, on emerging from the
waves, supported ourselves for some time by treading
water, while we held the two bundles above our heads.
This we did in order to let our eyes become accustomed
to the obscurity. Then, when we could see sufficiently,
we swam to a shelving rock, and landed in safety.
Having wrung the water from our trousers, and dried
ourselves as well as we could under the circumstances,
we proceeded to ignite the torch. This we accomplished
without difficulty in a few minutes; and no sooner
did it flare up than we were struck dumb with the
wonderful objects that were revealed to our gaze.
The roof of the cabin just above us seemed to be about
ten feet high, but grew higher as it receded into
the distance, until it was lost in darkness. It
seemed to be made of coral, and was supported by massive
columns of the same material. Immense icicles
(as they appeared to us) hung from it in various places.
These, however, were formed not of ice, but of a species
of limestone, which seemed to flow in a liquid form
towards the point of each, where it became solid.
A good many drops fell, however, to the rock below,
and these formed little cones, which rose to meet
the points above. Some of them had already met,
and thus we saw how the pillars were formed, which
at first seemed to us as if they had been placed there
by some human architect to support the roof. As
we advanced farther in, we saw that the floor was
composed of the same material as the pillars; and
it presented the curious appearance of ripples such
as are formed on water when gently ruffled by the wind.
There were several openings on either hand in the walls
that seemed to lead into other caverns; but, these
we did not explore at this time. We also observed
that the ceiling was curiously marked in many places,
as if it were the fretwork of a noble cathedral; and
the walls, as well as the roof, sparkled in the light
of our torch, and threw back gleams and flashes as
if they were covered with precious stones. Although
we proceeded far into this cavern, we did not come
to the end of it; and we were obliged to return more
speedily than we would otherwise have done, as our
torch was nearly expended. We did not observe
any openings in the roof, or any indications of places
whereby light might enter; but near the entrance to
the cavern stood an immense mass of pure white coral
rock, which caught and threw back the little light
that found an entrance through the cave’s mouth,
and thus produced, we conjectured, the pale-green
object which had first attracted our attention.
We concluded, also, that the reflecting power of this
rock was that which gave forth the dim light that
faintly illumined the first part of the cave.
Before diving through the passage
again we extinguished the small piece of our torch
that remained, and left it in a dry spot; conceiving
that we might possibly stand in need of it, if at
any future time we should chance to wet our torch
while diving into the cavern. As we stood for
a few minutes after it was out, waiting till our eyes
became accustomed to the gloom, we could not help
remarking the deep, intense stillness and the unutterable
gloom of all around us; and, as I thought of the stupendous
dome above, and the countless gems that had sparkled
in the torchlight a few minutes before, it came into
my mind to consider how strange it is that God should
make such wonderful and exquisitely beautiful works
never to be seen at all, except, indeed, by chance
visitors such as ourselves.
I afterwards found that there were
many such caverns among the islands of the South Seas,
some of them larger and more beautiful than the one
I have just described.
“Now, Ralph, are you ready?”
said Jack, in a low voice, that seemed to echo up
into the dome above.
“Quite ready.”
“Come along, then,” said
he; and plunging off the ledge of the rock into the
water, we dived through the narrow entrance. In
a few seconds we were panting on the rocks above,
and receiving the congratulations of our friend Peterkin.