<h2><SPAN name="IN_THE_ABYSS" id="IN_THE_ABYSS">IN THE ABYSS</SPAN></h2>
<p class="cap"><span class="upper">The</span> lieutenant stood in front of the steel sphere
and gnawed a piece of pine splinter. “What
do you think of it, Steevens?” he asked.</p>
<p>“It’s an idea,” said Steevens, in the tone of one
who keeps an open mind.</p>
<p>“I believe it will smash—flat,” said the lieutenant.</p>
<p>“He seems to have calculated it all out pretty
well,” said Steevens, still impartial.</p>
<p>“But think of the pressure,” said the lieutenant.
“At the surface of the water it’s fourteen pounds
to the inch, thirty feet down it’s double that;
sixty, treble; ninety, four times; nine hundred,
forty times; five thousand, three hundred—that’s
a mile—it’s two hundred and forty times fourteen
pounds; that’s—let’s see—thirty hundredweight—a
ton and a half, Steevens; <em>a ton and a half</em>
to the square inch. And the ocean where he’s
going is five miles deep. That’s seven and a
half”—</p>
<p>“Sounds a lot,” said Steevens, “but it’s jolly thick
steel.”</p>
<p>The lieutenant made no answer, but resumed his
pine splinter. The object of their conversation was
a huge ball of steel, having an exterior diameter of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</SPAN></span>
perhaps nine feet. It looked like the shot for some
Titanic piece of artillery. It was elaborately nested
in a monstrous scaffolding built into the framework
of the vessel, and the gigantic spars that were presently
to sling it overboard gave the stern of the
ship an appearance that had raised the curiosity of
every decent sailor who had sighted it, from the Pool
of London to the Tropic of Capricorn. In two
places, one above the other, the steel gave place to
a couple of circular windows of enormously thick
glass, and one of these, set in a steel frame of great
solidity, was now partially unscrewed. Both the
men had seen the interior of this globe for the first
time that morning. It was elaborately padded with
air cushions, with little studs sunk between bulging
pillows to work the simple mechanism of the affair.
Everything was elaborately padded, even the Myers
apparatus which was to absorb carbonic acid and
replace the oxygen inspired by its tenant, when he
had crept in by the glass manhole, and had been
screwed in. It was so elaborately padded that a
man might have been fired from a gun in it with
perfect safety. And it had need to be, for presently
a man was to crawl in through that glass manhole,
to be screwed up tightly, and to be flung overboard,
and to sink down—down—down, for five miles, even
as the lieutenant said. It had taken the strongest
hold of his imagination; it made him a bore at
mess; and he found Steevens, the new arrival
aboard, a godsend to talk to about it, over and
over again.</p>
<p>“It’s my opinion,” said the lieutenant, “that that
glass will simply bend in and bulge and smash,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</SPAN></span>
under a pressure of that sort. Daubrée has made
rocks run like water under big pressures—and, you
mark my words”—</p>
<p>“If the glass did break in,” said Steevens, “what
then?”</p>
<p>“The water would shoot in like a jet of iron.
Have you ever felt a straight jet of high pressure
water? It would hit as hard as a bullet. It would
simply smash him and flatten him. It would tear
down his throat, and into his lungs; it would blow
in his ears”—</p>
<p>“What a detailed imagination you have!” protested
Steevens, who saw things vividly.</p>
<p>“It’s a simple statement of the inevitable,” said
the lieutenant.</p>
<p>“And the globe?”</p>
<p>“Would just give out a few little bubbles, and it
would settle down comfortably against the day of
judgment, among the oozes and the bottom clay—with
poor Elstead spread over his own smashed
cushions like butter over bread.”</p>
<p>He repeated this sentence as though he liked
it very much. “Like butter over bread,” he
said.</p>
<p>“Having a look at the jigger?” said a voice,
and Elstead stood behind them, spick and span
in white, with a cigarette between his teeth, and
his eyes smiling out of the shadow of his ample
hat-brim. “What’s that about bread and butter,
Weybridge? Grumbling as usual about the insufficient
pay of naval officers? It won’t be more
than a day now before I start. We are to get the
slings ready to-day. This clean sky and gentle<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</SPAN></span>
swell is just the kind of thing for swinging off a
dozen tons of lead and iron; isn’t it?”</p>
<p>“It won’t affect you much,” said Weybridge.</p>
<p>“No. Seventy or eighty feet down, and I shall
be there in a dozen seconds, there’s not a particle
moving, though the wind shriek itself hoarse up
above, and the water lifts halfway to the clouds.
No. Down there”— He moved to the side of the
ship and the other two followed him. All three
leant forward on their elbows and stared down into
the yellow-green water.</p>
<p>“<em>Peace</em>,” said Elstead, finishing his thought aloud.</p>
<p>“Are you dead certain that clockwork will act?”
asked Weybridge presently.</p>
<p>“It has worked thirty-five times,” said Elstead.
“It’s bound to work.”</p>
<p>“But if it doesn’t?”</p>
<p>“Why shouldn’t it?”</p>
<p>“I wouldn’t go down in that confounded thing,”
said Weybridge, “for twenty thousand pounds.”</p>
<p>“Cheerful chap you are,” said Elstead, and spat
sociably at a bubble below.</p>
<p>“I don’t understand yet how you mean to work
the thing,” said Steevens.</p>
<p>“In the first place, I’m screwed into the sphere,”
said Elstead, “and when I’ve turned the electric light
off and on three times to show I’m cheerful, I’m
swung out over the stern by that crane, with all
those big lead sinkers slung below me. The top
lead weight has a roller carrying a hundred fathoms
of strong cord rolled up, and that’s all that joins the
sinkers to the sphere, except the slings that will be
cut when the affair is dropped. We use cord rather<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</SPAN></span>
than wire rope because it’s easier to cut and more
buoyant—necessary points, as you will see.</p>
<p>“Through each of these lead weights you notice
there is a hole, and an iron rod will be run through
that and will project six feet on the lower side. If
that rod is rammed up from below, it knocks up a
lever and sets the clockwork in motion at the side of
the cylinder on which the cord winds.</p>
<p>“Very well. The whole affair is lowered gently
into the water, and the slings are cut. The sphere
floats,—with the air in it, it’s lighter than water,—but
the lead weights go down straight and the cord runs
out. When the cord is all paid out, the sphere will
go down too, pulled down by the cord.”</p>
<p>“But why the cord?” asked Steevens. “Why
not fasten the weights directly to the sphere?”</p>
<p>“Because of the smash down below. The whole
affair will go rushing down, mile after mile, at a
headlong pace at last. It would be knocked to
pieces on the bottom if it wasn’t for that cord. But
the weights will hit the bottom, and directly they
do, the buoyancy of the sphere will come into play.
It will go on sinking slower and slower; come to
a stop at last, and then begin to float upward
again.</p>
<p>“That’s where the clockwork comes in. Directly
the weights smash against the sea bottom, the rod
will be knocked through and will kick up the clockwork,
and the cord will be rewound on the reel. I
shall be lugged down to the sea bottom. There I
shall stay for half an hour, with the electric light on,
looking about me. Then the clockwork will release
a spring knife, the cord will be cut, and up I shall<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</SPAN></span>
rush again, like a soda-water bubble. The cord
itself will help the flotation.”</p>
<p>“And if you should chance to hit a ship?” said
Weybridge.</p>
<p>“I should come up at such a pace, I should go
clean through it,” said Elstead, “like a cannon ball.
You needn’t worry about that.”</p>
<p>“And suppose some nimble crustacean should
wriggle into your clockwork”—</p>
<p>“It would be a pressing sort of invitation for
me to stop,” said Elstead, turning his back on the
water and staring at the sphere.</p>
<hr class="l3" />
<p>They had swung Elstead overboard by eleven
o’clock. The day was serenely bright and calm, with
the horizon lost in haze. The electric glare in the
little upper compartment beamed cheerfully three
times. Then they let him down slowly to the
surface of the water, and a sailor in the stern chains
hung ready to cut the tackle that held the lead
weights and the sphere together. The globe, which
had looked so large on deck, looked the smallest
thing conceivable under the stern of the ship. It
rolled a little, and its two dark windows, which
floated uppermost, seemed like eyes turned up in
round wonderment at the people who crowded the
rail. A voice wondered how Elstead liked the
rolling. “Are you ready?” sang out the commander.
“Ay, ay, sir!” “Then let her go!”</p>
<p>The rope of the tackle tightened against the blade
and was cut, and an eddy rolled over the globe in
a grotesquely helpless fashion. Someone waved a
handkerchief, someone else tried an ineffectual cheer,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</SPAN></span>
a middy was counting slowly, “Eight, nine, ten!”
Another roll, then with a jerk and a splash the thing
righted itself.</p>
<p>It seemed to be stationary for a moment, to grow
rapidly smaller, and then the water closed over it,
and it became visible, enlarged by refraction and
dimmer, below the surface. Before one could count
three it had disappeared. There was a flicker of
white light far down in the water, that diminished to
a speck and vanished. Then there was nothing but
a depth of water going down into blackness, through
which a shark was swimming.</p>
<p>Then suddenly the screw of the cruiser began to
rotate, the water was crickled, the shark disappeared
in a wrinkled confusion, and a torrent of foam rushed
across the crystalline clearness that had swallowed
up Elstead. “What’s the idee?” said one A.B. to
another.</p>
<p>“We’re going to lay off about a couple of miles, ’fear
he should hit us when he comes up,” said his mate.</p>
<p>The ship steamed slowly to her new position.
Aboard her almost everyone who was unoccupied
remained watching the breathing swell into which
the sphere had sunk. For the next half-hour it is
doubtful if a word was spoken that did not bear
directly or indirectly on Elstead. The December
sun was now high in the sky, and the heat very
considerable.</p>
<p>“He’ll be cold enough down there,” said Weybridge.
“They say that below a certain depth sea
water’s always just about freezing.”</p>
<p>“Where’ll he come up?” asked Steevens. “I’ve
lost my bearings.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“That’s the spot,” said the commander, who
prided himself on his omniscience. He extended
a precise finger south-eastward. “And this, I
reckon, is pretty nearly the moment,” he said. “He’s
been thirty-five minutes.”</p>
<p>“How long does it take to reach the bottom of
the ocean?” asked Steevens.</p>
<p>“For a depth of five miles, and reckoning—as we
did—an acceleration of two feet per second, both
ways, is just about three-quarters of a minute.”</p>
<p>“Then he’s overdue,” said Weybridge.</p>
<p>“Pretty nearly,” said the commander. “I suppose
it takes a few minutes for that cord of his to
wind in.”</p>
<p>“I forgot that,” said Weybridge, evidently relieved.</p>
<p>And then began the suspense. A minute slowly
dragged itself out, and no sphere shot out of the
water. Another followed, and nothing broke the
low oily swell. The sailors explained to one another
that little point about the winding-in of the cord.
The rigging was dotted with expectant faces.
“Come up, Elstead!” called one hairy-chested salt
impatiently, and the others caught it up, and shouted
as though they were waiting for the curtain of a
theatre to rise.</p>
<p>The commander glanced irritably at them.</p>
<p>“Of course, if the acceleration’s less than two,” he
said, “he’ll be all the longer. We aren’t absolutely
certain that was the proper figure. I’m no slavish
believer in calculations.”</p>
<p>Steevens agreed concisely. No one on the
quarter-deck spoke for a couple of minutes. Then
Steevens’ watchcase clicked.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>When, twenty-one minutes after, the sun reached
the zenith, they were still waiting for the globe to
reappear, and not a man aboard had dared to
whisper that hope was dead. It was Weybridge
who first gave expression to that realisation. He
spoke while the sound of eight bells still hung in the
air. “I always distrusted that window,” he said quite
suddenly to Steevens.</p>
<p>“Good God!” said Steevens; “you don’t think—?”</p>
<p>“Well!” said Weybridge, and left the rest to his
imagination.</p>
<p>“I’m no great believer in calculations myself,”
said the commander dubiously, “so that I’m not
altogether hopeless yet.” And at midnight the
gunboat was steaming slowly in a spiral round the
spot where the globe had sunk, and the white beam
of the electric light fled and halted and swept discontentedly
onward again over the waste of phosphorescent
waters under the little stars.</p>
<p>“If his window hasn’t burst and smashed him,”
said Weybridge, “then it’s a cursed sight worse, for
his clockwork has gone wrong, and he’s alive now,
five miles under our feet, down there in the cold and
dark, anchored in that little bubble of his, where
never a ray of light has shone or a human being
lived, since the waters were gathered together. He’s
there without food, feeling hungry and thirsty and
scared, wondering whether he’ll starve or stifle.
Which will it be? The Myers apparatus is running
out, I suppose. How long do they last?”</p>
<p>“Good heavens!” he exclaimed; “what little
things we are! What daring little devils! Down<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</SPAN></span>
there, miles and miles of water—all water, and all
this empty water about us and this sky. Gulfs!”
He threw his hands out, and as he did so, a little
white streak swept noiselessly up the sky, travelled
more slowly, stopped, became a motionless dot, as
though a new star had fallen up into the sky.
Then it went sliding back again and lost itself
amidst the reflections of the stars and the white
haze of the sea’s phosphorescence.</p>
<p>At the sight he stopped, arm extended and mouth
open. He shut his mouth, opened it again, and
waved his arms with an impatient gesture. Then he
turned, shouted “El-stead ahoy!” to the first watch,
and went at a run to Lindley and the search-light.
“I saw him,” he said. “Starboard there! His
light’s on, and he’s just shot out of the water. Bring
the light round. We ought to see him drifting,
when he lifts on the swell.”</p>
<p>But they never picked up the explorer until dawn.
Then they almost ran him down. The crane was
swung out and a boat’s crew hooked the chain to the
sphere. When they had shipped the sphere, they
unscrewed the manhole and peered into the darkness
of the interior (for the electric light chamber was
intended to illuminate the water about the sphere,
and was shut off entirely from its general cavity).</p>
<p>The air was very hot within the cavity, and the
indiarubber at the lip of the manhole was soft.
There was no answer to their eager questions and
no sound of movement within. Elstead seemed to
be lying motionless, crumpled up in the bottom of
the globe. The ship’s doctor crawled in and lifted
him out to the men outside. For a moment or so<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</SPAN></span>
they did not know whether Elstead was alive or
dead. His face, in the yellow light of the ship’s
lamps, glistened with perspiration. They carried
him down to his own cabin.</p>
<p>He was not dead, they found, but in a state of
absolute nervous collapse, and besides cruelly bruised.
For some days he had to lie perfectly still. It was
a week before he could tell his experiences.</p>
<p>Almost his first words were that he was going
down again. The sphere would have to be altered,
he said, in order to allow him to throw off the cord
if need be, and that was all. He had had the most
marvellous experience. “You thought I should find
nothing but ooze,” he said. “You laughed at my
explorations, and I’ve discovered a new world!”
He told his story in disconnected fragments, and
chiefly from the wrong end, so that it is impossible
to re-tell it in his words. But what follows is the
narrative of his experience.</p>
<p>It began atrociously, he said. Before the cord
ran out, the thing kept rolling over. He felt like a
frog in a football. He could see nothing but the
crane and the sky overhead, with an occasional
glimpse of the people on the ship’s rail. He
couldn’t tell a bit which way the thing would roll
next. Suddenly he would find his feet going up,
and try to step, and over he went rolling, head over
heels, and just anyhow, on the padding. Any other
shape would have been more comfortable, but no
other shape was to be relied upon under the huge
pressure of the nethermost abyss.</p>
<p>Suddenly the swaying ceased; the globe righted,
and when he had picked himself up, he saw the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</SPAN></span>
water all about him greeny-blue, with an attenuated
light filtering down from above, and a shoal of little
floating things went rushing up past him, as it
seemed to him, towards the light. And even as
he looked, it grew darker and darker, until the water
above was as dark as the midnight sky, albeit of a
greener shade, and the water below black. And
little transparent things in the water developed a
faint glint of luminosity, and shot past him in faint
greenish streaks.</p>
<p>And the feeling of falling! It was just like the
start of a lift, he said, only it kept on. One has to
imagine what that means, that keeping on. It was
then of all times that Elstead repented of his
adventure. He saw the chances against him in an
altogether new light. He thought of the big cuttlefish
people knew to exist in the middle waters, the
kind of things they find half digested in whales at
times, or floating dead and rotten and half eaten by
fish. Suppose one caught hold and wouldn’t let
go. And had the clockwork really been sufficiently
tested? But whether he wanted to go on or to go
back mattered not the slightest now.</p>
<p>In fifty seconds everything was as black as night
outside, except where the beam from his light struck
through the waters, and picked out every now and
then some fish or scrap of sinking matter. They
flashed by too fast for him to see what they were.
Once he thinks he passed a shark. And then the
sphere began to get hot by friction against the water.
They had underestimated this, it seems.</p>
<p>The first thing he noticed was that he was perspiring,
and then he heard a hissing growing louder<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</SPAN></span>
under his feet, and saw a lot of little bubbles—very
little bubbles they were—rushing upward like a fan
through the water outside. Steam! He felt the
window, and it was hot. He turned on the minute
glow-lamp that lit his own cavity, looked at the
padded watch by the studs, and saw he had been
travelling now for two minutes. It came into his
head that the window would crack through the
conflict of temperatures, for he knew the bottom
water is very near freezing.</p>
<p>Then suddenly the floor of the sphere seemed to
press against his feet, the rush of bubbles outside
grew slower and slower, and the hissing diminished.
The sphere rolled a little. The window had not
cracked, nothing had given, and he knew that the
dangers of sinking, at anyrate, were over.</p>
<p>In another minute or so he would be on the floor
of the abyss. He thought, he said, of Steevens and
Weybridge and the rest of them five miles overhead,
higher to him than the very highest clouds that ever
floated over land are to us, steaming slowly and
staring down and wondering what had happened to
him.</p>
<p>He peered out of the window. There were no
more bubbles now, and the hissing had stopped.
Outside there was a heavy blackness—as black as
black velvet—except where the electric light pierced
the empty water and showed the colour of it—a
yellow-green. Then three things like shapes of fire
swam into sight, following each other through the
water. Whether they were little and near or big
and far off he could not tell.</p>
<p>Each was outlined in a bluish light almost as<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</SPAN></span>
bright as the lights of a fishing smack, a light which
seemed to be smoking greatly, and all along the sides
of them were specks of this, like the lighter portholes
of a ship. Their phosphorescence seemed to go out
as they came into the radiance of his lamp, and he
saw then that they were little fish of some strange
sort, with huge heads, vast eyes, and dwindling
bodies and tails. Their eyes were turned towards
him, and he judged they were following him down.
He supposed they were attracted by his glare.</p>
<p>Presently others of the same sort joined them.
As he went on down, he noticed that the water
became of a pallid colour, and that little specks
twinkled in his ray like motes in a sunbeam. This
was probably due to the clouds of ooze and mud
that the impact of his leaden sinkers had disturbed.</p>
<p>By the time he was drawn down to the lead
weights he was in a dense fog of white that his
electric light failed altogether to pierce for more than
a few yards, and many minutes elapsed before the
hanging sheets of sediment subsided to any extent.
Then, lit by his light and by the transient phosphorescence
of a distant shoal of fishes, he was able
to see under the huge blackness of the super-incumbent
water an undulating expanse of greyish-white
ooze, broken here and there by tangled thickets of a
growth of sea lilies, waving hungry tentacles in the
air.</p>
<p>Farther away were the graceful, translucent outlines
of a group of gigantic sponges. About this
floor there were scattered a number of bristling
flattish tufts of rich purple and black, which he
decided must be some sort of sea-urchin, and small,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</SPAN></span>
large-eyed or blind things having a curious resemblance,
some to woodlice, and others to lobsters,
crawled sluggishly across the track of the light and
vanished into the obscurity again, leaving furrowed
trails behind them.</p>
<p>Then suddenly the hovering swarm of little fishes
veered about and came towards him as a flight of
starlings might do. They passed over him like a
phosphorescent snow, and then he saw behind them
some larger creature advancing towards the sphere.</p>
<p>At first he could see it only dimly, a faintly
moving figure remotely suggestive of a walking
man, and then it came into the spray of light that
the lamp shot out. As the glare struck it, it shut
its eyes, dazzled. He stared in rigid astonishment.</p>
<p>It was a strange vertebrated animal. Its dark
purple head was dimly suggestive of a chameleon,
but it had such a high forehead and such a braincase
as no reptile ever displayed before; the vertical
pitch of its face gave it a most extraordinary resemblance
to a human being.</p>
<p>Two large and protruding eyes projected from
sockets in chameleon fashion, and it had a broad
reptilian mouth with horny lips beneath its little
nostrils. In the position of the ears were two huge
gill-covers, and out of these floated a branching tree
of coralline filaments, almost like the tree-like gills
that very young rays and sharks possess.</p>
<p>But the humanity of the face was not the most
extraordinary thing about the creature. It was a
biped; its almost globular body was poised on a
tripod of two frog-like legs and a long thick tail,
and its fore limbs, which grotesquely caricatured the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</SPAN></span>
human hand, much as a frog’s do, carried a long
shaft of bone, tipped with copper. The colour of
the creature was variegated; its head, hands, and
legs were purple; but its skin, which hung loosely
upon it, even as clothes might do, was a phosphorescent
grey. And it stood there blinded by
the light.</p>
<p>At last this unknown creature of the abyss
blinked its eyes open, and, shading them with its
disengaged hand, opened its mouth and gave vent
to a shouting noise, articulate almost as speech
might be, that penetrated even the steel case and
padded jacket of the sphere. How a shouting may
be accomplished without lungs Elstead does not
profess to explain. It then moved sideways out
of the glare into the mystery of shadow that
bordered it on either side, and Elstead felt rather
than saw that it was coming towards him. Fancying
the light had attracted it, he turned the switch
that cut off the current. In another moment something
soft dabbed upon the steel, and the globe
swayed.</p>
<p>Then the shouting was repeated, and it seemed
to him that a distant echo answered it. The dabbing
recurred, and the globe swayed and ground
against the spindle over which the wire was rolled.
He stood in the blackness and peered out into the
everlasting night of the abyss. And presently he
saw, very faint and remote, other phosphorescent
quasi-human forms hurrying towards him.</p>
<p>Hardly knowing what he did, he felt about in his
swaying prison for the stud of the exterior electric
light, and came by accident against his own small<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</SPAN></span>
glow-lamp in its padded recess. The sphere twisted,
and then threw him down; he heard shouts like
shouts of surprise, and when he rose to his feet, he
saw two pairs of stalked eyes peering into the lower
window and reflecting his light.</p>
<p>In another moment hands were dabbing vigorously
at his steel casing, and there was a sound, horrible
enough in his position, of the metal protection of
the clockwork being vigorously hammered. That,
indeed, sent his heart into his mouth, for if these
strange creatures succeeded in stopping that, his
release would never occur. Scarcely had he thought
as much when he felt the sphere sway violently, and
the floor of it press hard against his feet. He turned
off the small glow-lamp that lit the interior, and sent
the ray of the large light in the separate compartment
out into the water. The sea-floor and the
man-like creatures had disappeared, and a couple
of fish chasing each other dropped suddenly by the
window.</p>
<p>He thought at once that these strange denizens
of the deep sea had broken the rope, and that he
had escaped. He drove up faster and faster, and
then stopped with a jerk that sent him flying against
the padded roof of his prison. For half a minute,
perhaps, he was too astonished to think.</p>
<p>Then he felt that the sphere was spinning slowly,
and rocking, and it seemed to him that it was also
being drawn through the water. By crouching close
to the window, he managed to make his weight
effective and roll that part of the sphere downward,
but he could see nothing save the pale ray of his
light striking down ineffectively into the darkness.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</SPAN></span>
It occurred to him that he would see more if he
turned the lamp off, and allowed his eyes to grow
accustomed to the profound obscurity.</p>
<p>In this he was wise. After some minutes the
velvety blackness became a translucent blackness,
and then, far away, and as faint as the zodiacal light
of an English summer evening, he saw shapes
moving below. He judged these creatures had
detached his cable, and were towing him along the
sea bottom.</p>
<p>And then he saw something faint and remote
across the undulations of the submarine plain, a
broad horizon of pale luminosity that extended
this way and that way as far as the range of his
little window permitted him to see. To this he was
being towed, as a balloon might be towed by men
out of the open country into a town. He approached
it very slowly, and very slowly the dim irradiation
was gathered together into more definite shapes.</p>
<p>It was nearly five o’clock before he came over
this luminous area, and by that time he could
make out an arrangement suggestive of streets
and houses grouped about a vast roofless erection
that was grotesquely suggestive of a ruined
abbey. It was spread out like a map below
him. The houses were all roofless enclosures of
walls, and their substance being, as he afterwards
saw, of phosphorescent bones, gave the
place an appearance as if it were built of drowned
moonshine.</p>
<p>Among the inner caves of the place waving
trees of crinoid stretched their tentacles, and tall,
slender, glassy sponges shot like shining minarets<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</SPAN></span>
and lilies of filmy light out of the general glow of
the city. In the open spaces of the place he could
see a stirring movement as of crowds of people, but
he was too many fathoms above them to distinguish
the individuals in those crowds.</p>
<p>Then slowly they pulled him down, and as they
did so, the details of the place crept slowly upon
his apprehension. He saw that the courses of the
cloudy buildings were marked out with beaded
lines of round objects, and then he perceived that at
several points below him, in broad open spaces, were
forms like the encrusted shapes of ships.</p>
<p>Slowly and surely he was drawn down, and the
forms below him became brighter, clearer, more distinct.
He was being pulled down, he perceived,
towards the large building in the centre of the town,
and he could catch a glimpse ever and again of the
multitudinous forms that were lugging at his cord.
He was astonished to see that the rigging of one of
the ships, which formed such a prominent feature of
the place, was crowded with a host of gesticulating
figures regarding him, and then the walls of the
great building rose about him silently, and hid the
city from his eyes.</p>
<p>And such walls they were, of water-logged wood,
and twisted wire-rope, and iron spars, and copper,
and the bones and skulls of dead men. The skulls
ran in zigzag lines and spirals and fantastic curves
over the building; and in and out of their eye-sockets,
and over the whole surface of the place, lurked and
played a multitude of silvery little fishes.</p>
<p>Suddenly his ears were filled with a low shouting
and a noise like the violent blowing of horns, and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</SPAN></span>
this gave place to a fantastic chant. Down the
sphere sank, past the huge pointed windows, through
which he saw vaguely a great number of these
strange, ghostlike people regarding him, and at
last he came to rest, as it seemed, on a kind of
altar that stood in the centre of the place.</p>
<p>And now he was at such a level that he could
see these strange people of the abyss plainly once
more. To his astonishment, he perceived that they
were prostrating themselves before him, all save one,
dressed as it seemed in a robe of placoid scales,
and crowned with a luminous diadem, who stood
with his reptilian mouth opening and shutting, as
though he led the chanting of the worshippers.</p>
<p>A curious impulse made Elstead turn on his
small glow-lamp again, so that he became visible
to these creatures of the abyss, albeit the glare
made them disappear forthwith into night. At this
sudden sight of him, the chanting gave place to a
tumult of exultant shouts; and Elstead, being
anxious to watch them, turned his light off again,
and vanished from before their eyes. But for a
time he was too blind to make out what they were
doing, and when at last he could distinguish them,
they were kneeling again. And thus they continued
worshipping him, without rest or intermission,
for the space of three hours.</p>
<p>Most circumstantial was Elstead’s account of this
astounding city and its people, these people of
perpetual night, who have never seen sun or moon
or stars, green vegetation, nor any living, air-breathing
creatures, who know nothing of fire, nor any light
but the phosphorescent light of living things.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Startling as is his story, it is yet more startling
to find that scientific men, of such eminence as
Adams and Jenkins, find nothing incredible in it.
They tell me they see no reason why intelligent,
water-breathing, vertebrated creatures, inured to a
low temperature and enormous pressure, and of such
a heavy structure, that neither alive nor dead would
they float, might not live upon the bottom of the
deep sea, and quite unsuspected by us, descendants
like ourselves of the great Theriomorpha of the New
Red Sandstone age.</p>
<p>We should be known to them, however, as strange,
meteoric creatures, wont to fall catastrophically dead
out of the mysterious blackness of their watery sky.
And not only we ourselves, but our ships, our
metals, our appliances, would come raining down
out of the night. Sometimes sinking things would
smite down and crush them, as if it were the judgment
of some unseen power above, and sometimes
would come things of the utmost rarity or utility,
or shapes of inspiring suggestion. One can understand,
perhaps, something of their behaviour at the
descent of a living man, if one thinks what a barbaric
people might do, to whom an enhaloed, shining creature
came suddenly out of the sky.</p>
<p>At one time or another Elstead probably told the
officers of the <i>Ptarmigan</i> every detail of his strange
twelve hours in the abyss. That he also intended to
write them down is certain, but he never did, and so
unhappily we have to piece together the discrepant
fragments of his story from the reminiscences of
Commander Simmons, Weybridge, Steevens, Lindley,
and the others.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>We see the thing darkly in fragmentary glimpses—the
huge ghostly building, the bowing, chanting people,
with their dark chameleon-like heads and faintly
luminous clothing, and Elstead, with his light turned
on again, vainly trying to convey to their minds
that the cord by which the sphere was held was to
be severed. Minute after minute slipped away, and
Elstead, looking at his watch, was horrified to find
that he had oxygen only for four hours more. But
the chant in his honour kept on as remorselessly as
if it was the marching song of his approaching death.</p>
<p>The manner of his release he does not understand,
but to judge by the end of cord that hung from the
sphere, it had been cut through by rubbing against
the edge of the altar. Abruptly the sphere rolled
over, and he swept up, out of their world, as an
ethereal creature clothed in a vacuum would sweep
through our own atmosphere back to its native ether
again. He must have torn out of their sight as a
hydrogen bubble hastens upward from our air. A
strange ascension it must have seemed to them.</p>
<p>The sphere rushed up with even greater velocity
than, when weighted with the lead sinkers, it had
rushed down. It became exceedingly hot. It drove
up with the windows uppermost, and he remembers
the torrent of bubbles frothing against the glass.
Every moment he expected this to fly. Then
suddenly something like a huge wheel seemed to
be released in his head, the padded compartment
began spinning about him, and he fainted. His
next recollection was of his cabin, and of the
doctor’s voice.</p>
<p>But that is the substance of the extraordinary<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</SPAN></span>
story that Elstead related in fragments to the
officers of the <i>Ptarmigan</i>. He promised to write
it all down at a later date. His mind was chiefly
occupied with the improvement of his apparatus,
which was effected at Rio.</p>
<p>It remains only to tell that on February 2,
1896, he made his second descent into the ocean
abyss, with the improvements his first experience
suggested. What happened we shall probably never
know. He never returned. The <i>Ptarmigan</i> beat
about over the point of his submersion, seeking him
in vain for thirteen days. Then she returned to
Rio, and the news was telegraphed to his friends.
So the matter remains for the present. But it is
hardly probable that no further attempt will be
made to verify his strange story of these hitherto
unsuspected cities of the deep sea.</p>
<hr class="l1" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</SPAN></span></p>
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