SECOND PART
CHAPTER 22: The Last Words of Captain Nemo
(continued)
From that day forward, who knows where the Nautilus took us
in the north Atlantic basin? Always at incalculable speed!
Always amid the High Arctic mists! Did it call at the capes
of Spitzbergen or the shores of Novaya Zemlya? Did it visit such
uncharted seas as the White Sea, the Kara Sea, the Gulf of Ob,
the Lyakhov Islands, or those unknown beaches on the Siberian coast?
I'm unable to say. I lost track of the passing hours. Time was
in abeyance on the ship's clocks. As happens in the polar regions,
it seemed that night and day no longer followed their normal sequence.
I felt myself being drawn into that strange domain where
the overwrought imagination of Edgar Allan Poe was at home.
Like his fabled Arthur Gordon Pym, I expected any moment to see
that "shrouded human figure, very far larger in its proportions
than any dweller among men," thrown across the cataract that protects
the outskirts of the pole!
I estimate--but perhaps I'm mistaken--that the Nautilus's haphazard
course continued for fifteen or twenty days, and I'm not sure
how long this would have gone on without the catastrophe that ended
our voyage. As for Captain Nemo, he was no longer in the picture.
As for his chief officer, the same applied. Not one crewman
was visible for a single instant. The Nautilus cruised beneath
the waters almost continuously. When it rose briefly to the surface
to renew our air, the hatches opened and closed as if automated.
No more positions were reported on the world map. I didn't know
where we were.
I'll also mention that the Canadian, at the end of his strength
and patience, made no further appearances. Conseil couldn't coax
a single word out of him and feared that, in a fit of delirium while
under the sway of a ghastly homesickness, Ned would kill himself.
So he kept a devoted watch on his friend every instant.
You can appreciate that under these conditions, our situation
had become untenable.
One morning--whose date I'm unable to specify--I was slumbering
near the first hours of daylight, a painful, sickly slumber.
Waking up, I saw Ned Land leaning over me, and I heard him tell me
in a low voice:
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