登陆注册
16210000000015

第15章 Another Degree

The separation had been accomplished.The astronomers would beworked harder,but the operation itself would not lose by it—the same accuracy and precision would be devoted to the measurement of the new meridian,and would be as scrupulously tested.The three English savants,sharing the work,would advance more slowly and would undergo more fatigue.But they were not men to spare themselves.What the Russians could do on their side,they too would accomplish on the new meridian.If necessary,national amour propre would encourage them in this long and laborious task.Three observers would now have to do the work of six;so all their thoughts and all their time must now be devoted to the enterprise.William Emery must stop dreaming,and Sir John Murray would no longer be able to study the fauna of South Africa rifle in hand.

A fresh programme,defining the duty of each astronomer,was drawn up.To Sir John Murray and the Colonel were entrusted the trigonometrical and zenith observations;William Emery took Nicolas Palander’s place as calculator.Henceforth the choice of stations and arrangements of sights was settled by common consent,and no disagreement was to be feared between the three savants.

Mokoum was still the hunter and guide to the caravan.The English sailors had naturally followed their chiefs;and though the steamer had remained with the Russians,the india-rubber boat,which was quite sufficient for crossing ordinary streams,formed a part of their equipment.The waggons had been divided according to the supplies they carried.Thus the support of the two caravans,and even their comfort,had been amply provided for.

The natives forming the detachment had been divided into two equal parts,but not without their betraying their dissatisfaction at this.Perhaps they were right,as regards their own safety.These Boschjesmen found themselves far from the regions with which they were familiar,far from the pasturages and streams they had frequented,carried into a country far to the northward,swarming with wandering tribes inveterately hostile to the Africans of the South;and under these circumstances it was no little disadvantage to them to divide their strength.But at last the bushman,aided by the vorloper,had overcome their reluctance,and they had consented to the division of the caravan into two detachments,which—and this was the argument which influenced them most of all—would be acting at a distance relatively inconsiderable from each other,and in the same region.

When they quitted Kolobeng on the 31st August,Colonel Everest’s troop made for the cairn which had served as a sight for their last observations:they turned back into the burnt forest and reached the hillock.There operations were resumed on 2nd September.A large triangle,the apex of which pointed towards the left,on a pylon erected on an elevated point,allowed the observer to carry their measurements ten or twelve miles to the west of their former meridian.

Six days later,on 8th September,the series of auxiliary triangles was completed,and Colonel Everest,after consultation with his colleagues and reference to the maps,had chosen the new arc of the meridian,which farther measurements were to calculate as high as the twentieth parallel south.It was one degree west of the former,the twenty-third east of Greenwich.

Thus the English would not be more than sixty miles from the Russians;but this was enough to prevent their triangles from intersecting.It was improbable that the two parties would meet,and more improbable still that the choice of a sight should lead to a discussion,still less a dispute.

The country traversed by the English during September was fertile and varied,though not populous,and was very favourable to the caravan’s progress.The weather was very fine,very clear,free from fogs and clouds.The observations were taken easily—very few forests of any size,copses and thickets well intersected in every direction,broad prairies commanded here and there by rises in the ground,which greatly assisted the construction of signals either for day or night work,and for the use of their instruments.

It was at the same time well supplied with all natural products.Most of the flowers attracted swarms of insects with their perfumes,especially a bee,differing little from the European bee,which left a very fluid and delicious white honey in cracks in the rocks or in fissures of the trees.A few of the larger animals sometimes strayed at night as far as the camp:giraffes,several varieties of antelope;a few beasts of prey,hyaenas,rhinoceroses,and occasionally an elephant.But Sir John would no longer neglect his task for the sake of shooting.His hand was on the eyepiece of the telescope,and no longer grasped the hunter’s rifle.

Mokoum,assisted by some of the natives,provided for the needs of the caravan;but it may be supposed the report of their guns,quickened Sir John’s pulse.Sometimes two or three prairie buffaloes fell to the hunter’s rifle,the bokolokolos of the Bechuanas,twelve feet from muzzle to tail and six feet from shoulder to hoof;their black hides had a bluish tint.They were dangerous animals,with short powerful limbs,small heads,and wild eyes,and the forehead armed with short thick black horns,but they provided an excellent addition to the fresh venison,the staple food of the caravan.

The natives prepared this meat so as to preserve it for any length of time,much as pemmican isprepared by the North American Indians.The Europeans watched this culinary operation with interest,although at first they showed some repugnance to it.The buffalo meat,after having been cut into thin slices and dried in the sun,was pressed in a tanned skin and beaten with a flail till it was reduced almost to impalpable fragments.It was then nothing more than powdered or pulverised meat.This powder,enclosed in skin bags,and squeezed closely together,was then moistened with boiling fat taken from the same animal;to this fat,which,it must be confessed,tastes of tallow,the African cooks add very fine marrow and the berries of certain shrubs;then this composition is rubbed and beaten until,when cold,it becomes a cake as hard as stone.

Mokoum then invited the astronomers to taste the mixture.The Europeans did so to please the hunter,who was proud of his pemmican as a national dish.They did not find it very agreeable at first,but they soon became accustomed to the taste of this African pudding,and before long they got to like it.It was,in fact,a very nourishing food,and very well adopted to the wants of a caravan in an unknown country,where fresh provisions might very possibly fail;it was easy to carry and could be kept almost any length of time,and it contained a great quantity of nutritive elements in a very small bulk.Thanks to the hunter,their store of pemmican amounted to several hundred pounds,which guaranteed them against want for the future.

Sometimes they took observations at night.William Emery was always thinking about his friend,Michel Zorn,and regretting the disaster which had so suddenly severed the link of friendship between them.Yes;he missed Michel Zorn,and when his heart was full of the impressions to which the grand wild scenes of nature around give birth,he had no one to whom he could unbosom himself.He therefore busied himself in calculations,and took refuge in figures with the tenacity of a Palander.Colonel Everest was just the same as before,with the same cold temperament,whose only passion was trigonometrical operations.As for Sir John,he frankly regretted his former freedom,but he took care never to complain.

Nevertheless,fortune occasionally gave him the chance he longed for.If he had no time now to beat the covers and hunt the wild beasts,these animals sometimes took the trouble to come on purpose to interrupt him in his observations.Then the savant became the hunter,Sir John regarding this as legitimate defence.Thus on 12th September,he had dealings with an old rhinoceros in the neighbourhood which cost him rather dear.

For some time this beast had been prowling about the caravan.It was an enormous chucuroo,as the Boschjesmen call that animal.It was about fourteen feet long and six feet high;its skin was black,and less wrinkled than that of its Asiatic congeners.The bushman said that it was very dangerous,and indeed the black species are more active and more aggressive than the white,and will attack men and horses without provocation.

That day Sir John Murray,accompanied by Mokoum,had gone to reconnoitre a height six miles from the station,where Colonel Everest meant to erect a signal pylon.By some presentiment he had taken his rifle,and not an ordinary shot-gun:though the rhinoceros had not been seen for two days,he was unwilling to cross an unknown part of the country without weapons.Mokoum and his companions had hunted the animal,but had not come up with him,and the enormous beast might have given up his visits.

Sir John had no reason to regret having acted so prudently.He and his companion had reached the height and just got to its top when,at its base on the skirts of a dense coppice the chucuroo suddenly made its appearance.Sir John had never seen it so closely before.It was truly a formidable beast:its little eyes gleamed;its short horns bent slightly back,one in front of the other;each was about two feet long,and firmly planted in the bony structure of his snout—a really dangerous weapon.

The bushman was the first to notice the animal,and squatted down under a mastick bush.‘Sir John,’he said,‘fortune is favouring you.There’s the chucuroo.’

‘The rhinoceros!’cried Sir John‘where?’

‘There!’the hunter pointed;‘as you see,he’s a magnificent fellow,and he seems very much disposed to off our retreat.Why I cannot understand,for he lives only on vegetables;but there he is,and we shall have to get rid of him.’

‘Can he get up to us?’asked Sir John.

‘No,’replied the bushman,‘the climb is too steep for his short thick legs;but he’ll wait for us down there.’

‘Well,let him wait,’said Sir John,‘and when we’ve finished our work at this station,we’ll get rid of our inconvenient neighbour.’

Sir John Murray and Mokoum then resumed their interrupted work.They made notes of the layout of the higher part of the hill,and chose the spot where the signal pylon should be erected.When this was done Sir John turned to the bushman and said:

‘When you like,Mokoum.’

‘I’m at your orders,Sir.’

‘Is the rhinoceros still waiting for us?’

‘Still.’

‘Let’s go down,then,and,powerful as the beast may be,a bullet from my rifle will soon account for him.’

‘A bullet!’cried the bushman;‘you don’t know what a chucuroo is.They take a great deal of killing,and nobody has ever seen a rhinoceros fall to a single bullet,well as it may have been aimed.’

‘Bah!’said Sir John,‘that’s because they did not use conical bullets.’

‘Conical or round,’replied Mokoum,‘your first bullets will never bring down such an animal as that.’

‘Well,my brave Mokoum,’Sir John was stimulated by his amour propre as a shot,‘I’ll just show you what our English weapons can do,as you seem to doubt it.’

And Sir John cocked his rifle,ready to fire as soon as he thought the beast was within range.

‘One word,your honour,’the bushman was rather put out,and checked his companion,‘will you make a bet with me?’

‘Why not,my worthy hunter?’replied Sir John.

‘I’m not rich,’Mokoum declared,‘but I’ll willingly risk a pound against your honour’s first bullet.’

‘Agreed!’Sir John retorted at once.‘There’ll be a pound for you if I fail to bring the rhinoceros down with my first bullet.’

‘Done?’asked the bushman.

‘Done!’

The two hunters descended the hillock,and were soon about five hundred yards from the animal,which had stayed perfectly still.It was thus in a very favourable position for Sir John,who could take aim at his ease.He thought he was so certain to win that before he pressed the trigger he wanted to give the bushman the chance of withdrawing his bet,so he asked:

‘The bet still stands?’

‘Still’was all that Mokoum said.

The rhinoceros all this time had stayed as motionless as a target.Sir John was able to choose where to hit it so as to kill it as once.He decided on hitting it in the mouth,and his amour propre as a hunter stimulating him,he took a very careful aim.

The shot rang out,but the bullet,instead of striking the flesh,hit the horn and broke off its tip.The animal did not seem to notice the blow.

‘That shot doesn’t count,’said the bushman,‘as you didn’t hit the flesh.’

‘Yes it does,’Sir John was rather vexed.‘I’ve lost a pound to you,Mokoum,but I’ll let it be double or quits.’

‘As you please,Sir John,but you’ll lose.’

‘We shall see.’

The rifle was reloaded,and Sir John aimed at the beast’s flank and fired.But,hitting a place where the skin lay in heavy folds,the bullet fell to the ground;the rhinoceros moved a couple of steps away.

‘Two pounds,”said Mokoum.

‘Will you bet again?’asked Sir John.

‘Willingly.’

This time Sir John,who was getting angry,took a careful aim at the animal’s head;the bullet struck the place it was aimed at and rebounded as if from an iron plate.

‘Four pounds,’the bushman said quietly.

‘Four it is,’Sir John was really exasperated.

This time the ball hit the rhinoceros’haunch.It sprang forward,but instead of falling dead it vented its fury on the bushes.

‘I think he’s still moving a little.Sir John,’was all that Mokoum said.

Sir John could no longer control himself,and his coolness completely forsook him.He risked the eight pounds he had lost to the bushman and lost them;he kept on increasing his bets—and losing—and it was only at the ninth ball that the toughskinned rhinoceros fell at last,shot through the heart.

Then Sir John began to cheer up;his bets and his disappointment were all forgotten;he could remember only one thing—he had shot a rhinoceros.

But as he said to some of his club friends in London,‘that was a dear animal.’

In fact,it had cost him no less than thirty-six pounds,a very considerable sum,which the bushman pocketed with his habitual calm.

同类推荐
  • 青龙传

    青龙传

    《青龙传》四回,叙清道光皇帝微服私访,惩办国戚黄士功兄弟事。作者及成书年代无从稽考。此底本系天津储仁逊抄本小说十五种之一种,见于南开大学图书馆持藏部《话本十四种》。
  • 福尔摩斯探案全集2

    福尔摩斯探案全集2

    阿瑟·柯南道尔作品经典的探案小说《福尔摩斯探案全集》,其中包括《血字的研究》、《四签名》、《冒险史》、《回忆录》、《巴斯克维尔的猎犬》。
  • 月亮背面

    月亮背面

    作者不仅扼守着讲故事的古典传统,还很会讲故事。一是注意设伏笔,说它“草蛇灰线,伏笔千里”可能过了,但小说中的一些关键情节转折,预先都有精心的设计,在氛围、细节、人物心里方面都作了铺垫埋伏,如乡政府的“改朝换代”前后,如夏商背叛的前后,老李、小李、绿儿一家的命运故事等等,这使小说中的几个故事有机地融会贯通,于结构之中无拼贴之感。二是很会设置典型的场景和细节。如农技站不远处的土台,曾经是老李、夏商与村民关系的象征,后来就成了安静展示不同心情的平台,对于表现人物心理有着极强的象征意义。
  • 白马之恋

    白马之恋

    “花样美男”张皓天,在酒吧里偶遇名作家出身的文化公司女老板“大鱼”,大鱼要他陪她度过一个特殊的夜晚,张皓天犹豫再三,还是瞒着女友蓝小月,去赴那个特殊的约会。两人相拥而眠,大鱼觉得自己好像真的爱上这个美男子了,但他们还是签订了一份“不爱合同”。
  • 福尔摩斯喵之二十二街恩仇

    福尔摩斯喵之二十二街恩仇

    本书包含了三个故事:《狗娘养的》、《香奈儿的爱情》、《阁楼上的男孩》。以一位有点肥胖的、曾被《福尔摩斯破案全集》砸中过脑袋、从此自诩为“侦探猫”且人称“福尔摩斯喵”的迪多的视觉,分别探讨忠诚、爱情、理解三个主题。这三个故事彼此独立,又相互关联。在一个不完美的世界,一个不正经的侦探一本正经地讲述不正经的推理故事,告诉你一只猫所理解的忠诚、爱情、牺牲以及生命的困境。
热门推荐
  • 甜宠蜜妻:老公,求慢点

    甜宠蜜妻:老公,求慢点

    【甜宠文1v1】“放开我儿子!”她怒视门边的男人。他扛着她走进屋,扔上床,欺身而上,动作勇猛火热,“宝贝儿,我不仅要儿子,我还要你!”渐入佳境,儿子门外哇哇大哭,他把玩具熊塞儿子怀里,“乖,爸爸让妈妈给你生妹妹!”夏毛毛“可是妈妈叫得好惨!”墨谨言挑眉,“这是‘爱’的表现。”他是帝都四大豪门莫韩席景四大家之首族长子墨谨言,帝国第一豪门继承人,权势滔天,腹黑狠辣,是万千少女心上人,他却只对她一人宠爱有加,只倾心她一人,只为她袖手天下……
  • 我拿过整个青春去爱你

    我拿过整个青春去爱你

    我曾拿过整个青春去爱你,二十五岁后的我青春已经结束,而你才刚刚开始我想我们曾经爱过是最好的,感谢老天让我在人生中的第一个十年遇见了你,我爱了你十五年,最终还是选择放弃。
  • 帝匠

    帝匠

    在遥远的年代,世界上不存在化学家,不存在冶金学家,不存在生物学家,不存在能源与动力学专家,不存在工程设计师;而集上述大能于一身者,有且只有--工匠!古时候的工匠,是"生物"、"机械"、"能源"等领域的多面手,起源于春秋时期的匠祖鲁班,发展与战国末年的墨家,因其能"化死物为坚利"的鬼斧神工而一直被统治阶级视为社稷大患;这也是为何工匠实为创造者,却列下九流的根本原因。本书的主角正是百年后于异世大陆重生的鲁班,前世匆匆,他虽得《天机卷》却将其中的天人篇弃如敝履,只心投入机巧篇,为求在那狼烟世道中,以巧夺天工之力为天下黎民谋安乐,然而正如神医不能医国,纵是神匠又奈何?光阴流逝,年华老去,他明白,想要做到这一切,光凭神奇的机巧术还远远不够,可是,谁又能给他一个再来的机会···且看异世鲁班如何采天钢以炼神兵,建侠团以战妖邪,辅明君以平乱世!
  • 炼符成神

    炼符成神

    符,取云物星辰之势,化自然天地要素之形;生于元始之上,出于空洞之中;符者:上符天、下符地、中合人体。携宝转生,他重修符道;再踏征程,我必炼符成神!在符生的概念里,没有什么事不是一张符能够解决的。如果有,那就两张!
  • 林子大了

    林子大了

    青春难免理性与感性的锤炼,林容在校园中便尝遍了酸甜苦辣。帮派,武术,宗教,情感,创业等等元素,都将一一出现……
  • 袖手天下:江湖险恶请逃跑

    袖手天下:江湖险恶请逃跑

    泉清无比郁闷,估计没有人比她更惨了,她现在是个鬼魂,猜猜她怎么死的?被无良宿友拉去探险,结果,饿死了!对于一个吃货来说,早知道,死并不可怕,但是!!一个吃货被饿死,这是一件很耻辱的事啊啊啊!!咦?不是转世吗?小白小黑,你们把我扔到哪个地方啊啊啊!!!转世成了小baby!那就看我如何笑爆江湖,闯天下!!!哎呀!一不小心把娘家说出来了!诶诶!别跑呀!我娘我爹我弟我姐我姨我舅我大婶我舅妈又不会吃了你!!虽然我家很庞大,求请不要逃跑啊!不是吧!你们都要我出江湖!准备干粮准备钱!准备逃跑!后面的亲戚别追了!还请前面大哥帮个忙打个掩护啊啊啊!
  • 桃园秘史

    桃园秘史

    ~~心之所向,想象力之所及,将是吾人足迹之所至~~世界很残酷,也很美好,请:武装,而非伪装自己;真实,而非现实地活着。这本破书,给你勇气!
  • 乾隆朝内府抄本理藩院则例

    乾隆朝内府抄本理藩院则例

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 毕业终点是失恋

    毕业终点是失恋

    七月的秋风吹落满树的红枫,校园街道上铺满秋天的气息,踩着枯萎的黄叶,嘎吱嘎吱地漫步校园,手上提着一份热腾腾的饭盒,向音乐厅走去。忽然,背后传来一声呼喊。“明溪”我转身一看,原来是我的好友——希楠。“哟!给谁送饭呀?嗯。看来是给若铭吃的吧。”希楠俏皮地低头偷看饭盒。“嗯。。。是啊,他又顾着创作,忘记吃饭了,这样他身体会不好的。”我提了提饭盒。“咦,说起来我还没吃呢,我也叫吴少秦送饭给我吧,嘻嘻”“诶,你呀!!!”如此两个人像普通大学的两名女生之间的闺蜜谈论,这样的场景在大学校园里很常见。
  • 真情实感的故事(中华成语故事全集)

    真情实感的故事(中华成语故事全集)

    成语是汉语词汇宝库里的璀璨明珠。它是长期以来人们在相沿习用的过程中,形成的形式简洁面意义精辟的固定短语。它结可严谨,表现性强,具有庄重典雅的书面语色彩,历来为人们喜闻乐用。不论讲话或作文,准确恰当地镶嵌或点缀一些成语。本书注重知识性、可读性和完整性,每个成语都辟有释义、出处、故事三大部分。编排顺序按笔画多少排列,既方便读者阅读,又方便读者查阅。本书既可作为中小学生学习成语的工具书,又适合不同层次读者作为故事阅读,具有广泛的适用性。