IN WHICH IT IS SHOWN THAT CRUSOES DO NOT HAVE EVERYTHING AS THEY WISH.
That done, the professor and his pupil
rushed into one another’s arms.
“My dear Godfrey!” exclaimed Tartlet.
“My good Tartlet!” replied Godfrey.
“At last we are arrived in port!”
observed the professor in the tone of a man who had
had enough of navigation and its accidents.
He called it arriving in port!
Godfrey had no desire to contradict him.
“Take off your life-belt,”
he said. “It suffocates you and hampers
your movements.”
“Do you think I can do so without inconvenience?”
asked Tartlet.
“Without any inconvenience,”
answered Godfrey. “Now put up your fiddle,
and let us take a look round.”
“Come on,” replied the
professor; “but if you don’t mind, Godfrey,
let us go to the first restaurant we see. I am
dying of hunger, and a dozen sandwiches washed down
with a glass or two of wine will soon set me on my
legs again.”
“Yes! to the first restaurant!”
answered Godfrey, nodding his head; “and even
to the last, if the first does not suit us.”
“And,” continued Tartlet,
“we can ask some fellow as we go along the road
to the telegraph office so as to send a message off
to your Uncle Kolderup. That excellent man will
hardly refuse to send on some necessary cash for us
to get back to Montgomery Street, for I have not got
a cent with me!”
“Agreed, to the first telegraph
office,” answered Godfrey, “or if there
isn’t one in this country, to the first post
office. Come on, Tartlet.”
The professor took off his swimming
apparatus, and passed it over his shoulder like a
hunting-horn, and then both stepped out for the edge
of the dunes which bordered the shore.
What more particularly interested
Godfrey, whom the encounter with Tartlet had imbued
with some hope, was to see if they too were the only
survivors of the Dream.
A quarter of an hour after the explorers
had left the edge of the reef they had climbed a dune
about sixty or eighty feet high, and stood on its
crest. Thence they looked on a large extent of
coast, and examined the horizon in the east, which
till then had been hidden by the hills on the shore.
Two or three miles away in that direction
a second line of hills formed the background, and
beyond them nothing was seen of the horizon.
Towards the north the coast trended
off to a point, but it could not be seen if there
was a corresponding cape behind. On the south
a creek ran some distance into the shore, and on this
side it looked as though the ocean closed the view.
Whence this land in the Pacific was probably a peninsula,
and the isthmus which joined it to the continent would
have to be sought for towards the north or north-east.
The country, however, far from being
barren, was hidden beneath an agreeable mantle of
verdure; long prairies, amid which meandered many
limpid streams, and high and thick forests, whose trees
rose above one another to the very background of hills.
It was a charming landscape.
But of houses forming town, village,
or hamlet, not one was in sight! Of buildings
grouped and arranged as a farm of any sort, not a sign!
Of smoke in the sky, betraying some dwelling hidden
among the trees, not a trace. Not a steeple above
the branches, not a windmill on an isolated hill.
Not even in default of houses a cabin, a hut, an ajoupa,
or a wigwam? No! nothing. If human beings
inhabited this unknown land, they must live like troglodytes,
below, and not above the ground. Not a road was
visible, not a footpath, not even a track. It
seemed that the foot of man had never trod either
a rock of the beach or a blade of the grass on the
prairies.
“I don’t see the town,”
remarked Tartlet, who, however, remained on tiptoe.
“That is perhaps because it
is not in this part of the province!” answered
Godfrey.
“But a village?”
“There’s nothing here.”
“Where are we then?”
“I know nothing about it.”
“What! You don’t
know! But Godfrey, we had better make haste and
find out.”
“Who is to tell us?”
“What will become of us then?”
exclaimed Tartlet, rounding his arms and lifting them
to the sky.
“Become a couple of Crusoes!”
At this answer the professor gave
a bound such as no clown had ever equalled.
Crusoes! They! A Crusoe!
He! Descendants of that Selkirk who had lived
for long years on the island of Juan Fernandez!
Imitators of the imaginary heroes of Daniel Defoe
and De Wyss whose adventures they had so often read!
Abandoned, far from their relatives, their friends;
separated from their fellow-men by thousands of miles,
destined to defend their lives perhaps against wild
beasts, perhaps against savages who would land there,
wretches without resources, suffering from hunger,
suffering from thirst, without weapons, without tools,
almost without clothes, left to themselves. No,
it was impossible!
“Don’t say such things,
Godfrey,” exclaimed Tartlet. “No!
Don’t joke about such things! The mere
supposition will kill me! You are laughing at
me, are you not?”
“Yes, my gallant Tartlet,”
answered Godfrey. “Reassure yourself.
But in the first place, let us think about matters
that are pressing.”
In fact, they had to try and find
some cavern, a grotto or hole, in which to pass the
night, and then to collect some edible mollusks so
as to satisfy the cravings of their stomachs.
Godfrey and Tartlet then commenced
to descend the talus of the dunes in the direction
of the reef. Godfrey showed himself very ardent
in his researches, and Tartlet considerably stupefied
by his shipwreck experiences. The first looked
before him, behind him, and all around him; the second
hardly saw ten paces in front of him.
“If there are no inhabitants
on this land, are there any animals?” asked
Godfrey.
He meant to say domestic animals,
such as furred and feathered game, not wild animals
which abound in tropical regions, and with which they
were not likely to have to do.
Several flocks of birds were visible
on the shore, bitterns, curlews, bernicle geese, and
teal, which hovered and chirped and filled the air
with their flutterings and cries, doubtless protesting
against the invasion of their domain.
Godfrey was justified in concluding
that where there were birds there were nests, and
where there were nests there were eggs. The birds
congregated here in such numbers, because rocks provided
them with thousands of cavities for their dwelling-places.
In the distance a few herons and some flocks of snipe
indicated the neighbourhood of a marsh.
Birds then were not wanting, the only
difficulty was to get at them without fire-arms.
The best thing to do now was to make use of them in
the egg state, and consume them under that elementary
but nourishing form.
But if the dinner was there, how were
they to cook it? How were they to set about lighting
a fire? An important question, the solution of
which was postponed.
Godfrey and Tartlet returned straight
towards the reef, over which some sea-birds were circling.
An agreeable surprise there awaited them.
Among the indigenous fowl which ran
along the sand of the beach and pecked about among
the sea-weed and under the tufts of aquatic plants,
was it a dozen hens and two or three cocks of the American
breed that they beheld? No! There was no
mistake, for at their approach did not a resounding
cock-a-doodle-do-oo-oo rend the air like the sound
of a trumpet?
And farther off, what were those quadrupeds
which were gliding in and out of the rocks, and making
their way towards the first slopes of the hills, or
grubbing beneath some of the green shrubs? Godfrey
could not be mistaken. There were a dozen agouties,
five or six sheep, and as many goats, who were quietly
browsing on the first vegetation on the very edge
of the prairie.
“Look there, Tartlet!” he exclaimed.
And the professor looked, but saw
nothing, so much was he absorbed with the thought
of this unexpected situation.
A thought flashed across the mind
of Godfrey, and it was correct: it was that these
hens, agouties, goats, and sheep had belonged to the
Dream. At the moment she went down, the
fowls had easily been able to reach the reef and then
the beach. As for the quadrupeds, they could easily
have swum ashore.
“And so,” remarked Godfrey,
“what none of our unfortunate companions have
been able to do, these simple animals, guided by their
instinct, have done! And of all those on board
the Dream, none have been saved but a few beasts!”
“Including ourselves!” answered Tartlet
naively.
As far as he was concerned, he had
come ashore unconsciously, very much like one of the
animals. It mattered little. It was a very
fortunate thing for the two shipwrecked men that a
certain number of these animals had reached the shore.
They would collect them, fold them, and with the special
fecundity of their species, if their stay on this land
was a lengthy one, it would be easy to have quite
a flock of quadrupeds, and a yard full of poultry.
But on this occasion, Godfrey wished
to keep to such alimentary resources as the coast
could furnish, either in eggs or shell-fish.
Professor Tartlet and he set to work to forage among
the interstices of the stones, and beneath the carpet
of sea-weeds, and not without success. They soon
collected quite a notable quantity of mussels and
periwinkles, which they could eat raw. A few dozen
eggs of the bernicle geese were also found among the
higher rocks which shut in the bay on the north.
They had enough to satisfy a good many; and, hunger
pressing, Godfrey and Tartlet hardly thought of making
difficulties about their first repast.
“And the fire?” said the professor.
“Yes! The fire!” said Godfrey.
It was the most serious of questions,
and it led to an inventory being made of the contents
of their pockets. Those of the professor were
empty or nearly so. They contained a few spare
strings for his kit, and a piece of rosin for his
bow. How would you get a light from that, I should
like to know? Godfrey was hardly better provided.
However, it was with extreme satisfaction that he
discovered in his pocket an excellent knife, whose
leather case had kept it from the sea-water. This
knife, with blade, gimlet, hook, and saw, was a valuable
instrument under the circumstances. But besides
this tool, Godfrey and his companion had only their
two hands; and as the hands of the professor had never
been used except in playing his fiddle, and making
his gestures, Godfrey concluded that he would have
to trust to his own.
He thought, however, of utilizing
those of Tartlet for procuring a fire by means of
rubbing two sticks of wood rapidly together. A
few eggs cooked in the embers would be greatly appreciated
at their second meal at noon.
While Godfrey then was occupied in
robbing the nests in spite of the proprietors, who
tried to defend their progeny in the shell, the professor
went off to collect some pieces of wood which had been
dried by the sun at the foot of the dunes. These
were taken behind a rock sheltered from the wind from
the sea. Tartlet then chose two very dry pieces,
with the intention of gradually obtaining sufficient
heat by rubbing them vigorously and continuously together.
What simple Polynesian savages commonly did, why should
not the professor, so much their superior in his own
opinion, be able to do?
Behold him then, rubbing and rubbing,
in a way to dislocate the muscles of his arm and shoulder.
He worked himself into quite a rage, poor man!
But whether it was that the wood was not right, or
its dryness was not sufficient, or the professor held
it wrongly, or had not got the peculiar turn of hand
necessary for operations of this kind, if he did not
get much heat out of the wood, he succeeded in getting
a good deal out of himself. In short, it was
his own forehead alone which smoked under the vapours
of his own perspiration.
When Godfrey returned with his collection
of eggs, he found Tartlet in a rage, in a state to
which his choregraphic exercises had never doubtless
provoked him.
“Doesn’t it do?” he asked.
“No, Godfrey, it does not do,”
replied the professor. “And I begin to
think that these inventions of the savages are only
imaginations to deceive the world.”
“No,” answered Godfrey.
“But in that, as in all things, you must know
how to do it.”
“These eggs, then?”
“There is another way.
If you attach one of these eggs to the end of a string
and whirl it round rapidly, and suddenly arrest the
movement of rotation, the movement may perhaps transform
itself into heat, and then ”
“And then the egg will be cooked?”
“Yes, if the rotation has been
swift enough and the stoppage sudden enough.
But how do you produce the stoppage without breaking
the egg? Now, there is a simpler way, dear Tartlet.
Behold!”
And carefully taking one of the eggs
of the bernicle goose, he broke the shell at its end,
and adroitly swallowed the inside without any further
formalities.
Tartlet could not make up his mind
to imitate him, and contented himself with the shell-fish.
It now remained to look for a grotto
or some shelter in which to pass the night.
“It is an unheard-of thing,”
observed the professor, “that Crusoes cannot
at the least find a cavern, which, later on, they can
make their home!”
“Let us look,” said Godfrey.
It was unheard of. We must avow,
however, that on this occasion the tradition was broken.
In vain did they search along the rocky shore on the
southern part of the bay. Not a cavern, not a
grotto, not a hole was there that would serve as a
shelter. They had to give up the idea. Godfrey
resolved to reconnoitre up to the first trees in the
background beyond the sandy coast.
Tartlet and he then remounted the
first line of sandhills and crossed the verdant prairies
which they had seen a few hours before.
A very odd circumstance, and a very
fortunate one at the time, that the other survivors
of the wreck voluntarily followed them. Evidently,
cocks and hens, and sheep, goats and agouties, driven
by instinct, had resolved to go with them. Doubtless
they felt too lonely on the beach, which did not yield
sufficient food.
Three-quarters of an hour later Godfrey
and Tartlet they had scarcely spoken during
the exploration arrived at the outskirt
of the trees. Not a trace was there of habitation
or inhabitant. Complete solitude. It might
even be doubted if this part of the country had ever
been trodden by human feet.
In this place were a few handsome
trees, in isolated groups, and others more crowded
about a quarter of a mile in the rear formed a veritable
forest of different species.
Godfrey looked out for some old trunk,
hollowed by age, which could offer a shelter among
its branches, but his researches were in vain, although
he continued them till night was falling.
Hunger made itself sharply felt, and
the two contented themselves with mussels, of which
they had thoughtfully brought an ample supply from
the beach. Then, quite tired out, they lay down
at the foot of a tree, and trusting to Providence,
slept through the night.