您的位置 : 首页 > 英文著作
Narrative of A. Gordon Pym
CHAPTER 23
Edgar Allan Poe
下载:Narrative of A. Gordon Pym.txt
本书全文检索:
       _ DURING the six or seven days immediately following we remained
       in our hiding-place upon the hill, going out only occasionally, and
       then with the greatest precaution, for water and filberts. We had
       made a kind of penthouse on the platform, furnishing it with a bed of
       dry leaves, and placing in it three large flat stones, which served
       us for both fireplace and table. We kindled a fire without difficulty
       by rubbing two pieces of dry wood together, the one soft, the other
       hard. The bird we had taken in such good season proved excellent
       eating, although somewhat tough. It was not an oceanic fowl, but a
       species of bittern, with jet black and grizzly plumage, and
       diminutive wings in proportion to its bulk. We afterward saw three of
       the same kind in the vicinity of the ravine, apparently seeking for
       the one we had captured; but, as they never alighted, we had no
       opportunity of catching them.
       As long as this fowl lasted we suffered nothing from our
       situation, but it was now entirely consumed, and it became absolutely
       necessary that we should look out for provision. The filberts would
       not satisfy the cravings of hunger, afflicting us, too, with severe
       gripings of the bowels, and, if freely indulged in, with violent
       headache. We had seen several large tortoises near the seashore to
       the eastward of the hill, and perceived they might be easily taken,
       if we could get at them without the observation of the natives. It
       was resolved, therefore, to make an attempt at descending.
       We commenced by going down the southern declivity, which seemed
       to offer the fewest difficulties, but had not proceeded a hundred
       yards before (as we had anticipated from appearances on the hilltop)
       our progress was entirely arrested by a branch of the gorge in which
       our companions had perished. We now passed along the edge of this for
       about a quarter of a mile, when we were again stopped by a precipice
       of immense depth, and, not being able to make our way along the brink
       of it, we were forced to retrace our steps by the main ravine.
       We now pushed over to the eastward, but with precisely similar
       fortune. After an hour's scramble, at the risk of breaking our necks,
       we discovered that we had merely descended into a vast pit of black
       granite, with fine dust at the bottom, and whence the only egress was
       by the rugged path in which we had come down. Toiling again up this
       path, we now tried the northern edge of the hill. Here we were
       obliged to use the greatest possible caution in our maneuvers, as the
       least indiscretion would expose us to the full view of the savages in
       the village. We crawled along, therefore, on our hands and knees,
       and, occasionally, were even forced to throw ourselves at full
       length, dragging our bodies along by means of the shrubbery. In this
       careful manner we had proceeded but a little way, when we arrived at
       a chasm far deeper than any we had yet seen, and leading directly
       into the main gorge. Thus our fears were fully confirmed, and we
       found ourselves cut off entirely from access to the world below.
       Thoroughly exhausted by our exertions, we made the best of our way
       back to the platform, and throwing ourselves upon the bed of leaves,
       slept sweetly and soundly for some hours.
       For several days after this fruitless search we were occupied in
       exploring every part of the summit of the hill, in order to inform
       ourselves of its actual resources. We found that it would afford us
       no food, with the exception of the unwholesome filberts, and a rank
       species of scurvy grass, which grew in a little patch of not more
       than four rods square, and would be soon exhausted. On the fifteenth
       of February, as near as I can remember, there was not a blade of this
       left, and the nuts were growing scarce; our situation, therefore,
       could hardly be more lamentable. {*5} On the sixteenth we again went
       round the walls of our prison, in hope of finding some avenue of
       escape; but to no purpose. We also descended the chasm in which we
       had been overwhelmed, with the faint expectation of discovering,
       through this channel, some opening to the main ravine. Here, too, we
       were disappointed, although we found and brought up with us a musket.
       On the seventeenth we set out with the determination of examining
       more thoroughly the chasm of black granite into which we had made our
       way in the first search. We remembered that one of the fissures in
       the sides of this pit had been but partially looked into, and we were
       anxious to explore it, although with no expectation of discovering
       here any opening.
       We found no great difficulty in reaching the bottom of the hollow
       as before, and were now sufficiently calm to survey it with some
       attention. It was, indeed, one of the most singular-looking places
       imaginable, and we could scarcely bring ourselves to believe it
       altogether the work of nature. The pit, from its eastern to its
       western extremity, was about five hundred yards in length, when all
       its windings were threaded; the distance from east to west in a
       straight line not being more (I should suppose, having no means of
       accurate examination) than forty or fifty yards. Upon first
       descending into the chasm, that is to say, for a hundred feet
       downward from the summit of the hill, the sides of the abyss bore
       little resemblance to each other, and, apparently, had at no time
       been connected, the one surface being of the soapstone, and the other
       of marl, granulated with some metallic matter. The average breadth or
       interval between the two cliffs was probably here sixty feet, but
       there seemed to be no regularity of formation. Passing down, however,
       beyond the limit spoken of, the interval rapidly contracted, and the
       sides began to run parallel, although, for some distance farther,
       they were still dissimilar in their material and form of surface.
       Upon arriving within fifty feet of the bottom, a perfect regularity
       commenced. The sides were now entirely uniform in substance, in
       colour, and in lateral direction, the material being a very black and
       shining granite, and the distance between the two sides, at all
       points facing each other, exactly twenty yards. The precise formation
       of the chasm will be best understood by means of a delineation taken
       upon the spot; for I had luckily with me a pocketbook and pencil,
       which I preserved with great care through a long series of subsequent
       adventure, and to which I am indebted for memoranda of many subjects
       which would otherwise have been crowded from my remembrance.
       This figure (see figure 1) {image} gives the general outlines of
       the chasm, without the minor cavities in the sides, of which there
       were several, each cavity having a corresponding protuberance
       opposite. The bottom of the gulf was covered to the depth of three or
       four inches with a powder almost impalpable, beneath which we found a
       continuation of the black granite. To the right, at the lower
       extremity, will be noticed the appearance of a small opening; this is
       the fissure alluded to above, and to examine which more minutely than
       before was the object of our second visit. We now pushed into it with
       vigor, cutting away a quantity of brambles which impeded us, and
       removing a vast heap of sharp flints somewhat resembling arrowheads
       in shape. We were encouraged to persevere, however, by perceiving
       some little light proceeding from the farther end. We at length
       squeezed our way for about thirty feet, and found that the aperture
       was a low and regularly formed arch, having a bottom of the same
       impalpable powder as that in the main chasm. A strong light now broke
       upon us, and, turning a short bend, we found ourselves in another
       lofty chamber, similar to the one we had left in every respect but
       longitudinal form. Its general figure is here given. (See figure 2.)
       {image}
       The total length of this chasm, commencing at the opening a and
       proceeding round the curve _b_ to the extremity _d_, is five hundred
       and fifty yards. At _c_ we discovered a small aperture similar to the
       one through which we had issued from the other chasm, and this was
       choked up in the same manner with brambles and a quantity of the
       white arrowhead flints. We forced our way through it, finding it
       about forty feet long, and emerged into a third chasm. This, too, was
       precisely like the first, except in its longitudinal shape, which was
       thus. (See figure 3.) {image}
       We found the entire length of the third chasm three hundred and
       twenty yards. At the point _a_ was an opening about six feet wide,
       and extending fifteen feet into the rock, where it terminated in a
       bed of marl, there being no other chasm beyond, as we had expected.
       We were about leaving this fissure, into which very little light was
       admitted, when Peters called my attention to a range of
       singular-looking indentures in the surface of the marl forming the
       termination of the _cul-de-sac_. With a very slight exertion of the
       imagination, the left, or most northern of these indentures might
       have been taken for the intentional, although rude, representation of
       a human figure standing erect, with outstretched arm. The rest of
       them bore also some little resemblance to alphabetical characters,
       and Peters was willing, at all events, to adopt the idle opinion that
       they were really such. I convinced him of his error, finally, by
       directing his attention to the floor of the fissure, where, among the
       powder, we picked up, piece by piece, several large flakes of the
       marl, which had evidently been broken off by some convulsion from the
       surface where the indentures were found, and which had projecting
       points exactly fitting the indentures; thus proving them to have been
       the work of nature. Figure 4 {image} presents an accurate copy of the
       whole.
       After satisfying ourselves that these singular caverns afforded
       us no means of escape from our prison, we made our way back, dejected
       and dispirited, to the summit of the hill. Nothing worth mentioning
       occurred during the next twenty-four hours, except that, in examining
       the ground to the eastward of the third chasm, we found two
       triangular holes of great depth, and also with black granite sides.
       Into these holes we did not think it worth while to attempt
       descending, as they had the appearance of mere natural wells, without
       outlet. They were each about twenty yards in circumference, and their
       shape, as well as relative position in regard to the third chasm, is
       shown in figure 5. {image}
       ~~~ End of Text of Chapter 23 ~~~ _