<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_III" id="CHAPTER_III"></SPAN>CHAPTER III</h2>
<div class="blockquot"><p>The Start—The rising Tide—Elms and different Plants—The
Jacamar—Aspect of the Forest—Gigantic Eucalypti—The Reason they
are called "Fever Trees"—Troops of Monkeys—A Waterfall—The Night
Encampment.</p>
</div>
<p>The next day, the 30th of October, all was ready for the proposed
exploring expedition, which recent events had rendered so necessary. In
fact, things had so come about that the settlers in Lincoln Island no
longer needed help for themselves, but were even able to carry it to
others.</p>
<p>It was therefore agreed that they should ascend the Mercy as far as the
river was navigable. A great part of the distance would thus be
traversed without fatigue, and the explorers could transport their
provisions and arms to an advanced point in the west of the island.</p>
<p>It was necessary to think not only of the things which they should take
with them, but also of those which they might have by chance to bring
back to Granite House. If there had been a wreck on the coast, as was
supposed, there would be many things cast up, which would be lawfully
their prizes. In the event of this, the cart would have been of more use
than the light canoe, but it was heavy and clumsy to drag, and therefore
more difficult to use; this led Pencroft to express his regret that the
chest had not contained, besides "his half-pound of tobacco," a pair of
strong New Jersey horses, which would have been very useful to the
colony!</p>
<p>The provisions, which Neb had already packed up, consisted of a store of
meat and of several gallons of beer, that is to say, enough to sustain
them for three days, the time which Harding assigned for the expedition.
They hoped besides to supply themselves on the road, and Neb took care
not to forget the portable stove.</p>
<p>The only tools the settlers took were the two woodmen's axes, which they
could use to cut a path through the thick<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 24]</SPAN></span> forests, as also the
instruments, the telescope and pocket-compass.</p>
<p>For weapons they selected the two flint-lock guns, which were likely to
be more useful to them than the percussion fowling-pieces, the first
only requiring flints which could be easily replaced, and the latter
needing fulminating caps, a frequent use of which would soon exhaust
their limited stock. However, they took also one of the carbines and
some cartridges. As to the powder, of which there was about fifty pounds
in the barrel, a small supply of it had to be taken, but the engineer
hoped to manufacture an explosive substance which would allow them to
husband it. To the firearms were added the five cutlasses well sheathed
in leather, and, thus supplied, the settlers could venture into the vast
forest with some chance of success.</p>
<p>It is useless to add that Pencroft, Herbert, and Neb, thus armed, were
at the summit of their happiness, although Cyrus Harding made them
promise not to fire a shot unless it was necessary.</p>
<p>At six in the morning the canoe put off from the shore; all had
embarked, including Top, and they proceeded to the mouth of the Mercy.</p>
<p>The tide had begun to come up half an hour before. For several hours,
therefore, there would be a current, which it was well to profit by, for
later the ebb would make it difficult to ascend the river. The tide was
already strong, for in three days the moon would be full, and it was
enough to keep the boat in the centre of the current, where it floated
swiftly along between the high banks without its being necessary to
increase its speed by the aid of the oars. In a few minutes the
explorers arrived at the angle formed by the Mercy, and exactly at the
place where, seven months before, Pencroft had made his first raft of
wood.</p>
<p>After this sudden angle the river widened and flowed under the shade of
great evergreen firs.</p>
<p>The aspect of the banks was magnificent. Cyrus Harding and his
companions could not but admire the lovely effects so easily produced by
nature with water and trees. As they advanced the forest element
diminished. On the right bank of the river grew magnificent specimens of
the ulmaceæ tribe, the precious elm, so valuable to builders, and which<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 25]</SPAN></span>
withstands well the action of water. Then there were numerous groups
belonging to the same family, amongst others one in particular, the
fruit of which produces a very useful oil. Further on, Herbert remarked
the lardizabala, a twining shrub which, when bruised in water, furnishes
excellent cordage; and two or three ebony trees of a beautiful black,
crossed with capricious veins.</p>
<p>From time to time, in certain places where the landing was easy, the
canoe was stopped, when Gideon Spilett, Herbert, and Pencroft, their
guns in their hands, and preceded by Top, jumped on shore. Without
expecting game, some useful plant might be met with, and the young
naturalist was delighted with discovering a sort of wild spinage,
belonging to the order of chenopodiaceæ, and numerous specimens of
cruciferæ, belonging to the cabbage tribe, which it would certainly be
possible to cultivate by transplanting. There were cresses,
horse-radish, turnips, and lastly, little branching hairy stalks,
scarcely more than three feet high, which produced brownish grains.</p>
<p>"Do you know what this plant is?" asked Herbert of the sailor.</p>
<p>"Tobacco!" cried Pencroft, who evidently had never seen his favourite
plant except in the bowl of his pipe.</p>
<p>"No, Pencroft," replied Herbert; "this is not tobacco, it is mustard."</p>
<p>"Mustard be hanged!" returned the sailor; "but if by chance you happen
to come across a tobacco-plant, my boy, pray don't scorn that!"</p>
<p>"We shall find it some day!" said Gideon Spilett.</p>
<p>"Well!" exclaimed Pencroft, "when that day comes, I do not know what
more will be wanting in our island!"</p>
<p>These different plants, which had been carefully rooted, up, were
carried to the canoe, where Cyrus Harding had remained buried in
thought.</p>
<p>The reporter, Herbert, and Pencroft in this manner frequently
disembarked, sometimes on the right bank, sometimes on the left bank of
the Mercy.</p>
<p>The latter was less abrupt, but the former more wooded. The engineer
ascertained by consulting his pocket compass that the direction of the
river from the first turn was obviously south-west and north-east, and
nearly straight for<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 26]</SPAN></span> a length of about three miles. But it was to be
supposed that this direction changed beyond that point, and that the
Mercy continued to the north-west, towards the spurs of Mount Franklin,
among which the river rose.</p>
<p>During one of these excursions, Gideon Spilett managed to get hold of
two couples of living gallinaceæ. They were birds with long, thin beaks,
lengthened necks, short wings, and without any appearance of a tail.
Herbert rightly gave them the name of tinamons, and it was resolved that
they should be the first tenants of their future poultry yard.</p>
<p>But till then the guns had not spoken, and the first report which awoke
the echoes of the forest of the Far West was provoked by the appearance
of a beautiful bird, resembling the kingfisher.</p>
<p>"I recognise him!" cried Pencroft, and it seemed as if his gun went off
by itself.</p>
<p>"What do you recognise?" asked the reporter.</p>
<p>"The bird which escaped us on our first excursion, and from which we
gave the name to that part of the forest."</p>
<p>"A jacamar!" cried Herbert.</p>
<p>It was indeed a jacamar, of which the plumage shines with a metallic
lustre. A shot brought it to the ground, and Top carried it to the
canoe. At the same time half a dozen lories were brought down. The lory
is of the size of a pigeon, the plumage dashed with green, part of the
wings crimson, and its crest bordered with white. To the young boy
belonged the honour of this shot, and he was proud enough of it. Lories
are better food than the jacamar, the flesh of which is rather tough,
but it was difficult to persuade Pencroft that he had not killed the
king of eatable birds. It was ten o'clock in the morning when the canoe
reached a second angle of the Mercy, nearly five miles from its mouth.
Here a halt was made for breakfast under the shade of some splendid
trees. The river still measured from sixty to seventy feet in breadth,
and its bed from five to six feet in depth. The engineer had observed
that it was increased by numerous affluents, but they were unnavigable,
being simply little streams. As to the forest, including Jacamar Wood,
as well as the forests of the Far West, it extended as far as the eye
could reach. In no place, either in the depths of the forest or under
the trees on the banks of the Mercy, was the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 27]</SPAN></span> presence of man revealed.
The explorers could not discover one suspicious trace. It was evident
that the woodman's axe had never touched these trees, that the pioneer's
knife had never severed the creepers hanging from one trunk to another
in the midst of tangled brushwood and long grass. If castaways had
landed on the island, they could not have yet quitted the shore and it
was not in the woods that the survivors of the supposed shipwreck should
be sought.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/aban019.jpg" class="jpg" width-obs="317" height-obs="448" alt="IS IT TOBACCO?" title="IS IT TOBACCO?" /> <span class="link"><SPAN href="images/aban019.jpg"><b>IS IT TOBACCO?</b></SPAN></span></div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 28]</SPAN></span>
The engineer therefore manifested some impatience to reach the western
coast of Lincoln Island, which was at least five miles distant according
to his estimation.</p>
<p>The voyage was continued, and as the Mercy appeared to flow not towards
the shore, but rather towards Mount Franklin, it was decided that they
should use the boat as long as there was enough water under its keel to
float it. It was both fatigue spared and time gained, for they would
have been obliged to cut a path through the thick wood with their axes.
But soon the flow completely failed them either the tide was going down,
and it was about the hour, or it could no longer be felt at this
distance from the mouth of the Mercy. They had therefore to make use of
the oars, Herbert and Neb each took one, and Pencroft took the scull.
The forest soon became less dense, the trees grew further apart and
often quite isolated. But the further they were from each other the more
magnificent they appeared, profiting, as they did, by the free, pure air
which circulated around them.</p>
<p>What splendid specimens of the Flora of this latitude! Certainly their
presence would have been enough for a botanist to name without
hesitation the parallel which traversed Lincoln Island.</p>
<p>"Eucalypti!" cried Herbert.</p>
<p>They were, in fact, those splendid trees, the giants of the
extra-tropical zone, the congeners of the Australian and New Zealand
eucalyptus, both situated under the same latitude as Lincoln Island.
Some rose to a height of two hundred feet. Their trunks at the base
measured twenty feet in circumference, and their bark was covered by a
network of furrows containing a red, sweet-smelling gum. Nothing is more
wonderful or more singular than those enormous specimens of the order of
the myrtaceæ, with their leaves placed vertically and not horizontally,
so that an edge and not a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 29]</SPAN></span> surface looks upwards, the effect being that
the sun's rays penetrate more freely among the trees.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/aban020.jpg" class="jpg" width-obs="309" height-obs="448" alt="THE HALT FOR BREAKFAST" title="THE HALT FOR BREAKFAST" /> <span class="link"><SPAN href="images/aban020.jpg"><b>THE HALT FOR BREAKFAST</b></SPAN></span></div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 30]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The ground at the foot of the eucalypti was carpeted with grass, and
from the bushes escaped flights of little birds, which glittered in the
sunlight like winged rubies.</p>
<p>"These are something like trees!" cried Neb; "but are they good for
anything?"</p>
<p>"Pooh!" replied Pencroft. "Of course there are vegetable giants as well
as human giants, and they are no good, except to show themselves at
fairs!"</p>
<p>"I think that you are mistaken, Pencroft," replied Gideon Spilett, "and
that the wood of the eucalyptus has begun to be very advantageously
employed in cabinet-making."</p>
<p>"And I may add," said Herbert, "that the eucalyptus belongs to a family
which comprises many useful members; the guava-tree, from whose fruit
guava jelly is made; the clove-tree, which produces the spice; the
pomegranate-tree, which bears pomegranates; the Eugeacia Cauliflora, the
fruit of which is used in making a tolerable wine; the Ugui myrtle,
which contains an excellent alcoholic liquor; the Caryophyllus myrtle,
of which the bark forms an esteemed cinnamon; the Eugenia Pimenta, from
whence comes Jamaica pepper; the common myrtle, from whose buds and
berries spice is sometimes made; the Eucalyptus manifera, which yields a
sweet sort of manna; the Guinea Eucalyptus, the sap of which is
transformed into beer by fermentation; in short, all those trees known
under the name of gum-trees or iron-bark trees in Australia, belong to
this family of the myrtaceæ, which contains forty-six genera and
thirteen hundred species!"</p>
<p>The lad was allowed to run on, and he delivered his little botanical
lecture with great animation. Cyrus Harding listened smiling, and
Pencroft with an indescribable feeling of pride.</p>
<p>"Very good, Herbert," replied Pencroft, "but I could swear that all
those useful specimens you have just told us about are none of them
giants like these!"</p>
<p>"That is true, Pencroft."</p>
<p>"That supports what I said," returned the sailor, "namely, that these
giants are good for nothing!"<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 31]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"There you are wrong, Pencroft," said the engineer; "these gigantic
eucalypti, which shelter us, are good for something."</p>
<p>"And what is that?"</p>
<p>"To render the countries which they inhabit healthy. Do you know what
they are called in Australia and New Zealand?"</p>
<p>"No, captain."</p>
<p>"They are called 'fever trees.'"</p>
<p>"Because they give fevers?"</p>
<p>"No, because they prevent them!"</p>
<p>"Good. I must note that," said the reporter.</p>
<p>"Note it then, my dear Spilett; for it appears proved that the presence
of the eucalyptus is enough to neutralise miasmas. This natural antidote
has been tried in certain countries in the middle of Europe and the
north of Africa, where the soil was absolutely unhealthy, and the
sanitary condition of the inhabitants has been gradually ameliorated. No
more intermittent fevers prevail in the regions now covered with forests
of the myrtaceæ. This fact is now beyond doubt, and it is a happy
circumstance for us settlers in Lincoln Island."</p>
<p>"Ah! what an island! What a blessed island!" cried Pencroft. "I tell
you, it wants nothing—unless it is—"</p>
<p>"That will come, Pencroft, that will be found," replied the engineer;
"but now we must continue our voyage and push on as far as the river
will carry our boat!"</p>
<p>The exploration was therefore continued for another two miles in the
midst of country covered with eucalypti, which predominated in the woods
of this portion of the island. The space which they occupied extended as
far as the eye could reach on each side of the Mercy, which wound along
between high green banks. The bed was often obstructed by long weeds,
and even by pointed rocks, which rendered the navigation very difficult.
The action of the oars was prevented, and Pencroft was obliged to push
with a pole. They found also that the water was becoming shallower and
shallower, and that the canoe must soon stop. The sun was already
sinking towards the horizon, and the trees threw long shadows on the
ground. Cyrus Harding, seeing that he could not hope to reach the
western coast of the island<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 32]</SPAN></span> in one journey, resolved to camp at the
place where any further navigation was prevented by want of water. He
calculated that they were still five or six miles from the coast, and
this distance was too great for them to attempt traversing during the
night in the midst of unknown woods.</p>
<p>The boat was pushed on through the forest, which gradually became
thicker again, and appeared also to have more inhabitants; for if the
eyes of the sailor did not deceive him, he thought he saw bands of
monkeys springing among the trees. Sometimes even two or three of these
animals stopped at a little distance from the canoe and gazed at the
settlers without manifesting any terror, as if, seeing men for the first
time, they had not yet learned to fear them. It would have been easy to
bring down one of these quadrumani with a gunshot, and Pencroft was
greatly tempted to fire, but Harding opposed so useless a massacre. This
was prudent, for the monkeys, or apes rather, appearing to be very
powerful and extremely active, it was useless to provoke an unnecessary
aggression, and the creatures might, ignorant of the power of the
explorer's firearms, have attacked them. It is true that the sailor
considered the monkeys from a purely alimentary point of view, for those
animals which are herbivorous make very excellent game; but since they
had an abundant supply of provisions, it was a pity to waste their
ammunition.</p>
<p>Towards four o'clock, the navigation of the Mercy became exceedingly
difficult, for its course was obstructed by aquatic plants and rocks.
The banks rose higher and higher, and already they were approaching the
spurs of Mount Franklin. The source could not be far off, since it was
fed by the water from the southern slopes of the mountain.</p>
<p>"In a quarter of an hour," said the sailor, "we shall be obliged to
stop, captain."</p>
<p>"Very well, we will stop, Pencroft, and we will make our encampment for
the night."</p>
<p>"At what distance are we from Granite House?" asked Herbert.</p>
<p>"About seven miles," replied the engineer, "taking into calculation,
however, the <i>détours</i> of the river, which has carried us to the
north-west."</p>
<p>"Shall, we go on?" asked the reporter.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 33]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Yes, as long as we can," replied Cyrus Harding. "To-morrow, at break of
day, we will leave the canoe, and in two hours I hope we shall cross the
distance which separates us from the coast, and then we shall have the
whole day in which to explore the shore."</p>
<p>"Go-ahead!" replied Pencroft.</p>
<p>But soon the boat grated on the stony bottom of the river, which was now
not more than twenty feet in breadth. The trees met like a bower
overhead, and caused a half-darkness. They also heard the noise of a
waterfall, which showed that a few hundred feet up the river there was a
natural barrier.</p>
<p>Presently, after a sudden turn of the river, a cascade appeared through
the trees. The canoe again touched the bottom, and in a few minutes it
was moored to a trunk near the right bank.</p>
<p>It was nearly five o'clock. The last rays of the sun gleamed through the
thick foliage and glanced on the little waterfall, making the spray
sparkle with all the colours of the rainbow. Beyond that, the Mercy was
lost in the brushwood, where it was fed from some hidden source. The
different streams which flowed into it increased it to a regular river
further down, but here it was simply a shallow, limpid brook.</p>
<p>It was agreed to camp here, as the place was charming. The colonists
disembarked, and a fire was soon lighted under a clump of trees, among
the branches of which Cyrus Harding and his companions could, if it was
necessary, take refuge for the night.</p>
<p>Supper was quickly devoured, for they were very hungry, and then there
was only sleeping to think of. But, as roarings of rather a suspicious
nature had been heard during the evening, a good fire was made up for
the night, so as to protect the sleepers with its crackling flames. Neb
and Pencroft also watched by turns, and did not spare fuel. They thought
they saw the dark forms of some wild animals prowling round the camp
among the bushes, but the night passed without incident, and the next
day, the 31st of October, at five o'clock in the morning, all were on
foot, ready for a start.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 34]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />