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<h2> Chapter L: The Death of a Titan. </h2>
<p>At the moment when Porthos, more accustomed to the darkness than these
men, coming from open daylight, was looking round him to see if through
this artificial midnight Aramis were not making him some signal, he felt
his arm gently touched, and a voice low as a breath murmured in his ear,
"Come."</p>
<p>"Oh!" said Porthos.</p>
<p>"Hush!" said Aramis, if possible, yet more softly.</p>
<p>And amidst the noise of the third brigade, which continued to advance, the
imprecations of the guards still left alive, the muffled groans of the
dying, Aramis and Porthos glided unseen along the granite walls of the
cavern. Aramis led Porthos into the last but one compartment, and showed
him, in a hollow of the rocky wall, a barrel of powder weighing from
seventy to eighty pounds, to which he had just attached a fuse. "My
friend," said he to Porthos, "you will take this barrel, the match of
which I am going to set fire to, and throw it amidst our enemies; can you
do so?"</p>
<p>"<i>Parbleu!</i>" replied Porthos; and he lifted the barrel with one hand.
"Light it!"</p>
<p>"Stop," said Aramis, "till they are all massed together, and then, my
Jupiter, hurl your thunderbolt among them."</p>
<p>"Light it," repeated Porthos.</p>
<p>"On my part," continued Aramis, "I will join our Bretons, and help them to
get the canoe to the sea. I will wait for you on the shore; launch it
strongly, and hasten to us."</p>
<p>"Light it," said Porthos, a third time.</p>
<p>"But do you understand me?"</p>
<p>"<i>Parbleu!</i>" said Porthos again, with laughter that he did not even
attempt to restrain, "when a thing is explained to me I understand it;
begone, and give me the light."</p>
<p>Aramis gave the burning match to Porthos, who held out his arm to him, his
hands being engaged. Aramis pressed the arm of Porthos with both his
hands, and fell back to the outlet of the cavern where the three rowers
awaited him.</p>
<p>Porthos, left alone, applied the spark bravely to the match. The spark—a
feeble spark, first principle of conflagration—shone in the darkness
like a glow-worm, then was deadened against the match which it set fire
to, Porthos enlivening the flame with his breath. The smoke was a little
dispersed, and by the light of the sparkling match objects might, for two
seconds, be distinguished. It was a brief but splendid spectacle, that of
this giant, pale, bloody, his countenance lighted by the fire of the match
burning in surrounding darkness! The soldiers saw him, they saw the barrel
he held in his hand—they at once understood what was going to
happen. Then, these men, already choked with horror at the sight of what
had been accomplished, filled with terror at thought of what was about to
be accomplished, gave out a simultaneous shriek of agony. Some endeavored
to fly, but they encountered the third brigade, which barred their
passage; others mechanically took aim and attempted to fire their
discharged muskets; others fell instinctively upon their knees. Two or
three officers cried out to Porthos to promise him his liberty if he would
spare their lives. The lieutenant of the third brigade commanded his men
to fire; but the guards had before them their terrified companions, who
served as a living rampart for Porthos. We have said that the light
produced by the spark and the match did not last more than two seconds;
but during these two seconds this is what it illumined: in the first
place, the giant, enlarged in the darkness; then, at ten paces off, a heap
of bleeding bodies, crushed, mutilated, in the midst of which some still
heaved in the last agony, lifting the mass as a last respiration inflating
the sides of some old monster dying in the night. Every breath of Porthos,
thus vivifying the match, sent towards this heap of bodies a
phosphorescent aura, mingled with streaks of purple. In addition to this
principal group scattered about the grotto, as the chances of death or
surprise had stretched them, isolated bodies seemed to be making ghastly
exhibitions of their gaping wounds. Above ground, bedded in pools of
blood, rose, heavy and sparkling, the short, thick pillars of the cavern,
of which the strongly marked shades threw out the luminous particles. And
all this was seen by the tremulous light of a match attached to a barrel
of powder, that is to say, a torch which, whilst throwing a light on the
dead past, showed death to come.</p>
<p>As I have said, this spectacle did not last above two seconds. During this
short space of time an officer of the third brigade got together eight men
armed with muskets, and, through an opening, ordered them to fire upon
Porthos. But they who received the order to fire trembled so that three
guards fell by the discharge, and the five remaining balls hissed on to
splinter the vault, plow the ground, or indent the pillars of the cavern.</p>
<p>A burst of laughter replied to this volley; then the arm of the giant
swung round; then was seen whirling through the air, like a falling star,
the train of fire. The barrel, hurled a distance of thirty feet, cleared
the barricade of dead bodies, and fell amidst a group of shrieking
soldiers, who threw themselves on their faces. The officer had followed
the brilliant train in the air; he endeavored to precipitate himself upon
the barrel and tear out the match before it reached the powder it
contained. Useless! The air had made the flame attached to the conductor
more active; the match, which at rest might have burnt five minutes, was
consumed in thirty seconds, and the infernal work exploded. Furious
vortices of sulphur and nitre, devouring shoals of fire which caught every
object, the terrible thunder of the explosion, this is what the second
which followed disclosed in that cavern of horrors. The rocks split like
planks of deal beneath the axe. A jet of fire, smoke, and <i>debris</i>
sprang from the middle of the grotto, enlarging as it mounted. The large
walls of silex tottered and fell upon the sand, and the sand itself, an
instrument of pain when launched from its hard bed, riddled the faces with
its myriad cutting atoms. Shrieks, imprecations, human life, dead bodies—all
were engulfed in one terrific crash.</p>
<p>The three first compartments became one sepulchral sink into which fell
grimly back, in the order of their weight, every vegetable, mineral, or
human fragment. Then the lighter sand and ash came down in turn,
stretching like a winding sheet and smoking over the dismal scene. And
now, in this burning tomb, this subterranean volcano, seek the king's
guards with their blue coats laced with silver. Seek the officers,
brilliant in gold, seek for the arms upon which they depended for their
defense. One single man has made of all of those things a chaos more
confused, more shapeless, more terrible than the chaos which existed
before the creation of the world. There remained nothing of the three
compartments—nothing by which God could have recognized His
handiwork. As for Porthos, after having hurled the barrel of powder amidst
his enemies, he had fled, as Aramis had directed him to do, and had gained
the last compartment, into which air, light, and sunshine penetrated
through the opening. Scarcely had he turned the angle which separated the
third compartment from the fourth when he perceived at a hundred paces
from him the bark dancing on the waves. There were his friends, there
liberty, there life and victory. Six more of his formidable strides, and
he would be out of the vault; out of the vault! a dozen of his vigorous
leaps and he would reach the canoe. Suddenly he felt his knees give way;
his knees seemed powerless, his legs to yield beneath him.</p>
<p>"Oh! oh!" murmured he, "there is my weakness seizing me again! I can walk
no further! What is this?"</p>
<p>Aramis perceived him through the opening, and unable to conceive what
could induce him to stop thus—"Come on, Porthos! come on," he cried;
"come quickly!"</p>
<p>"Oh!" replied the giant, making an effort that contorted every muscle of
his body—"oh! but I cannot." While saying these words, he fell upon
his knees, but with his mighty hands he clung to the rocks, and raised
himself up again.</p>
<p>"Quick! quick!" repeated Aramis, bending forward towards the shore, as if
to draw Porthos towards him with his arms.</p>
<p>"Here I am," stammered Porthos, collecting all his strength to make one
step more.</p>
<p>"In the name of Heaven! Porthos, make haste! the barrel will blow up!"</p>
<p>"Make haste, monseigneur!" shouted the Bretons to Porthos, who was
floundering as in a dream.</p>
<p>But there was no time; the explosion thundered, earth gaped, the smoke
which hurled through the clefts obscured the sky; the sea flowed back as
though driven by the blast of flame which darted from the grotto as if
from the jaws of some gigantic fiery chimera; the reflux took the bark out
twenty <i>toises</i>; the solid rocks cracked to their base, and separated
like blocks beneath the operation of the wedge; a portion of the vault was
carried up towards heaven, as if it had been built of cardboard; the green
and blue and topaz conflagration and black lava of liquefactions clashed
and combated an instant beneath a majestic dome of smoke; then oscillated,
declined, and fell successively the mighty monoliths of rock which the
violence of the explosion had not been able to uproot from the bed of
ages; they bowed to each other like grave and stiff old men, then
prostrating themselves, lay down forever in their dusty tomb.</p>
<p>This frightful shock seemed to restore Porthos the strength that he had
lost; he arose, a giant among granite giants. But at the moment he was
flying between the double hedge of granite phantoms, these latter, which
were no longer supported by the corresponding links, began to roll and
totter round our Titan, who looked as if precipitated from heaven amidst
rocks which he had just been launching. Porthos felt the very earth
beneath his feet becoming jelly-tremulous. He stretched both hands to
repulse the falling rocks. A gigantic block was held back by each of his
extended arms. He bent his head, and a third granite mass sank between his
shoulders. For an instant the power of Porthos seemed about to fail him,
but this new Hercules united all his force, and the two walls of the
prison in which he was buried fell back slowly and gave him place. For an
instant he appeared, in this frame of granite, like the angel of chaos,
but in pushing back the lateral rocks, he lost his point of support, for
the monolith which weighed upon his shoulders, and the boulder, pressing
upon him with all its weight, brought the giant down upon his knees. The
lateral rocks, for an instant pushed back, drew together again, and added
their weight to the ponderous mass which would have been sufficient to
crush ten men. The hero fell without a groan—he fell while answering
Aramis with words of encouragement and hope, for, thanks to the powerful
arch of his hands, for an instant he believed that, like Enceladus, he
would succeed in shaking off the triple load. But by degrees Aramis beheld
the block sink; the hands, strung for an instant, the arms stiffened for a
last effort, gave way, the extended shoulders sank, wounded and torn, and
the rocks continued to gradually collapse.</p>
<p>"Porthos! Porthos!" cried Aramis, tearing his hair. "Porthos! where are
you? Speak!"</p>
<p>"Here, here," murmured Porthos, with a voice growing evidently weaker,
"patience! patience!"</p>
<p>Scarcely had he pronounced these words, when the impulse of the fall
augmented the weight; the enormous rock sank down, pressed by those others
which sank in from the sides, and, as it were, swallowed up Porthos in a
sepulcher of badly jointed stones. On hearing the dying voice of his
friend, Aramis had sprung to land. Two of the Bretons followed him, with
each a lever in his hand—one being sufficient to take care of the
bark. The dying rattle of the valiant gladiator guided them amidst the
ruins. Aramis, animated, active and young as at twenty, sprang towards the
triple mass, and with his hands, delicate as those of a woman, raised by a
miracle of strength the corner-stone of this great granite grave. Then he
caught a glimpse, through the darkness of that charnel-house, of the still
brilliant eye of his friend, to whom the momentary lifting of the mass
restored a momentary respiration. The two men came rushing up, grasped
their iron levers, united their triple strength, not merely to raise it,
but sustain it. All was useless. They gave way with cries of grief, and
the rough voice of Porthos, seeing them exhaust themselves in a useless
struggle, murmured in an almost cheerful tone those supreme words which
came to his lips with the last respiration, "Too heavy!"</p>
<p>After which his eyes darkened and closed, his face grew ashy pale, the
hands whitened, and the colossus sank quite down, breathing his last sigh.
With him sank the rock, which, even in his dying agony he had still held
up. The three men dropped the levers, which rolled upon the tumulary
stone. Then, breathless, pale, his brow covered with sweat, Aramis
listened, his breast oppressed, his heart ready to break.</p>
<p>Nothing more. The giant slept the eternal sleep, in the sepulcher which
God had built about him to his measure.</p>
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