<h2><SPAN name="V" id="V"></SPAN>CHAPTER V.</h2>
<p class="letter">
ARRANGING THE CHIMNEYS—THE IMPORTANT QUESTION OF FIRE—THE MATCH
BOX—SEARCH OVER THE SHORE—RETURN OF THE REPORTER AND NEB—ONE
MATCH—THE CRACKLING FIRE—THE FISH SUPPER—THE FIRST NIGHT ON
LAND.</p>
<p>The first care of Pencroff, after the raft had been unloaded, was to make the
Chimneys habitable, by stopping up those passages traversed by the draughts of
air. Sand, stones, twisted branches, and mud, hermetically sealed the galleries
of the & open to the southerly winds, and shut out its upper curve. One
narrow, winding passage, opening on the side; was arranged to carry out the
smoke and to quicken the draught of the fire. The Chimneys were thus divided
into three or four chambers, if these dark dens, which would hardly have
contained a beast, might be so called. But they were dry, and one could stand
up in them, or at least in the principal one, which was in the centre. The
floor was covered with sand, and, everything considered, they could establish
themselves in this place while waiting for one better.</p>
<p>While working, Herbert and Pencroff chatted together.</p>
<p>“Perhaps,” said the boy, “our companions will have found a
better place than ours.”</p>
<p>“It is possible.” answered the sailor, “but, until we know,
don’t let us stop. Better have two strings to one’s bow than none
at all!”</p>
<p>“Oh,” repeated Herbert, “if they can only find Mr. Smith, and
bring him back with them, how thankful we will be!”</p>
<p>“Yes,” murmured Pencroff. “He was a good man.”</p>
<p>“Was!” said Herbert. “Do you think we shall not see him
again?”</p>
<p>“Heaven forbid!” replied the sailor.</p>
<p>The work of division was rapidly accomplished, and Pencroff declared himself
satisfied. “Now,” said he, “our friends may return, and they
will find a good enough shelter.”</p>
<p>Nothing remained but to fix the fireplace and to prepare the meal, which, in
truth, was a task easy and simple enough. Large flat stones were placed at the
mouth of the first gallery to the left, where the smoke passage had been made;
and this chimney was made so narrow that but little heat would escape up the
flue, and the cavern would be comfortably warmed. The stock of wood was piled
up in one of the chambers, and the sailor placed some logs and broken branches
upon the stones. He was occupied in arranging them when Herbert asked him if he
had some matches.</p>
<p>“Certainly,” replied Pencroff, “and moreover, fortunately;
for without matches or tinder we would indeed be in trouble.”</p>
<p>“Could not we always make fire as the savages do,” replied Herbert,
“by rubbing two bits of dry wood together?”</p>
<p>“Just try it, my boy, some time, and see if you do anything more than put
your arms out of joint.”</p>
<p>“Nevertheless, it is often done in the islands of the Pacific.”</p>
<p>“I don’t say that it is not,” replied Pencroff, “but
the savages must have a way of their own, or use a certain kind of wood, as
more than once I have wanted to get fire in that way and have never yet been
able to. For my part, I prefer matches; and, by the way, where are mine?”</p>
<p>Pencroff, who was an habitual smoker, felt in his vest for the box, which he
was never without, but, not finding it, he searched the pockets of his
trowsers, and to his profound amazement, it was not there.</p>
<p>“This is an awkward business,” said he, looking at Herbert.
“My box must have fallen from my pocket, and I can’t find it. But
you, Herbert, have you nothing: no steel, not anything, with which we can make
fire?”</p>
<p>“Not a thing, Pencroff.”</p>
<p>The sailor, followed by the boy, walked out, rubbing his forehead.</p>
<p>On the sand, among the rocks, by the bank of the river, both of them searched
with the utmost care, but without result. The box was of copper, and had it
been there, they must have seen it.</p>
<p>“Pencroff,” asked Herbert, “did not you throw it out of the
basket?”</p>
<p>“I took good care not to,” said the sailor. “But when one has
been knocked around as we have been, so small a thing could easily have been
lost; even my pipe is gone. The confounded box; where can it be?”</p>
<p>“Well, the tide is out; let us run to the place where we landed,”
said Herbert.</p>
<p>It was little likely that they would find this box, which the sea would have
rolled among the pebbles at high water; nevertheless, it would do no harm to
search. They, therefore, went quickly to the place where they had first landed,
some 200 paces from the Chimneys. There, among the pebbles, in the hollows of
the rocks, they made minute search, but in vain. If the box had fallen here it
must have been carried out by the waves. As the tide went down, the sailor
peered into every crevice, but without Success. It was a serious loss, and, for
the time, irreparable. Pencroff did not conceal his chagrin. He frowned, but
did not speak, and Herbert tried to console him by saying, that, most probably,
the matches would have been so wetted as to be useless.</p>
<p>“No, my boy,” answered the sailor. “They were in a tightly
closing metal box. But now, what are we to do?”</p>
<p>“We will certainly find means of procuring fire,” said Herbert.
“Mr. Smith or Mr. Spilett will not be as helpless as we are.”</p>
<p>“Yes, but in the meantime we are without it,” said Pencroff,
“and our companions will find but a very sorry meal on their
return.”</p>
<p>“But,” said Herbert, hopefully, “it is not possible that they
will have neither tinder nor matches.”</p>
<p>“I doubt it,” answered the sailor, shaking his head. “In the
first place, neither Neb nor Mr. Smith smoke, and then I’m afraid Mr.
Spilett has more likely kept his notebook than his match-box.”</p>
<p>Herbert did not answer. This loss was evidently serious. Nevertheless, the lad
thought surely they could make a fire in some way or other, but Pencroff, more
experienced, although a man not easily discouraged, knew differently. At any
rate there was but one thing to do:—to wait until the return of Neb and
the reporter. It was necessary to give up the repast of cooked eggs which they
had wished to prepare, and a diet of raw flesh did not seem to be, either for
themselves or for the others, an agreeable prospect.</p>
<p>Before returning to the Chimneys, the companions, in case they failed of a
fire, gathered a fresh lot of lithodomes, and then silently took the road to
their dwelling. Pencroff, his eyes fixed upon the ground, still searched in
every direction for the lost box. They followed again up the left bank of the
river, from its mouth to the angle where the raft had been built. They returned
to the upper plateau, and went in every direction, searching in the tall grass
on the edge of the forest, but in vain. It was 5 o’clock when they
returned again to the Chimneys, and it is needless to say that the passages
were searched in their darkest recesses before all hope was given up.</p>
<p>Towards 6 o’clock, just as the sun was disappearing behind the high land
in the west, Herbert, who was walking back and forth upon the shore, announced
the return of Neb and of Gideon Spilett. They came back alone, and the lad felt
his heart sink. The sailor had not, then, been wrong in his presentiments; they
had been unable to find the engineer.</p>
<p>The reporter, when he came up, seated himself upon a rock, without speaking.
Fainting from fatigue, half dead with hunger, he was unable to utter a word. As
to Neb, his reddened eyes showed how he had been weeping, and the fresh tears
which he was unable to restrain, indicated, but too clearly, that he had lost
all hope.</p>
<p>The reporter at length gave the history of their search. Neb and he had
followed the coast for more than eight miles, and, consequently, far beyond the
point where the balloon had made the plunge which was followed by the
disappearance of the engineer and Top. The shore was deserted. Not a recently
turned stone, not a trace upon the sand, not a footprint, was upon all that
part of the shore. It was evident that nobody inhabited that portion of the
island. The sea was as deserted as the land; and it was there, at some hundreds
of feet from shore, that the engineer had found his grave.</p>
<p>At that moment Neb raised his head, and in a voice which showed how he still
struggled against despair, exclaimed:—</p>
<p>“No, he is not dead. It is impossible. It might happen to you or me, but
never to him. He is a man who can get out of anything!”</p>
<p>Then his strength failing him, he murmured, “But I am used up.”</p>
<p>Herbert ran to him and cried:—</p>
<p>“Neb, we will find him; God will give him back to us; but you, you must
be famishing; do eat something.”</p>
<p>And while speaking the lad offered the poor negro a handful of
shell-fish—a meagre and insufficient nourishment enough.</p>
<p>But Neb, though he had eaten nothing for hours, refused them. Poor fellow!
deprived of his master, he wished no longer to live.</p>
<p>As to Gideon Spilett, he devoured the mollusks, and then laid down upon the
sand at the foot of a rock. He was exhausted, but calm. Herbert, approaching
him, took his hand.</p>
<p>“Mr. Spilett,” said he, “we have discovered a shelter where
you will be more comfortable. The night is coming on; so come and rest there.
To-morrow we will see—”</p>
<p>The reporter rose, and, guided by the lad, proceeded towards the Chimneys. As
he did so, Pencroff came up to him, and in an off-hand way asked him if, by
chance, he had a match with him. The reporter stopped, felt in his pockets, and
finding none, said:—</p>
<p>“I had some, but I must have thrown them all away.”</p>
<p>Then the sailor called Neb and asked him the same question, receiving a like
answer.</p>
<p>“Curse it!” cried the sailor, unable to restrain the word.</p>
<p>The reporter heard it, and going to him said:—“Have you no
matches?”</p>
<p>“Not one; and, of course, no fire.”</p>
<p>“Ah,” cried Neb, “if he was here, my master, he could soon
make one.”</p>
<p>The four castaways stood still and looked anxiously at each other. Herbert was
the first to break the silence, by saying:—</p>
<p>“Mr. Spilett, you are a smoker, you always have matches about you;
perhaps you have not searched thoroughly. Look again; a single match will be
enough.”</p>
<p>The reporter rummaged the pockets of his trowsers, his vest, and coat, and to
the great joy of Pencroff, as well as to his own surprise, felt a little sliver
of wood caught in the lining of his vest. He could feel it from the outside,
but his fingers were unable to disengage it. If this should prove a match, and
only one, it was extremely necessary not to rub off the phosphorus.</p>
<p>“Let me try,” said the lad. And very adroitly, without breaking it,
he drew out this little bit of wood, this precious trifle, which to these poor
men was of such great importance. It was uninjured.</p>
<p>“One match!” cried Pencroff.” “Why, it is as good as if
we had a whole ship-load!”</p>
<p>He took it, and, followed by his companions, regained the Chimneys. This tiny
bit of wood, which in civilised lands is wasted with indifference, as
valueless, it was necessary here to use with the utmost care. The sailor,
having assured himself that it was dry, said:—</p>
<p>“We must have some paper.”</p>
<p>“Here is some,” answered Spilett, who, after a little hesitation,
had torn a leaf from his note-book.</p>
<p>Pencroff took the bit of paper and knelt down before the fire-place, where some
handfuls of grass, leaves, and dry moss had been placed under the faggots in
such a way that the air could freely circulate and make the dry wood readily
ignite. Then Pencroff shaping the paper into a cone, as pipe-smokers do in the
wind, placed it among the moss. Taking, then, a slightly rough stone and wiping
it carefully, with beating heart and suspended breath, he gave the match a
little rub. The first stroke produced no effect, as Pencroff fearing to break
off the phosphorus had not rubbed hard enough.</p>
<p>“Ho, I won’t be able to do it,” said he; “my hand
shakes—the match will miss—I can’t do it—I don’t
want to try!” And, rising, he besought Herbert to undertake it.</p>
<p>Certainly, the boy had never in his life been so affected. His heart beat
furiously. Prometheus, about to steal the fire from heaven, could not have been
more excited.</p>
<p>Nevertheless he did not hesitate, but rubbed the stone with a quick stroke. A
little sputtering was heard, and a light blue flame sprung out and produced a
pungent smoke. Herbert gently turned the match, so as to feed the flame, and
then slid it under the paper cone. In a few seconds the paper took fire, and
then the moss kindled. An instant later, the dry wood crackled, and a joyous
blaze, fanned by the breath of the sailor, shone out from the darkness.</p>
<p>“At length,” cried Pencroff, rising, “I never was so excited
in my life!”</p>
<p>It was evident that the fire did well in the fireplace of flat stones. The
smoke readily ascended through its passage; the chimney drew, and an agreeable
warmth quickly made itself felt. As to the fire, it would be necessary to take
care that it should not go out, and always to keep some embers among the
cinders. But it was only a matter of care and attention as the wood was plenty,
and the supply could always be renewed in good time.</p>
<p>Pencroff began at once to utilize the fire by preparing something more
nourishing than a dish of lithodomes. Two dozen eggs were brought by Herbert,
and the reporter, seated in a corner, watched these proceedings without
speaking. A triple thought held possession of his mind. Did Cyrus still live?
If alive, where was he? If he had survived his plunge, why was it he had found
no means of making his existence known? As to Neb, he roamed the sand like one
distracted.</p>
<p>Pencroff, who knew fifty-two ways of cooking eggs, had no choice at this time.
He contented himself with placing them in the hot cinders and letting them cook
slowly. In a few minutes the operation was finished, and the sailor invited the
reporter to take part in the supper. This was the first meal of the castaways
upon this unknown coast. The hard eggs were excellent, and as the egg contains
all the elements necessary for man’s nourishment, these poor men found
them sufficient, and felt their strength reviving.</p>
<p>Unfortunately, one was absent from this repast. If the five prisoners who had
escaped from Richmond had all been there, under those piled-up rocks, before
that bright and crackling fire upon that dry sand, their happiness would have
been complete. But the most ingenious, as well as the most learned—he who
was undoubtedly their chief, Cyrus Smith—alas! was missing, and his body
had not even obtained burial.</p>
<p>Thus passed the 25th of March. The night was come. Outside they heard the
whistling of the wind, the monotonous thud of the surf, and the grinding of the
pebbles on the beach.</p>
<p>The reporter had retired to a dark corner, after having briefly noted the
events of the day—the first sight of this new land, the loss of the
engineer, the exploration of the shore, the incidents of the matches, etc.;
and, overcome by fatigue, he was enabled to find some rest in sleep.</p>
<p>Herbert fell asleep at once. The sailor, dozing, with one eye open, passed the
night by the fire, on which he kept heaping fuel.</p>
<p>One only of the castaways did not rest in the Chimneys. It was the
inconsolable, the despairing Neb, who, during the whole night, and in spite of
his companions’ efforts to make him take some rest, wandered upon the
sands calling his master.</p>
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