A PYTHON DISCOVERED AND A GEYSER INTERVIEWED
“It never rains but it pours”
is a well-known proverb which finds frequent illustration
in the experience of almost every one. At all
events Verkimier had reason to believe in the truth
of it at that time, for adventures came down on him,
as it were, in a sort of deluge, more or less astounding,
insomuch that his enthusiastic spirit, bathing, if
we may say so, in an ocean of scientific delight, pronounced
Sumatra to be the very paradise of the student of
nature.
We have not room in this volume to
follow him in the details of his wonderful experiences,
but we must mention one adventure which he had on
the very day after the tiger-incident, because it very
nearly had the effect of separating him from his travelling
companions.
Being deaf, as we have said owing
to the explosion of his revolver in the hole but
not necessarily dumb, the professor, after one or two
futile attempts to hear and converse, deemed it wise
to go to bed and spend the few conscious minutes that
might precede sleep in watching Van der Kemp,
who kindly undertook to skin his tiger for him.
Soon the self-satisfied man fell into a sweet infantine
slumber, and dreamed of tigers, in which state he
gave vent to sundry grunts, gasps, and half-suppressed
cries, to the immense delight of Moses, who sat watching
him, indulging in a running commentary suggestive of
the recent event, and giving utterance now and then
to a few imitative growls by way of enhancing the
effect of the dreams!
“Look! look! Massa Nadgel,
he’s twitchin’ all ober. De
tiger’s comin’ to him now.”
“Looks like it, Moses.”
“Yes an’, see,
he grip de ’volver no, too soon,
or de tiger’s hoed away, for he’s stopped
twitchin’! dare; de tiger comes agin!”
A gasp and clenching of the right
hand seemed to warrant this assumption. Then
a yell rang through the hut; Moses displayed all, and
more than all his teeth, and the professor, springing
up on one elbow, glared fearfully.
“I’n’t it awrful?”
inquired Moses in a low tone. The professor awoke
mentally, recognised the situation, smiled an imbecile
smile, and sank back again on his pillow with a sigh
of relief.
After that, when the skinning of the
tiger was completed, the dreams appeared to leave
him, and all his comrades joined him in the land of
Nod. He was first to awake when daylight entered
their hut the following morning, and, feeling in a
fresh, quiescent state of mind after the excitement
of the preceding night, he lay on his back, his eyes
fixed contentedly on the grand tiger-skin which hung
on the opposite wall.
By degrees his eyes grew wearied of
that object, and he allowed them to travel languidly
upwards and along the roof until they rested on the
spot directly over his head, where they became fixed,
and, at the same time, opened out to a glare, compared
to which all his previous glaring was as nothing for
there, in the thatch, looking down upon him, was the
angular head of a huge python. The snake was
rolled up in a tight coil, and had evidently spent
the night within a yard of the professor’s head!
Being unable to make out what sort of snake it was,
and fearing that it might be a poisonous one, he crept
quietly from his couch, keeping his eyes fixed on
the reptile as he did so. One result of this
mode of action was that he did not see where he was
going, and inadvertently thrust one finger into Moses’
right eye, and another into his open mouth.
The negro naturally shut his mouth with a snap, while
the professor opened his with a roar, and in another
moment every man was on his feet blinking inquiringly.
“Look! zee snake!” cried
the professor, when Moses released him.
“We must get him out of that,”
remarked Van der Kemp, as he quietly made a noose
with a piece of rattan, and fastened it to the end
of a long pole. With the latter he poked the
creature up, and, when it had uncoiled sufficiently,
he slipped the noose deftly over its head.
“Clear out, friends,” he said, looking
round.
All obeyed with uncommon promptitude
except the professor, who valiantly stood his ground.
Van der Kemp pulled the python violently down
to the floor, where it commenced a tremendous scuffle
among the chairs and posts. The hermit kept
its head off with the pole, and sought to catch its
tail, but failed twice. Seeing this the professor
caught the tail as it whipped against his legs, and
springing down the steps so violently that he snapped
the cord by which the hermit held it, and drew the
creature straight out a thick monster full
twelve feet long, and capable of swallowing a dog
or a child.
“Out of zee way!” shouted
the professor, making a wild effort to swing the python
against a tree, but the tail slipped from his grasp,
the professor fell, and the snake went crashing against
a log, under which it took refuge.
Nigel, who was nearest to it, sprang
forward, fortunately caught its tail, and, swinging
it and himself round with such force that it could
not coil up at all, dashed it against a tree.
Before it could recover from the shock, Moses had
caught up a hatchet and cut its head off with one
blow. The tail wriggled for a few seconds, and
the head gaped once or twice, as if in mild surprise
at so sudden a finale.
“Zat is strainch very
strainch,” slowly remarked the professor, as,
still seated on the ground, he solemnly noted these
facts.
“Not so very strange,
after all,” said Van der Kemp; “I’ve
seen the head of many a bigger snake cut off at one
blow.”
“Mine frond, you mistake me.
It is zee vorking of physical law in zee spiritual
vorld zat perplexes me. Moses has cut zee brute
in two physical fact, substance can be
divided. Zee two parts are still alife, zerfore,
zee life zee spirit has also
been divided!”
“It is indeed very strange,”
said Nigel, with a laugh. “Stranger still
that you may cut a worm into several parts, and the
life remains in each, but, strangest of all, that
you should sit on the ground, professor, instead of
rising up, while you philosophise. You are not
hurt, I hope are you?”
“I razer zink I am,” returned
the philosopher with a faint smile; “mine onkle,
I zink, is spraint.”
This was indeed true, and it seemed
as if the poor man’s wanderings were to be,
for a time at least, brought to an abrupt close.
Fortunately it was found that a pony could be procured
at that village, and, as they had entered the borders
of the mountainous regions, and the roads were more
open and passable than heretofore, it was resolved
that the professor should ride until his ankle recovered.
We must now pass over a considerable
portion of time and space, and convey the reader,
by a forced march, to the crater of an active volcano.
By that time Verkimier’s ankle had recovered
and the pony had been dismissed. The heavy luggage,
with the porters, had been left in the low grounds,
for the mountain they had scaled was over 10,000 feet
above the sea-level. Only one native from the
plain below accompanied them as guide, and three of
their porters whose inquiring minds tempted them to
make the ascent.
At about 10,000 feet the party reached
what the natives called the dempo or edge of the volcano,
whence they looked down into the sawah or ancient
crater, which was a level space composed of brown soil
surrounded by cliffs, and lying like the bottom of
a cup 200 feet below them. It had a sulphurous
odour, and was dotted here and there with clumps of
heath and rhododendrons. In the centre of this
was a cone which formed the true or modern crater.
On scrambling up to the lip of the cone and looking
down some 300 feet of precipitous rock they beheld
what seemed to be a pure white lake set in a central
basin of 200 feet in diameter. The surface of
this lakelet smoked, and although it reflected every
passing cloud as if it were a mirror, it was in reality
a basin of hot mud, the surface of which was about
thirty feet below its rim.
“You will soon see a change
come over it,” said the hermit, as the party
gazed in silent admiration at the weird scene.
He had scarcely spoken, when the middle
of the lake became intensely black and scored with
dark streaks. This, though not quite obvious
at first from the point where they stood, was caused
by the slow formation of a great chasm in the centre
of the seething lake of mud. The lake was sinking
into its own throat. The blackness increased.
Then a dull sullen roar was heard, and next moment
the entire lake upheaved, not violently, but in a
slow, majestic manner some hundreds of feet into the
air, whence it fell back into its basin with an awful
roar which reverberated and echoed from the rocky
walls of the caldron like the singing of an angry
sea. An immense volume of steam the
motive power which had blown up the lake was
at the same time liberated and dissipated in the air.
The wave-circles died away on the
margin of the lake, and the placid, cloud-reflecting
surface was restored until the geyser had gathered
fresh force for another upheaval.
“Amazing!” exclaimed Nigel,
who had gazed with feelings of awe at this curious
exhibition of the tremendous internal forces with which
the Creator has endowed the earth.
“Vonderful!” exclaimed
the professor, whose astonishment was such, that his
eyebrows rose high above the rim of his huge blue binoculars.
Moses, to whom such an exhibition
of the powers of nature was familiar, was, we are
sorry to say, not much impressed, if impressed at all!
Indeed he scarcely noticed it, but watched, with intense
teeth-and-gum disclosing satisfaction, the faces of
two of the native porters who had never seen anything
of the kind before, and whose terrified expressions
suggested the probability of a precipitate flight when
their trembling limbs became fit to resume duty.
“Will it come again soon?”
asked Nigel, turning to Van der Kemp.
“Every fifteen or twenty minutes
it goes through that process all day and every day,”
replied the hermit.
“But, if I may joodge from zee
stones ant scoriae around,” said the professor,
“zee volcano is not always so peaceful as it
is joost now.”
“You are right. About
once in every three years, and sometimes oftener,
the crops of coffee, bananas, rice, etcetera, in this
region are quite destroyed by sulphur-rain, which
covers everything for miles around the crater.”
“Hah! it vould be too hôte
a place zis for us, if zat vas to happin joost now,”
remarked Verkimier with a smile.
“It cannot be far off the time
now, I should think,” said Van der Kemp.
All this talk Moses translated, and
embellished, to the native porters with the solemn
sincerity of a true and thorough-paced hypocrite.
He had scarcely finished, and was watching with immense
delight the changeful aspect of their whitey-green
faces, when another volcanic fit came on, and the
deep-toned roar of the coming explosion was heard.
It was so awesome that the countenance even of Van
der Kemp became graver than usual. As for
the two native porters, they gazed and trembled.
Nigel and the professor also gazed with lively expectation.
Moses we grieve to record it hugged
himself internally, and gloated over the two porters.
Another moment and there came a mighty
roar. Up went the mud-lake hundreds of feet
into the air; out came the steam with the sound of
a thousand trombones, and away went the two porters,
head over heels, down the outer slope of the cone
and across the sawah as if the spirit of evil were
after them.
There was no cause, however, for alarm.
The mud-lake, falling back into its native cup, resumed
its placid aspect and awaited its next upheaval with
as much tranquillity as if it had never known disturbance
in the past, and were indifferent about the future.
That evening our travellers encamped
in close proximity to the crater, supped on fowls
roasted in an open crevice whence issued steam and
sulphurous smells, and slept with the geyser’s
intermittent roar sounding in their ears and re-echoing
in their dreams.