It was quite evident that we were being cast up-
wards by eruptive matter; under the raft there was
a mass of boiling water, and under this was a heav-
ing mass of lava, and an aggregate of rocks which
on reaching the. summit of the water would be dis-
persed in every direction. That we were inside the
chimney of a volcano there could no longer be the
shadow of a doubt. Nothing more terrible could be
conceived !
But on this occasion, instead of Sneffels, an old
and extinct volcano, we were inside a mountain of
fire in full activity. Several times I found myself
asking, what mountain was it, and on what part of
the world we should be shot out. As if it were of
any consequence! In the northern regions, there
could be no reasonable doubt about that. Before it
went decidedly mad, the compass had never made
the slightest mistake. From the cape of Saknus-
sem, we had been swept away to the northward
many hundreds of leagues. Now the question was,
were we once more under Iceland — should we he
belched forth on to the earth through the crater of
Mount Hecla, or should we reappear through one
of the other seven fire- funnels of the island? Tak-
ing in my mental vision a radius of five hundred
leagues to the westward, I could Bee. under this
parallel only the little-known volcanoes of the
northwest coasts of America. To the east one only
existed somewhere about the eightieth degree of
latitude, the Esk, upon the island of Jean Mayen,
not far from the frozen regions of Spitzbergen. It
was not craters that were wanting, and many of
them were big enough to vomit a whole army; all
I wished to know was the particular one towards
whjch we were making with such fearful velocity.
I often think now of my folly.; as if I should have
expected to escape !
Towards morning, the ascending motion became
greater and greater. If the degree of heat in-
creased instead of decreasing, as we approached
the surface of the earth, it was simply because the
causes were local and wholly due to volcanic in-
fluence. Our very style of locomotion left in my
mind no doubt upon the subject. An enormous
force, a force of some hundred of combined atmos-
pheres produced by vapors accumulated and long
compressed in the interior of the earth, were hoist-
ing us upwards with irresistible power.
But though we were approaching the light of day,
to what fearful dangers were we about to be ex-
posed? Instant death appeared the only fate which
we could expeet or contemplate.
The Worst Period of the Ascent
SOON a dim, sepulchral light penetrated the
vertical gallery, which became wider and
wider. I could make out to the right and left
long dark corridors like immense tunnels, from
which awful and horrid vapors poured out. Ton-
gues of fire, sparkling and crackling, appeared about
to lick us up. The hour had come !
"Look, uncle, look!" I cried.
"Well, what you see are the great sulphurous
flames. Nothing more common in connection with
an eruption."
"But if they lap us round!" I angrily replied.
"They will not lap us round," was his quiet a'nJ
serene answer.
"But it will he all the same in the end if they
stifle us," I cried.
"We shall not be stifled. The gallery is rapidly
becoming wider and wider, and if it be necessary,
we will presently leave the raft and take refuge in
some fissure in the rock."
"But the water, the water, which is continually
ascending?" I despairingly replied.
"There is no longer any water, Harry," he an-
swered, "but a kind of lava paste, which is heaving
us up, in company with itself, to the mouth of the
crater."
In truth, the liquid column' of water had wholly
disappeared to give place to dense masses of seeth-
ing eruptive matter. The temperature was becoming
utterly insupportable, and a thermometer exposed
to this atmosphere would have marked between 189
and 190 degrees Fahrenheit. Perspiration rushed
from every pore. But for the extraordinary rapidity
of our ascent we should have been stifled.
Nevertheless, the Professor did not carry out
his proposition of abandoning the raft; and he did
quite wisely. Anyway, those few ill-joined beams
offered a solid surface — a support which elsewhere
must have utterly failed us.
Towards eight o'clock in the morning a new in-
cident startled us. The ascensional movement sud-
denly ceased. The raft became still and motionless.
"What is the matter now?" I said querulously, very
much startled by this ehange.
"A simple halt," replied my uncle.
"Is the eruption about to fail?" I asked.
"I hope not."
Without making any reply, I rose. I tried to
look around me. Perhaps the raft, checked by some
projecting rock, opposed a momentary resistance
to the eruptive mass. In this case, it was absolutely
necessary to release it as quickly as possible.
Nothing of the kind had occurred. The column of
cinders, of scoria?, of broken rocks and earth, had
wholly ceased to ascend. "I tell you, uncle, that the
eruption has stopped," was my oracular decision.
"Ah," said my uncle, "you think so, my boy. You
are wrong. Do not be in the least alarmed; this
sudden moment of calm will not last long, be as-
sured. It has already endured five minutes, and be-
fore we are many minutes older we shall be con-
tinuing our journey to the mouth of the crater."
All the time he was speaking the Professor con-
tinued to consult his chronometer, and he was
probably right in his prognostics. Soon the raft
resumed its motion, in a very rapid and disorderly
way, which lasted two minutes or thereabout; and
then again it stopped as suddenly as before. "Good,"
said my uncle, observing the hour, "in ten minutes
we shall start again."
"In ten minutes?"
"Yes — precisely. We have to do with a volcano,
the eruption of which is intermittent. We are com-
pelled to breathe just as it does.
A Long, Lasting Delirium as Escape Approaches ,
NOTHING could be more true. At the exact
minute he had indicated, we were- again
launched on high with extreme rapidity.
Not to be cast off the raft, it was necessary to hold
on to the beams. Then the hoist again ceased.
Many times Since have I thought of this singular,
Page:Amazing Stories Volume 01 Number 04.djvu/84
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AMAZING STORIES