第 50 节
作者:津鸿一瞥      更新:2021-10-16 18:44      字数:9320
  Hope there seemed none whateveryet; strangely enough we were
  neither of us utterly hopeless; and even when the evil that we
  dreaded was upon us; and that which we greatly feared had come; we
  sat in the car of the balloon with the waters up to our middle; and
  still smiled with a ghastly hopefulness to one another。
  * * *
  He who has crossed the St。 Gothard will remember that below
  Andermatt there is one of those Alpine gorges which reach the very
  utmost limits of the sublime and terrible。  The feelings of the
  traveller have become more and more highly wrought at every step;
  until at last the naked and overhanging precipices seem to close
  above his head; as he crosses a bridge hung in mid…air over a
  roaring waterfall; and enters on the darkness of a tunnel; hewn out
  of the rock。
  What can be in store for him on emerging?  Surely something even
  wilder and more desolate than that which he has seen already; yet
  his imagination is paralysed; and can suggest no fancy or vision of
  anything to surpass the reality which he had just witnessed。  Awed
  and breathless he advances; when lo! the light of the afternoon sun
  welcomes him as he leaves the tunnel; and behold a smiling valley
  a babbling brook; a village with tall belfries; and meadows of
  brilliant greenthese are the things which greet him; and he
  smiles to himself as the terror passes away and in another moment
  is forgotten。
  So fared it now with ourselves。  We had been in the water some two
  or three hours; and the night had come upon us。  We had said
  farewell for the hundredth time; and had resigned ourselves to meet
  the end; indeed I was myself battling with a drowsiness from which
  it was only too probable that I should never wake; when suddenly;
  Arowhena touched me on the shoulder; and pointed to a light and to
  a dark mass which was bearing right upon us。  A cry for helploud
  and clear and shrillbroke forth from both of us at once; and in
  another five minutes we were carried by kind and tender hands on to
  the deck of an Italian vessel。
  CHAPTER XXIX:  CONCLUSION
  The ship was the Principe Umberto; bound from Callao to Genoa; she
  had carried a number of emigrants to Rio; had gone thence to
  Callao; where she had taken in a cargo of guano; and was now on her
  way home。  The captain was a certain Giovanni Gianni; a native of
  Sestri; he has kindly allowed me to refer to him in case the truth
  of my story should be disputed; but I grieve to say that I suffered
  him to mislead himself in some important particulars。  I should add
  that when we were picked up we were a thousand miles from land。
  As soon as we were on board; the captain began questioning us about
  the siege of Paris; from which city he had assumed that we must
  have come; notwithstanding our immense distance from Europe。  As
  may be supposed; I had not heard a syllable about the war between
  France and Germany; and was too ill to do more than assent to all
  that he chose to put into my mouth。  My knowledge of Italian is
  very imperfect; and I gathered little from anything that he said;
  but I was glad to conceal the true point of our departure; and
  resolved to take any cue that he chose to give me。
  The line that thus suggested itself was that there had been ten or
  twelve others in the balloon; that I was an English Milord; and
  Arowhena a Russian Countess; that all the others had been drowned;
  and that the despatches which we had carried were lost。  I came
  afterwards to learn that this story would not have been credible;
  had not the captain been for some weeks at sea; for I found that
  when we were picked up; the Germans had already long been masters
  of Paris。  As it was; the captain settled the whole story for me;
  and I was well content。
  In a few days we sighted an English vessel bound from Melbourne to
  London with wool。  At my earnest request; in spite of stormy
  weather which rendered it dangerous for a boat to take us from one
  ship to the other; the captain consented to signal the English
  vessel; and we were received on board; but we were transferred with
  such difficulty that no communication took place as to the manner
  of our being found。  I did indeed hear the Italian mate who was in
  charge of the boat shout out something in French to the effect that
  we had been picked up from a balloon; but the noise of the wind was
  so great; and the captain understood so little French that he
  caught nothing of the truth; and it was assumed that we were two
  persons who had been saved from shipwreck。  When the captain asked
  me in what ship I had been wrecked; I said that a party of us had
  been carried out to sea in a pleasure…boat by a strong current; and
  that Arowhena (whom I described as a Peruvian lady) and I were
  alone saved。
  There were several passengers; whose goodness towards us we can
  never repay。  I grieve to think that they cannot fail to discover
  that we did not take them fully into our confidence; but had we
  told them all; they would not have believed us; and I was
  determined that no one should hear of Erewhon; or have the chance
  of getting there before me; as long as I could prevent it。  Indeed;
  the recollection of the many falsehoods which I was then obliged to
  tell; would render my life miserable were I not sustained by the
  consolations of my religion。  Among the passengers there was a most
  estimable clergyman; by whom Arowhena and I were married within a
  very few days of our coming on board。
  After a prosperous voyage of about two months; we sighted the
  Land's End; and in another week we were landed at London。  A
  liberal subscription was made for us on board the ship; so that we
  found ourselves in no immediate difficulty about money。  I
  accordingly took Arowhena down into Somersetshire; where my mother
  and sisters had resided when I last heard of them。  To my great
  sorrow I found that my mother was dead; and that her death had been
  accelerated by the report of my having been killed; which had been
  brought to my employer's station by Chowbok。  It appeared that he
  must have waited for a few days to see whether I returned; that he
  then considered it safe to assume that I should never do so; and
  had accordingly made up a story about my having fallen into a
  whirlpool of seething waters while coming down the gorge homeward。
  Search was made for my body; but the rascal had chosen to drown me
  in a place where there would be no chance of its ever being
  recovered。
  My sisters were both married; but neither of their husbands was
  rich。  No one seemed overjoyed on my return; and I soon discovered
  that when a man's relations have once mourned for him as dead; they
  seldom like the prospect of having to mourn for him a second time。
  Accordingly I returned to London with my wife; and through the
  assistance of an old friend supported myself by writing good little
  stories for the magazines; and for a tract society。  I was well
  paid; and I trust that I may not be considered presumptuous in
  saying that some of the most popular of the brochures which are
  distributed in the streets; and which are to be found in the
  waiting…rooms of the railway stations; have proceeded from my pen。
  During the time that I could spare; I arranged my notes and diary
  till they assumed their present shape。  There remains nothing for
  me to add; save to unfold the scheme which I propose for the
  conversion of Erewhon。
  That scheme has only been quite recently decided upon as the one
  which seems most likely to be successful。
  It will be seen at once that it would be madness for me to go with
  ten or a dozen subordinate missionaries by the same way as that
  which led me to discover Erewhon。  I should be imprisoned for
  typhus; besides being handed over to the straighteners for having
  run away with Arowhena:  an even darker fate; to which I dare
  hardly again allude; would be reserved for my devoted fellow…
  labourers。  It is plain; therefore; that some other way must be
  found for getting at the Erewhonians; and I am thankful to say that
  such another way is not wanting。  One of the rivers which descends
  from the Snowy Mountains; and passes through Erewhon; is known to
  be navigable for several hundred miles from its mouth。  Its upper
  waters have never yet been explored; but I feel little doubt that
  it will be found possible to take a light gunboat (for we must
  protect ourselves) to the outskirts of the Erewhonian country。
  I propose; therefore; that one of those associations should be
  formed in which the risk of each of the members is confined to the
  amount of his stake in the concern。  The first step would be to
  draw up a prospectus。  In this I would advise that no mention
  should be made of the fact that the Erewhonians are the lost
  tribes。  The discovery is one of absorbing interest to myself; but
  it is of a sentimental rather than commercial value; and business
  is business。  The capital to be raised should not be less than
  fifty thousand pounds; and might be either in five or ten pound
  shares as hereafter determined。  This should be amply sufficient
  for the expenses of an experimental voyage。
  When the money had been subscribed; it would be our duty to charter
  a steamer of some twelve or fourteen hundred tons burden; and with