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gestures signifying danger; and that there would be mischief if
they held on longer。 Many obeyed; the rest were too weak to hold
on to the ropes; and were forced to let them go。 On this the
balloon bounded suddenly upwards; but my own feeling was that the
earth had dropped off from me; and was sinking fast into the open
space beneath。
This happened at the very moment that the attention of the crowd
was divided; the one half paying heed to the eager gestures of
those coming from Mr。 Nosnibor's house; and the other to the
exclamations from myself。 A minute more and Arowhena would
doubtless have been discovered; but before that minute was over; I
was at such a height above the city that nothing could harm me; and
every second both the town and the crowd became smaller and more
confused。 In an incredibly short time; I could see little but a
vast wall of blue plains rising up against me; towards whichever
side I looked。
At first; the balloon mounted vertically upwards; but after about
five minutes; when we had already attained a very great elevation;
I fancied that the objects on the plain beneath began to move from
under me。 I did not feel so much as a breath of wind; and could
not suppose that the balloon itself was travelling。 I was;
therefore; wondering what this strange movement of fixed objects
could mean; when it struck me that people in a balloon do not feel
the wind inasmuch as they travel with it and offer it no
resistance。 Then I was happy in thinking that I must now have
reached the invariable trade wind of the upper air; and that I
should be very possibly wafted for hundreds or even thousands of
miles; far from Erewhon and the Erewhonians。
Already I had removed the wrappings and freed Arowhena; but I soon
covered her up with them again; for it was already very cold; and
she was half stupefied with the strangeness of her position。
And now began a time; dream…like and delirious; of which I do not
suppose that I shall ever recover a distinct recollection。 Some
things I can recallas that we were ere long enveloped in vapour
which froze upon my moustache and whiskers; then comes a memory of
sitting for hours and hours in a thick fog; hearing no sound but my
own breathing and Arowhena's (for we hardly spoke) and seeing no
sight but the car beneath us and beside us; and the dark balloon
above。
Perhaps the most painful feeling when the earth was hidden was that
the balloon was motionless; though our only hope lay in our going
forward with an extreme of speed。 From time to time through a rift
in the clouds I caught a glimpse of earth; and was thankful to
perceive that we must be flying forward faster than in an express
train; but no sooner was the rift closed than the old conviction of
our being stationary returned in full force; and was not to be
reasoned with: there was another feeling also which was nearly as
bad; for as a child that fears it has gone blind in a long tunnel
if there is no light; so ere the earth had been many minutes
hidden; I became half frightened lest we might not have broken away
from it clean and for ever。 Now and again; I ate and gave food to
Arowhena; but by guess…work as regards time。 Then came darkness; a
dreadful dreary time; without even the moon to cheer us。
With dawn the scene was changed: the clouds were gone and morning
stars were shining; the rising of the splendid sun remains still
impressed upon me as the most glorious that I have ever seen;
beneath us there was an embossed chain of mountains with snow fresh
fallen upon them; but we were far above them; we both of us felt
our breathing seriously affected; but I would not allow the balloon
to descend a single inch; not knowing for how long we might not
need all the buoyancy which we could command; indeed I was thankful
to find that; after nearly four…and…twenty hours; we were still at
so great a height above the earth。
In a couple of hours we had passed the ranges; which must have been
some hundred and fifty miles across; and again I saw a tract of
level plain extending far away to the horizon。 I knew not where we
were; and dared not descend; lest I should waste the power of the
balloon; but I was half hopeful that we might be above the country
from which I had originally started。 I looked anxiously for any
sign by which I could recognise it; but could see nothing; and
feared that we might be above some distant part of Erewhon; or a
country inhabited by savages。 While I was still in doubt; the
balloon was again wrapped in clouds; and we were left to blank
space and to conjectures。
The weary time dragged on。 How I longed for my unhappy watch! I
felt as though not even time was moving; so dumb and spell…bound
were our surroundings。 Sometimes I would feel my pulse; and count
its beats for half…an…hour together; anything to mark the timeto
prove that it was there; and to assure myself that we were within
the blessed range of its influence; and not gone adrift into the
timelessness of eternity。
I had been doing this for the twentieth or thirtieth time; and had
fallen into a light sleep: I dreamed wildly of a journey in an
express train; and of arriving at a railway station where the air
was full of the sound of locomotive engines blowing off steam with
a horrible and tremendous hissing; I woke frightened and uneasy;
but the hissing and crashing noises pursued me now that I was
awake; and forced me to own that they were real。 What they were I
knew not; but they grew gradually fainter and fainter; and after a
time were lost。 In a few hours the clouds broke; and I saw beneath
me that which made the chilled blood run colder in my veins。 I saw
the sea; and nothing but the sea; in the main black; but flecked
with white heads of storm…tossed; angry waves。
Arowhena was sleeping quietly at the bottom of the car; and as I
looked at her sweet and saintly beauty; I groaned; and cursed
myself for the misery into which I had brought her; but there was
nothing for it now。
I sat and waited for the worst; and presently I saw signs as though
that worst were soon to be at hand; for the balloon had begun to
sink。 On first seeing the sea I had been impressed with the idea
that we must have been falling; but now there could be no mistake;
we were sinking; and that fast。 I threw out a bag of ballast; and
for a time we rose again; but in the course of a few hours the
sinking recommenced; and I threw out another bag。
Then the battle commenced in earnest。 It lasted all that afternoon
and through the night until the following evening。 I had seen
never a sail nor a sign of a sail; though I had half blinded myself
with straining my eyes incessantly in every direction; we had
parted with everything but the clothes which we had upon our backs;
food and water were gone; all thrown out to the wheeling
albatrosses; in order to save us a few hours or even minutes from
the sea。 I did not throw away the books till we were within a few
feet of the water; and clung to my manuscripts to the very last。
Hope there seemed none whateveryet; strangely enough we were
neither of us utterly hopeless; and even when the evil that we
dr