<h2><SPAN name="XIII" id="XIII"></SPAN>CHAPTER XIII.</h2>
<p class="letter">
TOP’S CONTRIBUTION—MAKING BOWS AND ARROWS—A
BRICK-KILN—A POTTERY—DIFFERENT COOKING UTENSILS—THE FIRST
BOILED MEAT—MUGWORT—THE SOUTHERN CROSS—AN IMPORTANT
ASTRONOMICAL OBSERVATION.</p>
<p>“Now then, Mr. Smith, where shall we begin?” asked Pencroff the
next morning.</p>
<p>“At the beginning,” answered the engineer.</p>
<p>And this, indeed, was necessary, as the colonists did not even possess
implements with which to make implements. Neither were they in that condition
of nature which “having time,” economizes effort; the necessities
of life must be provided for at once, and, if profiting by experience they had
nothing to invent, at least they had everything to make. Their iron and steel
was in the ore, their pottery was in the clay, their linen and clothes were
still to be provided.</p>
<p>It must be remembered, however, that these colonists were <i>men</i>, in the
best sense of the word. The engineer Smith could not have been aided by
comrades more intelligent, or more devoted and zealous. He had questioned them,
and knew their ability.</p>
<p>The reporter, having learned everything so as to be able to speak of
everything, would contribute largely from his knowledge and skill towards the
settlement of the island. He would not shirk work; and, a thorough sportsman,
he would follow as a business what he had formerly indulged in as a pastime.
Herbert, a manly lad, already well versed in natural science, would contribute
his share to the common cause. Neb was devotion personified. Adroit,
intelligent, indefatigable, robust, of iron constitution, knowing something of
the work in a smithy, his assistance would be considerable. As to Pencroff, he
had sailed every sea, had been a carpenter in the Brooklyn yards, an assistant
tailor on board ship, and, during hie leaves of absence, a gardener, farmer,
etc.; in short, like every sailor, he was a Jack-of-all-trades.</p>
<p>Indeed, it would have been hard to bring together five men, more able to
struggle against fate, and more certain to triumph in the end.</p>
<p>“At the beginning,” Smith had said. And this beginning was the
construction of an apparatus which would serve to transform the natural
substances. Every one knows what an important part heat plays in these
transformations. Therefore, as wood and coal were already provided it was only
necessary to make an oven to utilize them.</p>
<p>“What good is an oven,” asked Pencroff.</p>
<p>“To make the pottery that we want,” replied Smith.</p>
<p>“And how will we make an oven?”</p>
<p>“With bricks.”</p>
<p>“And how will we make the bricks?”</p>
<p>“With the clay. Come, friends. We will set up our factory at the place of
production, so as to avoid carriage. Neb will bring the provisions, and we
shall not lack fire to cook food.”</p>
<p>“No,” replied the reporter, “but suppose we lack food, since
we have no hunting implements?”</p>
<p>“If we only had a knife!” cried the sailor,</p>
<p>“What, then?” asked Smith.</p>
<p>“Why, I would make a bow and arrows. And game would be plenty in the
larder.”</p>
<p>“A knife. Something that will cut,” said the engineer, as if
talking to himself.</p>
<p>Suddenly his face brightened:</p>
<p>“Come here, Top,” he called.</p>
<p>The dog bounded to his master, and Smith having taken off the collar which the
animal had around his neck, broke it into halves, saying:—</p>
<p>“Here are two knives, Pencroff.”</p>
<p>For all response, the sailor gave a couple of cheers. Top’s collar was
made from a thin piece of tempered steel. All that was therefore necessary was
to rub it to an edge upon a sand-stone, and then to sharpen it upon one of
finer grain. These kind of stones were readily procurable upon the beach, and
in a couple of hours the implements of the colony consisted of two strong
blades, which it was easy to fasten into solid handles. The overcoming of this
first difficulty was greeted as a triumph and it was indeed a fortunate event.</p>
<p>On setting out, it was the intention of the engineer to return to the western
bank of the lake, where he had noticed the clay, of which he had secured a
specimen. Following the bank of the Mercy they crossed Prospect Plateau, and
after a walk of about five miles, they arrived at a glade some 200 paces
distant from Lake Grant.</p>
<p>On the way, Herbert had discovered a tree from which the South American Indians
make bows. It was the “crejimba,” of the palm family. From it they
cut long straight branches, which they peeled and shaped into bows. For cords
they took the fibres of the “hibiscus heterophyltus” (Indian hemp),
a malvaceous plant, the fibres of which are as strong as the tendons of an
animal. Pencroff, having thus provided bows, only needed arrows. Those were
easily made from straight, stiff branches, free from knots, but it was not so
easy to arm them with a substitute for iron. But Pencroff said that he had
accomplished this much, and that chance would do the rest.</p>
<p>The party had reached the place discovered the day before. The ground was
composed of that clay which is used in making bricks and tiles, and was
therefore just the thing for their purpose. The labor was not difficult. It was
only necessary to scour the clay with sand, mould the bricks, and then bake
them before a wood fire.</p>
<p>Usually, bricks are pressed in moulds, but the engineer contented himself with
making these by hand. All this day and the next was employed in this work. The
clay, soaked in water, was kneaded by the hands and feet of the manipulators,
and then divided into blocks of equal size. A skilled workman can make, without
machinery, as many as 10,000 bricks in twelve hours; but in the two days the
brickmakers of Lincoln Island had made but 3,000, which were piled one upon the
other to await the time when they would be dry enough to bake, which would be
in three or four days.</p>
<p>On the 2d of April, Smith occupied himself in determining the position of the
island.</p>
<p>The day before he had noted the precise minute at which the sun had set,
allowing for the refraction. On this morning, he ascertained with equal
precision the time of its rising. The intervening time was twelve hours and
twenty-four minutes. Therefore six hours and twelve minutes after rising the
sun would pass the meridian, and the point in the sky which it would occupy at
that instant would be north.</p>
<p>At the proper hour Smith marked this point, and by getting two trees in line
obtained a meridian for his future operations.</p>
<p>During the two days preceding the baking they occupied themselves by laying in
a supply of firewood. Branches were cut from the edge of the clearing, and all
the dead wood under the trees was picked up. And now and then they hunted in
the neighborhood, the more successfully, as Pencroff had some dozens of arrows
with very sharp points. It was Top who had provided these points by bringing in
a porcupine, poor game enough, but of an undeniable value, thanks to the quills
with which it bristled. These quills were firmly fastened to the ends of the
arrows, and their flight was guided by feathering them with the
cockatoo’s feathers. The reporter and Herbert soon became expert
marksmen, and all kinds of game, such as cabiais, pigeons, agoutis, heath-cock,
etc., abounded at the Chimneys. Most of these were killed in that part of the
forest upon the left bank of the Mercy, which they had called Jacamar Wood,
after the kingfisher which Pencroff and Herbert had pursued there during their
first exploration.</p>
<p>The meat was eaten fresh, but they preserved the hams of the cabiai by smoking
them before a fire of green wood, having made them aromatic with odorous
leaves. Thus, they had nothing but roast after roast, and they would have been
glad to have heard a pot singing upon the hearth; but first they must have the
pot, and for this they must have the oven.</p>
<p>During these excursions, the hunters noticed the recent tracks of large
animals, armed with strong claws, but they could not tell their species; and
Smith cautioned them to be prudent, as, doubtless, there were dangerous beasts
in the forest.</p>
<p>He was right. For one day Spilett and Herbert saw an animal resembling a
jaguar. But, fortunately, the beast did not attack them, as they could hardly
have killed it without being themselves wounded. But, Spilett promised, if he
should ever obtain a proper weapon, such as one of the guns Pencroff begged
for, that he would wage relentless war on all ferocious beasts and rid the
island of their presence.</p>
<p>They did not do anything to the Chimneys, as the engineer hoped to discover, or
to build, if need be, a more convenient habitation, but contented themselves by
spreading fresh quantities of moss and dry leaves upon the sand in the
corridors, and upon these primitive beds the tired workmen slept soundly. They
also reckoned the days already passed on Lincoln Island, and began keeping a
calendar. On the 5th of April, which was a Wednesday, they had been twelve days
upon the island.</p>
<p>On the morning of the 6th, the engineer with his companions met at the place
where the bricks were to be baked. Of course the operation was to be conducted
in the open air, and not in an oven, or, rather, the pile of bricks would in
itself form a bake-oven. Carefully-prepared faggots were laid upon the ground,
surrounding the tiers of dry bricks, which formed a great cube, in which
air-holes had been left. The work occupied the whole day, and it was not until
evening that they lit the fire, which all night long they kept supplied with
fuel.</p>
<p>The work lasted forty-eight hours, and succeeded perfectly. Then, as it was
necessary to let the smoking mass cool, Neb and Pencroff, directed by Mr.
Smith, brought, on a hurdle made of branches, numerous loads of limestone which
they found scattered in abundance to the north of the lake. These stones,
decomposed by heat, furnished a thick quick-lime, which increased in bulk by
slacking, and was fully as pure as if it had been produced by the calcimation
of chalk or marble. Mixed with sand in order to diminish its shrinkage while
drying, this lime made an excellent mortar.</p>
<p>By the 9th of April the engineer had at his disposal a quantity of lime, all
prepared, and some thousands of bricks. They, therefore, began at once the
construction of an oven, in which to bake their pottery. This was accomplished
without much difficulty; and, five days later, the oven was supplied with coal
from the open vein, which the engineer had discovered near the mouth of Red
Creek, and the first smoke escaped from a chimney twenty feet high. The glade
was transformed into a manufactory, and Pencroff was ready to believe that all
the products of modern industry would be produced from this oven.</p>
<p>Meantime the colonists made a mixture of the clay with lime and quartz, forming
pipe-clay, from which they moulded pots and mugs, plates and jars, tubs to hold
water, and cooking vessels. Their form was rude and defective, but after they
had been baked at a high temperature, the kitchen of the Chimneys found itself
provided with utensils as precious as if they were composed of the finest
kaolin.</p>
<p>We must add that Pencroff, desirous of knowing whether this material deserved
its name of pipe-clay, made some large pipes, which he would have found
perfect, but for the want of tobacco. And, indeed, this was a great privation
to the sailor.</p>
<p>“But the tobacco will come like everything else,” he would say in
his hopeful moments.</p>
<p>The work lasted until the 15th of April, and the time was well spent. The
colonists having become potters, made nothing but pottery. When it would suit
the engineer to make them smiths they would be smiths. But as the morrow would
be Sunday, and moreover Easter Sunday, all agreed to observe the day by rest.
These Americans were religious men, scrupulous observers of the precepts of the
Bible, and their situation could only develop their trust in the Author of all
things.</p>
<p>On the evening of the 15th they returned permanently to the Chimneys, bringing
the rest of the pottery back with them, and putting out the oven fire until
there should be use for it again. This return was marked by the fortunate
discovery by the engineer of a substance that would answer for tinder, which,
we know, is the spongy, velvety pulp of a mushroom of the polypore family.
Properly prepared it is extremely inflammable, especially when previously
saturated with gunpowder, or nitrate or chlorate of potash. But until then they
had found no polypores, nor any fungi that would answer instead. Now, the
engineer, having found a certain plant belonging to the mugwort family, to
which belong wormwood, mint, etc., broke off some tufts, and, handing them to
the sailor, said:—</p>
<p>“Here, Pencroff, is something for you.”</p>
<p>Pencroff examined the plant, with its long silky threads and leaves covered
with a cotton-like down.</p>
<p>“What is it, Mr. Smith?” he asked. “Ah, I know! It’s
tobacco!”</p>
<p>“No,” answered Smith; “it is Artemesia wormwood, known to
science as Chinese mugwort, but to us it will be tinder.”</p>
<p>This mugwort, properly dried, furnished a very inflammable substance,
especially after the engineer had impregnated it with nitrate of potash, which
is the same as saltpetre, a mineral very plenty on the island.</p>
<p>This evening the colonists, seated in the central chamber, supped with comfort.
Neb had prepared some agouti soup, a spiced ham, and the boiled corms of the
“caladium macrorhizum,” an herbaceous plant of the arad family,
which under the tropics takes a tree form. These corms, which are very
nutritious, had an excellent flavor, something like that of Portland sago, and
measurably supplied the place of bread, which the colonists were still without.</p>
<p>Supper finished, before going to sleep the party took a stroll upon the beach.
It was 8 o’clock, and the night was magnificent. The moon, which had been
full five days before, was about rising, and in the zenith, shining resplendent
above the circumpolar constellations, rode the Southern Cross. For some moments
the engineer gazed at it attentively. At its summit and base were two stars of
the first magnitude, and on the left arm and the right, stars, respectively, of
the second magnitude and the third. Then, after some reflection, he
said:—</p>
<p>“Herbert, is not to-day the 15th of April?”</p>
<p>“Yes, sir,” answered the lad.</p>
<p>“Then, if I am not mistaken, to-morrow will be one of the four days in
the year when the mean and real time are the same; that is to say, my boy, that
to-morrow, within some seconds of noon by the clocks, the sun will pass the
meridian. If, therefore, the weather is clear, I think I will be able to obtain
the longitude of the island within a few degrees.”</p>
<p>“Without a sextant or instruments?” asked Spilett.</p>
<p>“Yes,” replied the engineer. And since it is so clear, I will try
to-night to find our latitude by calculating the height of the Cross, that is,
of the Southern Pole, above the horizon. You see, my friends, before settling
down, it will not do to be content with determining this land to be an island;
we must find out its locality.”</p>
<p>“Indeed, instead of building a house, it will be better to build a ship,
if we are within a hundred miles of an inhabited land.”</p>
<p>“That is why I am now going to try to get the latitude of the place, and
to-morrow noon to calculate the longitude.”</p>
<p>If the engineer had possessed a sextant, the work would have been easy, as this
evening, by taking the height of the pole, and to-morrow by the sun’s
passage of the meridian, he would have the co-ordinates of the island. But,
having no instruments he must devise something. So returning to the Chimneys,
he made, by the light of the fire, two little flat sticks which he fastened
together with a thorn, in a way that they could be opened and shut like
compasses, and returned with them to the beach. But as the sea horizon was
hidden from this point by Claw Cape, the engineer determined to make his
observation from Prospect Plateau, leaving, until the next day, the computation
of the height of the latter, which could easily be done by elementary geometry.</p>
<p>The colonists, therefore, went to the edge of the plateau which faced the
southeast, overlooking the fantastic rocks bordering the shore. The place rose
some fifty feet above the right bank of the Mercy, which descended, by a double
slope, to the end of Claw Cape and to the southern boundary of the island.
Nothing obstructed the vision, which extended over half the horizon from the
Cape to Reptile Promontory. To the south, this horizon, lit by the first rays
of the moon, was sharply defined against the sky. The Cross was at this time
reversed, the star Alpha being nearest the pole. This constellation is not
situated as near to the southern as the polar star is to the northern pole;
Alpha is about 27° from it, but Smith knew this and could calculate
accordingly. He took care also to observe it at the instant when it passed the
meridian under the pole, thus simplifying the operation.</p>
<p>The engineer opened the arms of his compass so that one pointed to the horizon
and the other to the star, and thus obtained the angle of distance which
separated them. And in order to fix this distance immovably, he fastened these
arms, respectively, by means of thorns, to a cross piece of wood. This done, it
was only necessary to calculate the angle obtained, bringing the observation to
the level of the sea so as to allow for the depression of the horizon caused by
the height of the plateau. The measurement of this angle would thus give the
height of Alpha, or the pole, above the horizon; or, since the latitude of a
point on the globe is always equal to the height of the pole above the horizon
at that point, the latitude of the island.</p>
<p>This calculation was postponed until the next day, and by 10 o’clock
everybody slept profoundly.</p>
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