<SPAN name="chapter_3"></SPAN>
<h2><span class="chapter_no" title="three">III</span><br/>THREE MONTHS IN A BALLOON</h2>
<p class="first_paragraph"><span class="first_word">Mr. Munchausen</span> was not handsome, but
the Imps liked him very much, he was so
full of wonderful reminiscences, and was always
willing to tell anybody that would listen, all about
himself. To the Heavenly Twins he was the greatest
hero that had ever lived. Napoleon Bonaparte,
on Mr. Munchausen’s own authority, was not half
the warrior that he, the late Baron had been, nor
was Cæsar in his palmiest days, one-quarter so wise
or so brave. How old the Baron was no one ever
knew, but he had certainly lived long enough to
travel the world over, and stare every kind of death
squarely in the face without flinching. He had
fought Zulus, Indians, tigers, elephants—in fact,
everything that fights, the Baron had encountered,
and in every contest he had come out victorious.
He was the only man the children had ever seen that
had lost three legs in battle and then had recovered
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page27" title="27"> </SPAN>them after the fight was over; he was the only
visitor to their house that had been lost in the African
jungle and wandered about for three months
without food or shelter, and best of all he was, on
his own confession, the most truthful narrator of
extraordinary tales living. The youngsters had to
ask the Baron a question only, any one, it mattered
not what it was—to start him off on a story of
adventure, and as he called upon the Twins’ father
once a month regularly, the children were not long
in getting together a collection of tales beside
which the most exciting episodes in history paled
into insignificant commonplaces.</p>
<p>“Uncle Munch,” said the Twins one day, as they
climbed up into the visitor’s lap and disarranged
his necktie, “was you ever up in a balloon?”</p>
<p>“Only once,” said the Baron calmly. “But I
had enough of it that time to last me for a lifetime.”</p>
<p>“Was you in it for long?” queried the Twins,
taking the Baron’s watch out of his pocket and
flinging it at Cerberus, who was barking outside of
the window.</p>
<p><SPAN class="pagenum" id="page28" title="28"> </SPAN>“Well, it seemed long enough,” the Baron answered,
putting his pocket-book in the inside pocket
of his vest where the Twins could not reach it.
“Three months off in the country sleeping all
day long and playing tricks all night seems a very
short time, but three months in a balloon and the
constant centre of attack from every source is too
long for comfort.”</p>
<p>“Were you up in the air for three whole
months?” asked the Twins, their eyes wide open
with astonishment.</p>
<p>“All but two days,” said the Baron. “For two
of those days we rested in the top of a tree in
India. The way of it was this: I was always, as
you know, a great favourite with the Emperor
Napoleon, of France, and when he found himself
involved in a war with all Europe, he replied to
one of his courtiers who warned him that his army
was not in condition: ‘Any army is prepared for
war whose commander-in-chief numbers Baron
Munchausen among his advisers. Let me have
Munchausen at my right hand and I will fight the
world.’ So they sent for me and as I was not very
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page29" title="29"> </SPAN>busy I concluded to go and assist the French, although
the allies and I were also very good friends.
I reasoned it out this way: In this fight the allies
are the stronger. They do not need me. Napoleon
does. Fight for the weak, Munchausen, I said to
myself, and so I went. Of course, when I reached
Paris I went at once to the Emperor’s palace and
remained at his side until he took the field, after
which I remained behind for a few days to put
things to rights for the Imperial family. Unfortunately
for the French, the King of Prussia heard of
my delay in going to the front, and he sent word to
his forces to intercept me on my way to join Napoleon
at all hazards, and this they tried to do. When
I was within ten miles of the Emperor’s headquarters,
I was stopped by the Prussians, and had
it not been that I had provided myself with a balloon
for just such an emergency, I should have been
captured and confined in the King’s palace at Berlin,
until the war was over.</p>
<p>“Foreseeing all this, I had brought with me a
large balloon packed away in a secret section of my
trunk, and while my body-guard was fighting with
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page30" title="30"> </SPAN>the Prussian troops sent to capture me, I and my
valet inflated the balloon, jumped into the car and
were soon high up out of the enemy’s reach. They
fired several shots at us, and one of them would
have pierced the balloon had I not, by a rare good
shot, fired my own rifle at the bullet, and hitting it
squarely in the middle, as is my custom, diverted it
from its course, and so saved our lives.</p>
<p>“It had been my intention to sail directly over
the heads of the attacking party and drop down into
Napoleon’s camp the next morning, but unfortunately
for my calculations, a heavy wind came up in
the night and the balloon was caught by a northerly
blast, and blown into Africa, where, poised in the
air directly over the desert of Sahara, we encountered
a dead calm, which kept us stalled up for two
miserable weeks.”</p>
<p>“Why didn’t you come down?” asked the Twins,
“wasn’t the elevator running?”</p>
<p>“We didn’t dare,” explained the Baron, ignoring
the latter part of the question. “If we had we’d
have wasted a great deal of our gas, and our condition
would have been worse than ever. As I told
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page31" title="31"> </SPAN>you we were directly over the centre of the desert.
There was no way of getting out of it except by long
and wearisome marches over the hot, burning sands
with the chances largely in favour of our never getting
out alive. The only thing to do was to stay
just where we were and wait for a favouring
breeze. This we did, having to wait four mortal
weeks before the air was stirred.”</p>
<p>“You said two weeks a minute ago, Uncle
Munch,” said the Twins critically.</p>
<p>“Two? Hem! Well, yes it was two, now that I
think of it. It’s a natural mistake,” said the Baron
stroking his mustache a little nervously. “You
see two weeks in a balloon over a vast desert of
sand, with nothing to do but whistle for a breeze, is
equal to four weeks anywhere else. That is, it seems
so. Anyhow, two weeks or four, whichever it was,
the breeze came finally, and along about midnight
left us stranded again directly over an Arab encampment
near Wady Halfa. It was a more perilous
position really, than the first, because the moment
the Arabs caught sight of us they began to
make frantic efforts to get us down. At first we
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page32" title="32"> </SPAN>simply laughed them to scorn and made faces at
them, because as far as we could see, we were safely
out of reach. This enraged them and they apparently
made up their minds to kill us if they could.
At first their idea was to get us down alive and sell
us as slaves, but our jeers changed all that, and
what should they do but whip out a lot of guns and
begin to pepper us.</p>
<p>“‘I’ll settle them in a minute,’ I said to myself,
and set about loading my own gun. Would you
believe it, I found that my last bullet was the one
with which I had saved the balloon from the Prussian
shot?”</p>
<p>“Mercy, how careless of you, Uncle Munch!”
said one of the Twins. “What did you do?”</p>
<p>“I threw out a bag of sand ballast so that the
balloon would rise just out of range of their guns,
and then, as their bullets got to their highest point
and began to drop back, I reached out and caught
them in a dipper. Rather neat idea, eh? With
these I loaded my own rifle and shot every one
of the hostile party with their own ammunition,
and when the last of the attacking Arabs dropped
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page33" title="33"> </SPAN>I found there were enough bullets left to fill the
empty sand bag again, so that the lost ballast
was not missed. In fact, there were enough of
them in weight to bring the balloon down so
near to the earth that our anchor rope dangled
directly over the encampment, so that my valet and
I, without wasting any of our gas, could climb
down and secure all the magnificent treasures in
rugs and silks and rare jewels these robbers of the
desert had managed to get together in the course of
their depredations. When these were placed in the
car another breeze came up, and for the rest of the
time we drifted idly about in the heavens waiting
for a convenient place to land. In this manner we
were blown hither and yon for three months over
land and sea, and finally we were wrecked upon a
tall tree in India, whence we escaped by means of a
convenient elephant that happened to come our
way, upon which we rode triumphantly into Calcutta.
The treasures we had secured from the
Arabs, unfortunately, we had to leave behind us in
the tree, where I suppose they still are. I hope
some day to go back and find them.”</p>
<div id="illo02" class="illo">
<SPAN href="images/illo02.jpg"><ANTIMG src="images/illo02-thumb.jpg" width-obs="300" height-obs="413" alt="Baron reaches out of a balloon car with a soup ladle to catch bullets" /></SPAN>
<p class="caption">“As their bullets got to their highest point
and began to drop back, I reached out and
caught them.” <span class="illo_ch">Chapter III.</span></p>
</div>
<p><SPAN class="pagenum" id="page34" title="34"> </SPAN>Here Mr. Munchausen paused for a moment to
catch his breath. Then he added with a sigh. “Of
course, I went back to France immediately, but by
the time I reached Paris the war was over, and the
Emperor was in exile. I was too late to save him—though
I think if he had lived some sixty or seventy
years longer I should have managed to restore his
throne, and Imperial splendour to him.”</p>
<p>The Twins gazed into the fire in silence for a
minute or two. Then one of them asked:</p>
<p>“But what did you live on all that time, Uncle
Munch?”</p>
<p>“Eggs,” said the Baron. “Eggs and occasionally
fish. My servant had had the foresight when
getting the balloon ready to include, among the
things put into the car, a small coop in which were
six pet chickens I owned, and without which I
never went anywhere. These laid enough eggs
every day to keep us alive. The fish we caught
when our balloon stood over the sea, baiting our
anchor with pieces of rubber gas pipe used to inflate
the balloon, and which looked very much like
worms.”</p>
<!-- Original location of illo02 -->
<p><SPAN class="pagenum" id="page35" title="35"> </SPAN>“But the chickens?” said the Twins. “What
did they live on?”</p>
<p>The Baron blushed.</p>
<p>“I am sorry you asked that question,” he said,
his voice trembling somewhat. “But I’ll answer it
if you promise never to tell anyone. It was the
only time in my life that I ever practised an intentional
deception upon any living thing, and I
have always regretted it, although our very lives
depended upon it.”</p>
<p>“What was it, Uncle Munch?” asked the Twins,
awed to think that the old warrior had ever deceived
anyone.</p>
<p>“I took the egg shells and ground them into
powder, and fed them to the chickens. The poor
creatures supposed it was corn-meal they were getting,”
confessed the Baron. “I know it was mean,
but what could I do?”</p>
<p>“Nothing,” said the Twins softly. “And we
don’t think it was so bad of you after all. Many
another person would have kept them laying eggs
until they starved, and then he’d have killed them
and eaten them up. You let them live.”</p>
<p><SPAN class="pagenum" id="page36" title="36"> </SPAN>“That may be so,” said the Baron, with a smile
that showed how relieved his conscience was by the
Twins’ suggestion. “But I couldn’t do that you
know, because they were pets. I had been brought
up from childhood with those chickens.”</p>
<p>Then the Twins, jamming the Baron’s hat down
over his eyes, climbed down from his lap and went
to their play, strongly of the opinion that, though a
bold warrior, the Baron was a singularly kind,
soft-hearted man after all.</p>
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