FIRE!
The 1st of December came, the fatal
day, for if the projectile did not start that very
evening at 10m. and 40s. p.m., more than eighteen
years would elapse before the moon would present the
same simultaneous conditions of zenith and perigee.
The weather was magnificent; notwithstanding
the approach of winter the sun shone brightly and
bathed in its radiance that earth which three of its
inhabitants were about to leave for a new world.
How many people slept badly during
the night that preceded the ardently-longed-for day!
How many breasts were oppressed with the heavy burden
of waiting! All hearts beat with anxiety except
only the heart of Michel Ardan. This impassible
person went and came in his usual business-like way,
but nothing in him denoted any unusual preoccupation.
His sleep had been peaceful it was the sleep
of Turenne upon a gun-carriage the night before the
battle.
From early dawn an innumerable crowd
covered the prairie, which extended as far as the
eye could reach round Stony Hill. Every quarter
of an hour the railroad of Tampa brought fresh sightseers.
According to the Tampa Town Observer, five
millions of spectators were that day upon Floridian
soil.
The greater part of this crowd had
been living in tents round the inclosure, and laid
the foundations of a town which has since been called
“Ardan’s Town.” The ground bristled
with huts, cabins, and tents, and these ephemeral
habitations sheltered a population numerous enough
to rival the largest cities of Europe.
Every nation upon earth was represented;
every language was spoken at the same time. It
was like the confusion of tongues at the Tower of
Babel. There the different classes of American
society mixed in absolute equality. Bankers,
cultivators, sailors, agents, merchants, cotton-planters,
and magistrates elbowed each other with primitive ease.
The créoles of Louisiana fraternised with the
farmers of Indiana; the gentlemen of Kentucky and
Tennessee, the elegant and haughty Virginians, joked
with the half-savage trappers of the Lakes and the
butchers of Cincinnati. They appeared in broad-brimmed
white beavers and Panamas, blue cotton trousers,
from the Opelousa manufactories, draped in elegant
blouses of ecru cloth, in boots of brilliant colours,
and extravagant shirt-frills; upon shirt-fronts, cuffs,
cravats, on their ten fingers, even in their ears,
an assortment of rings, pins, diamonds, chains, buckles,
and trinkets, the cost of which equalled the bad taste.
Wife, children, servants, in no less rich dress, accompanied,
followed, preceded, and surrounded their husbands,
fathers, and masters, who resembled the patriarchs
amidst their innumerable families.
At meal-times it was a sight to see
all these people devour the dishes peculiar to the
Southern States, and eat, with an appetite menacing
to the provisioning of Florida, the food that would
be repugnant to a European stomach, such as fricasseed
frogs, monkey-flesh, fish-chowder, underdone opossum,
and raccoon steaks.
The liquors that accompanied this
indigestible food were numerous. Shouts and vociférations
to buy resounded through the bar-rooms or taverns,
decorated with glasses, tankards, decanters, and bottles
of marvellous shapes, mortars for pounding sugar,
and bundles of straws.
“Mint-julep!” roars out one of the salesmen.
“Claret sangaree!” shouts another through
his nose.
“Gin-sling!” shouts one.
“Cocktail! Brandy-smash!” cries another.
“Who’ll buy real mint-julep
in the latest style?” shouted these skilful
salesmen, rapidly passing from one glass to another
the sugar, lemon, green mint, crushed ice, water,
cognac, and fresh pine-apple which compose this refreshing
drink.
Generally these sounds, addressed
to throats made thirsty by the spices they consumed,
mingled into one deafening roar. But on this 1st
of December these cries were rare. No one thought
of eating and drinking, and at 4 p.m. there were many
spectators in the crowd who had not taken their customary
lunch! A much more significant fact, even the
national passion for gaming was allayed by the general
emotion. Thimbles, skittles, and cards were left
in their wrappings, and testified that the great event
of the day absorbed all attention.
Until nightfall a dull, noiseless
agitation like that which precedes great catastrophes
ran through the anxious crowd. An indescribable
uneasiness oppressed all minds, and stopped the beating
of all hearts. Every one wished it over.
However, about seven o’clock
this heavy silence was suddenly broken. The moon
rose above the horizon. Several millions of hurrahs
saluted her apparition. She was punctual to the
appointment. Shouts of welcome broke from all
parts, whilst the blonde Phoebe shone peacefully in
a clear sky, and caressed the enraptured crowd with
her most affectionate rays.
At that moment the three intrepid
travellers appeared. When they appeared the cries
redoubled in intensity. Unanimously, instantaneously,
the national song of the United States escaped from
all the spectators, and “Yankee Doodle,”
sung by 5,000,000 of hearty throats, rose like a roaring
tempest to the farthest limits of the atmosphere.
Then, after this irresistible outburst,
the hymn was ended, the last harmonies died away by
degrees, and a silent murmur floated over the profoundly-excited
crowd.
In the meantime the Frenchman and
the two Americans had stepped into the inclosure round
which the crowd was pressing. They were accompanied
by the members of the Gun Club, and deputations sent
by the European observatories. Barbicane was
coolly and calmly giving his last orders. Nicholl,
with compressed lips and hands crossed behind his back,
walked with a firm and measured step. Michel
Ardan, always at his ease, clothed in a perfect travelling
suit, with leather gaiters on his legs, pouch at his
side, in vast garment of maroon velvet, a cigar in
his mouth, distributed shakes of the hand with princely
prodigality. He was full of inexhaustible gaiety,
laughing, joking, playing pranks upon the worthy J.T.
Maston, and was, in a word, “French,” and,
what is worse, “Parisian,” till the last
second.
Ten o’clock struck. The
moment had come to take their places in the projectile;
the necessary mechanism for the descent the door-plate
to screw down, the removal of the cranes and scaffolding
hung over the mouth of the Columbiad, took some time.
Barbicane had set his chronometer
to the tenth of a second by that of the engineer Murchison,
who was entrusted with setting fire to the powder
by means of the electric spark; the travellers shut
up in the projectile could thus watch the impassive
needle which was going to mark the precise instant
of their departure.
The moment for saying farewell had
come. The scene was touching; in spite of his
gaiety Michel Ardan felt touched. J.T. Maston
had found under his dry eyelids an ancient tear that
he had, doubtless, kept for the occasion. He
shed it upon the forehead of his dear president.
“Suppose I go too?” said he. “There
is still time!”
“Impossible, old fellow,” answered Barbicane.
A few moments later the three travelling
companions were installed in the projectile, and had
screwed down the door-plate, and the mouth of the
Columbiad, entirely liberated, rose freely towards
the sky.
Nicholl, Barbicane, and Michel Ardan
were definitively walled up in their metal vehicle.
Who could predict the universal emotion
then at its paroxysm?
The moon was rising in a firmament
of limpid purity, outshining on her passage the twinkling
fire of the stars; she passed over the constellation
of the Twins, and was now nearly halfway between the
horizon and the zenith.
A frightful silence hung over all
that scene. There was not a breath of wind on
the earth! Not a sound of breathing from the crowd!
Hearts dared not beat. Every eye was fixed on
the gaping mouth of the Columbiad.
Murchison watched the needle of his
chronometer. Hardly forty seconds had to elapse
before the moment of departure struck, and each one
lasted a century!
At the twentieth there was a universal
shudder, and the thought occurred to all the crowd
that the audacious travellers shut up in the vehicle
were likewise counting these terrible seconds!
Some isolated cries were heard.
“Thirty-five! thirty-six! thirty-seven! thirty eight! thirty-nine!
forty! Fire!!!”
Murchison immediately pressed his
finger upon the electric knob and hurled the electric
spark into the depths of the Columbiad.
A fearful, unheard-of, superhuman
report, of which nothing could give an idea, not even
thunder or the eruption of volcanoes, was immediately
produced. An immense spout of fire sprang up from
the bowels of the earth as if from a crater.
The soil heaved and very few persons caught a glimpse
of the projectile victoriously cleaving the air amidst
the flaming smoke.