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The Waif of the "Cynthia"
THE WAIF OF THE "CYNTHIA."
By
Jules Verne and Andre Laurie
NO. 659 DOUBLE NUMBER PRICE 20 CENTS
The Seaside Library, Pocket Edition, Issued Tri-weekly. By
subscription $50 per annum.
Copyrighted 1885 by George Munro-- Entered at the Post Office at New
York at second class rates-- Jan. 6, 1886
Rand McNally edition, published Feb. 1888 325 pages printed on fine
paper beautifully illustrated with handsome illuminated and embossed
covers.
THE WAIF OF THE "CYNTHIA."
CHAPTER I.
MR. MALARIUS' FRIEND.
There is probably neither in Europe nor anywhere else a scholar whose
face is more universally known than that of Dr. Schwaryencrona, of
Stockholm. His portrait appears on the millions of bottles with green
seals, which are sent to the confines of the globe.
Truth compels us to state that these bottles only contain cod liver
oil, a good and useful medicine; which is sold to the inhabitants of
Norway for a "couronnes," which is worth one franc and thirty-nine
centimes.
Formerly this oil was made by the fishermen, but now the process is a
more scientific one, and the prince of this special industry is the
celebrated Dr. Schwaryencrona.
There is no one who has not seen his pointed beard, his spectacles,
his hooked nose, and his cap of otter skin. The engraving, perhaps, is
not very fine, but it is certainly a striking likeness. A proof of
this is what happened one day in a primary school in Noroe, on the
western coast of Norway, a few leagues from Bergen.
Two o'clock had struck. The pupils were in their classes in the large,
sanded hall--the girls on the left and the boys on the right--occupied
in following the demonstration which their teacher, Mr. Malarius, was
making on the black-board. Suddenly the door opened, and a fur coat,
fur boots, fur gloves, and a cap of otter, made their appearance on
the threshold.
The pupils immediately rose respectfully, as is usual when a stranger
visits the class-room. None of them had ever seen the new arrival
before, but they all whispered when they saw him, "Doctor
Schwaryencrona," so much did the picture engraved on the bottles
resemble the doctor.
We must say that the pupils of Mr. Malarius had the bottles
continually before their eyes, for one of the principal manufactories
of the doctor was at Noroe. But for many years the learned man had not
visited that place, and none of the children consequently could have
beheld him in the flesh. In imagination it was another matter, for
they often spoke of him in Noroe, and his ears must have often
tingled, if the popular belief has any foundation. Be this as it may,
his recognition was unanimous, and a triumph for the unknown artist
who had drawn his portrait--a triumph of which this modest artist
might justly be proud, and of which more than one photographer in the
world might well be jealous.
But what astonished and disappointed the pupils a little was to
discover that the doctor was a man below the ordinary height, and not
the giant which they had imagined him to be. How could such an
illustrious man be satisfied with a height of only five feet three
inches? His gray head hardly reached the shoulder of Mr. Malarius, and
he was already stooping with age. He was also much thinner than the
doctor, which made him appear twice as tall. His large brown overcoat,
to which long use had given a greenish tint, hung loosely around him;
he wore short breeches and shoes with buckles, and from beneath his
black silk cap a few gray locks had made their escape. His rosy cheeks
and smiling countenance gave an expression of great sweetness to his
face. He also wore spectacles, through which he did not cast piercing
glances like the doctor, but through them his blue eyes shone with
inexhaustible benevolence.
In the memory of his pupils Mr. Malarius had never punished a scholar.
But, nevertheless, they all respected him, and loved him. He had a
brave soul, and all the world knew it very well. They were not
ignorant of the fact that in his youth he had passed brilliant
examinations, and that he had been offered a professorship in a great
university, where he might have attained to honor and wealth. But he
had a sister, poor Kristina, who was always ill and suffering. She
would not have left her native village for the world, for she felt
sure that she would die if they removed to the city. So Mr. Malarius
had submitted gently to her wishes, and sacrificed his own prospects.
He had accepted the humble duty of the village school-master, and when
twenty years afterward Kristina had died, blessing him, he had become
accustomed to his obscure and retired life, and did not care to change
it. He was absorbed in his work, and forgot the world. He found a
supreme pleasure in becoming a model instructor, and in having the
best-conducted school in his country. Above all, he liked to instruct
his best pupils in the higher branches, to initiate them into
scientific studies, and in ancient and modern literature, and give
them the information which is usually the portion of the higher
classes, and not bestowed upon the children of fishermen and peasants.
"What is good for one class, is good for the other," he argued. "If
the poor have not as many comforts, that is no reason why they should
be denied an acquaintance with Homer and Shakespeare; the names of the
stars which guide them across the ocean, or of the plants which grow
on the earth. They will soon see them laid low by their ploughs, but
in their infancy at least they will have drunk from pure sources, and
participated in the common patrimony of mankind." In more than one
country this system would have been thought imprudent, and calculated
to disgust the lowly with their humble lot in life, and lead them to
wander away in search of adventures. But in Norway nobody thinks of
these things. The patriarchal sweetness of their dispositions, the
distance between the villages, and the laborious habits of the people,
seem to remove all danger of this kind. This higher instruction is
more frequent than a stranger would believe to be possible. Nowhere is
education more generally diffused, and nowhere is it carried so high;
as well in the poorest rural schools, as in the colleges.
Therefore the Scandinavian Peninsula may flatter herself, that she has
produced more learned and distinguished men in proportion to her
population, than any other region of Europe. The traveler is
constantly astonished by the contrast between the wild and savage
aspect of nature, and the manufactures, and works of art, which
represent the most refined civilization.
But perhaps it is time for us to return to Noroe, and Dr.
Schwaryencrona, whom we have left on the threshold of the school. If
the pupils had been quick to recognize him, although they had never
seen him before, it had been different with the instructor, whose
acquaintance with him dated further back.
"Ah! good-day, my dear Malarius!" said the visitor cordially,
advancing with outstretched hands toward the school-master.
"Sir! you are very welcome," answered the latter, a little surprised,
and somewhat timidly, as is customary with all men who have lived
secluded lives; and are interrupted in the midst of their duties. "But
excuse me if I ask whom I have the honor of--"
"What! Have I changed so much since we ran together over the snow, and
smoked our long pipes at Christiania; have you forgotten our Krauss
boarding-house, and must I name your comrade and friend?"
"Schwaryencrona!" cried Mr. Malarius. "Is it possible.--Is it really
you.--Is it the doctor?"
"Oh! I beg of you, omit all ceremony. I am your old friend Roff, and
you are my brave Olaf, the best, the dearest friend of my youth. Yes,
I know you well. We have both changed a little in thirty years; but
our hearts are still young, and we have always kept a little corner in
them for those whom we learned to love, when we were students, and eat
our dry bread side by side."
The doctor laughed, and squeezed the hands of Mr. Malarius, whose eyes
were moist.
"My dear friend, my good excellent doctor, you must not stay here,"
said he; "I will give all these youngsters a holiday, for which they
will not be sorry, I assure you, and then you must go home with me."
"Not at all!" declared the doctor, turning toward the pupils who were
watching this scene with lively interest. "I must neither interfere
with your work, nor the studies of these youths. If you wish to give
me great pleasure, you will permit me to sit here near you, while you
resume your teaching."
"I would willingly do so," answered Mr. Malarius, "but to tell you the
truth, I have no longer any heart for geometry; besides, having
mentioned a holiday, I do not like to disappoint the children. There
is one way of arranging the matter however. If Doctor Schwaryencrona
would deign to do my pupils the honor of questioning them about their
studies, and then I will dismiss them for the rest of the day."
"An excellent idea. I shall be only too happy to do so. I will become
their examiner."
Then taking the master's seat, he addressed the school:
"Tell me," asked the doctor, "who is the best pupil?"
"Erik Hersebom!" answered fifty youthful voices unhesitatingly.
"Ah! Erik Hersebom. Well, Erik, will you come here?"
A young boy, about twelve years of age, who was seated on the front
row of benches, approached his chair. He was a grave, serious-looking
child, whose pensive cast of countenance, and large deep set eyes,
would have attracted attention anywhere, and he was the more
remarkable, because of the blonde heads by which he was surrounded.
While all his companions of both sexes had hair the color of flax,
rosy complexions, and blue eyes, his hair was of deep chestnut color,
like his eyes, and his skin was brown. He had not the prominent cheek
bones, the short nose, and the stout frame of these Scandinavian
children. In a word, by his physical characteristics so plainly
marked, it was evident that he did not belong to the race by whom he
was surrounded.
He was clothed like them in the coarse cloth of the country, made in
the style common among the peasantry of Bergen; but the delicacy of
his limbs, the smallness of his head, the easy elegance of his poise,
and the natural gracefulness of his movements and attitudes, all
seemed to denote a foreign origin.
No physiologist could have helped being struck at once by these
peculiarities, and such was the case with Dr. Schwaryencrona.
However, he had no motive for calling attention to these facts, and he
simply proceeded to fulfill the duty which he had undertaken.
"Where shall we begin--with grammar?" he asked the young lad.
"I am at the command of the doctor," answered Erik, modestly.
The doctor then gave him two or three simple questions, but was
astonished to hear him answer them, not only in the Swedish language,
but also in French and English. It was the usual custom of Mr.
Malarius, who contended that it was as easy to learn three languages
at once as it was to learn only one.
"You teach them French and English then?" said the doctor, turning
toward his friend.
"Why not? also the elements of Greek and Latin. I do not see what harm
it can do them."
"Nor I," said the doctor, laughing, and Erik Hersebom translated
several sentences very correctly.
In one of the sentences, reference was made to the hemlock drunk by
Socrates, and Mr. Malarius asked the doctor to question him as to the
family which this plant belonged to.
Erik answered without hesitation "that it was one of the family of
umbelliferous plants," and described them in detail.
From botany they passed to geometry, and Erik demonstrated clearly a
theorem relative to the sum of the angles of a triangle.
The doctor became every moment more and more surprised.
"Let us have a little talk about geography," he said. "What sea is it
which bounds Scandinavia, Russia and Siberia on the north?"
"It is the Arctic Ocean."
"And what waters does this ocean communicate with?"
"The Atlantic on the west, and the Pacific on the east."
"Can you name two or three of the most important seaports on the
Pacific?"
"I can mention Yokohama, in Japan; Melbourne, in Australia; San
Francisco, in the State of California."
"Well, since the Arctic Ocean communicates on one side with the
Atlantic, and on the other with the Pacific, do you not think that the
shortest route to Yokohama or San Francisco would be through this
Arctic Ocean?"
"Assuredly," answered Erik, "it would be the shortest way, if it were
practicable, but all navigators who have attempted to follow it have
been prevented by ice, and been compelled to renounce the enterprise,
when they have escaped death."
"Have they often attempted to discover the north-east passage?"
"At least fifty times during the last three centuries, but without
success."
"Could you mention a few of the expeditions?"
"The first was organized in 1523, under the direction of Franois
Sebastian Cabot. It consisted of three vessels under the command of
the unfortunate Sir Hugh Willoughby, who perished in Lapland, with all
his crew. One of his lieutenants, Chancellor, was at first successful,
and opened a direct route through the Polar Sea. But he also, while
making a second attempt, was shipwrecked, and perished. A captain,
Stephen Borough, who was sent in search of him, succeeded in making
his way through the strait which separates Nova Zembla from the Island
of Waigate and in penetrating into the Sea of Kara. But the fog and
ice prevented him from going any further.
"Two expeditions which were sent out in 1580 were equally
unsuccessful. The project was nevertheless revived by the Hollanders
about fifteen years later, and they fitted out, successively, three
expeditions, under the command of Barentz.
"In 1596, Barentz also perished, in the ice of Nova Zembla.
"Ten years later Henry Hudson was sent out, but also failed.
"The Danes were not more successful in 1653.
"In 1676, Captain John Wood was also shipwrecked. Since that period
the north-east passage has been considered impracticable, and
abandoned by the maritime powers."
"Has it never been attempted since that epoch?"
"It has been by Russia, to whom it would be of immense advantage, as
well as to all the northern nations, to find a direct route between
her shores and Siberia. She has sent out during a century no less than
eighteen expeditions to explore the coasts of Nova Zembla, the Sea of
Kara, and the eastern and western coasts of Siberia. But, although
these expeditions have made these places better known, they have also
demonstrated the impossibility of forcing a passage through the Arctic
Ocean. The academician Van Baer, who made the last attempt in 1837,
after Admiral Lutke and Pachtusow, declared emphatically that this
ocean is simply a glacier, as impracticable for vessels as it would be
if it were a continent."
"Must we, then, renounce all hopes of discovering a north-east
passage?"
"That seems to be the conclusion which we must arrive at, from the
failure of these numerous attempts. It is said, however, that a great
navigator, named Nordenskiold, wishes to make another attempt, after
he has prepared himself by first exploring portions of this polar sea.
If he then considers it practicable, he may get up another
expedition."
Dr. Schwaryencrona was a warm admirer of Nordenskiold, and this is why
he had asked these questions about the north-east passage. He was
charmed with the clearness of these answers.
He fixed his eyes on Erik Hersebom, with an expression of the deepest
interest.
"Where did you learn all this, my dear child?" he demanded, after a
short silence.
"Here, sir," answered Erik, surprised at the question.
"You have never studied in any other school?"
"Certainly not."
"Mr. Malarius may be proud of you, then," said the doctor, turning
toward the master.
"I am very well satisfied with Erik," said the latter.
"He has been my pupil for eight years. When I first took him he was
very young, and he has always been at the head of his section."
The doctor became silent. His piercing eyes were fixed upon Erik, with
a singular intensity. He seemed to be considering some problem, which
it would not be wise to mention.
"He could not have answered my question better and I think it useless
to continue the examination," he said at last. "I will no longer delay
your holiday, my children, and since Mr. Malarius desires it, we will
stop for to-day."
At these words, the master clapped his hands. All the pupils rose at
once, collected their books, and arranged themselves in four lines, in
the empty spaces between the benches.
Mr. Malarias clapped his hands a second time. The column started, and
marched out, keeping step with military precision.
At a third signal they broke their ranks, and took to flight with
joyous cries.
In a few seconds they were scattered around the blue waters of the
fiord, where might be seen also the turf roofs of the village of
Noroe.