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of Europe,” Hakkabut blurted

out at last.

 

Servadac shrugged his shoulders in contempt and turned away.

Here was a man who had been resident three months in Gallia,

a living witness of all the abnormal phenomena that had occurred,

and yet refusing to believe that his hope of making good bargains with

European traders was at an end. Surely nothing, thought the captain,

will convince the old rascal now; and he moved off in disgust.

The orderly, however, who had listened with much amusement,

was by no means disinclined for the conversation to be continued.

“Are you satisfied, old Ezekiel?” he asked.

 

“Isn’t it so? Am I not right? Didn’t a stranger arrive here last night?”

inquired the Jew.

 

“Yes, quite true.”

 

“Where from?”

 

“From the Balearic Isles.”

 

“The Balearic Isles?” echoed Isaac.

 

“Yes.”

 

“Fine quarters for trade! Hardly twenty leagues from Spain! He must

have brought news from Europe!”

 

“Well, old Manasseh, what if he has?”

 

“I should like to see him.”

 

“Can’t be.”

 

The Jew sidled close up to Ben Zoof, and laying his hand on his arm,

said in a low and insinuating tone, “I am poor, you know; but I would

give you a few reals if you would let me talk to this stranger.”

 

But as if he thought he was making too liberal an offer, he added,

“Only it must be at once.”

 

“He is too tired; he is worn out; he is fast asleep,”

answered Ben Zoof.

 

“But I would pay you to wake him.”

 

The captain had overheard the tenor of the conversation,

and interposed sternly, “Hakkabut! if you make the least

attempt to disturb our visitor, I shall have you turned outside

that door immediately.”

 

“No offense, my lord, I hope,” stammered out the Jew. “I only meant—”

 

“Silence!” shouted Servadac. The old man hung his head, abashed.

 

“I will tell you what,” said Servadac after a brief interval;

“I will give you leave to hear what this stranger has to tell

as soon as he is able to tell us anything; at present we have

not heard a word from his lips.”

 

The Jew looked perplexed.

 

“Yes,” said Servadac; “when we hear his story, you shall hear it too.”

 

“And I hope it will be to your liking, old Ezekiel!” added Ben Zoof

in a voice of irony.

 

They had none of them long to wait, for within a few minutes Rosette’s

peevish voice was heard calling, “Joseph! Joseph!”

 

The professor did not open his eyes, and appeared to be slumbering on,

but very shortly afterwards called out again, “Joseph! Confound the

fellow! where is he?” It was evident that he was half dreaming

about a former servant now far away on the ancient globe.

“Where’s my blackboard, Joseph?”

 

“Quite safe, sir,” answered Ben Zoof, quickly.

 

Rosette unclosed his eyes and fixed them full upon the orderly’s face.

“Are you Joseph?” he asked.

 

“At your service, sir,” replied Ben Zoof with imperturbable gravity.

 

“Then get me my coffee, and be quick about it.”

 

Ben Zoof left to go into the kitchen, and Servadac approached the professor

in order to assist him in rising to a sitting posture.

 

“Do you recognize your quondam pupil, professor?” he asked.

 

“Ah, yes, yes; you are Servadac,” replied Rosette. “It is twelve

years or more since I saw you; I hope you have improved.”

 

“Quite a reformed character, sir, I assure you,” said Servadac, smiling.

 

“Well, that’s as it should be; that’s right,” said the astronomer with

fussy importance. “But let me have my coffee,” he added impatiently;

“I cannot collect my thoughts without my coffee.”

 

Fortunately, Ben Zoof appeared with a great cup, hot and strong.

After draining it with much apparent relish, the professor got

out of bed, walked into the common hall, round which he glanced

with a preoccupied air, and proceeded to seat himself in an armchair,

the most comfortable which the cabin of the Dobryna had supplied.

Then, in a voice full of satisfaction, and that involuntarily

recalled the exclamations of delight that had wound up the two first

of the mysterious documents that had been received, he burst out,

“Well, gentlemen, what do you think of Gallia?”

 

There was no time for anyone to make a reply before Isaac Hakkabut

had darted forward.

 

“By the God—”

 

“Who is that?” asked the startled professor; and he frowned,

and made a gesture of repugnance.

 

Regardless of the efforts that were made to silence him,

the Jew continued, “By the God of Abraham, I beseech you,

give me some tidings of Europe!”

 

“Europe?” shouted the professor, springing from his seat as if

he were electrified; “what does the man want with Europe?”

 

“I want to get there!” screeched the Jew; and in spite of every exertion

to get him away, he clung most tenaciously to the professor’s chair,

and again and again implored for news of Europe.

 

Rosette made no immediate reply. After a moment or two’s reflection,

he turned to Servadac and asked him whether it was not the middle of April.

 

“It is the twentieth,” answered the captain.

 

“Then to-day,” said the astronomer, speaking with the greatest

deliberation—“to-day we are just three millions of leagues

away from Europe.”

 

The Jew was utterly crestfallen.

 

“You seem here,” continued the professor, “to be very ignorant

of the state of things.”

 

“How far we are ignorant,” rejoined Servadac, “I cannot tell.

But I will tell you all that we do know, and all that we have surmised.”

And as briefly as he could, he related all that had happened

since the memorable night of the thirty-first of December; how they

had experienced the shock; how the Dobryna had made her voyage;

how they had discovered nothing except the fragments of the old

continent at Tunis, Sardinia, Gibraltar, and now at Formentera;

how at intervals the three anonymous documents had been received;

and, finally, how the settlement at Gourbi Island had been abandoned

for their present quarters at Nina’s Hive.

 

The astronomer had hardly patience to hear him to the end.

“And what do you say is your surmise as to your present position?”

he asked.

 

“Our supposition,” the captain replied, “is this. We imagine that we

are on a considerable fragment of the terrestrial globe that has been

detached by collision with a planet to which you appear to have given

the name of Gallia.”

 

“Better than that!” cried Rosette, starting to his feet with excitement.

 

“How? Why? What do you mean?” cried the voices of the listeners.

 

“You are correct to a certain degree,” continued the professor.

“It is quite true that at 47′ 35.6″ after two o’clock on the morning

of the first of January there was a collision; my comet grazed the earth;

and the bits of the earth which you have named were carried clean away.”

 

They were all fairly bewildered.

 

“Where, then,” cried Servadac eagerly, “where are we?”

 

“You are on my comet, on Gallia itself!”

 

And the professor gazed around him with a perfect air of triumph.

CHAPTER III

THE PROFESSOR’S EXPERIENCES

 

“Yes, my comet!” repeated the professor, and from time to time

he knitted his brows, and looked around him with a defiant air,

as though he could not get rid of the impression that someone

was laying an unwarranted claim to its proprietorship,

or that the individuals before him were intruders upon his

own proper domain.

 

But for a considerable while, Servadac, the count,

and the lieutenant remained silent and sunk in thought.

Here then, at last, was the unriddling of the enigma they

had been so long endeavoring to solve; both the hypotheses

they had formed in succession had now to give way before

the announcement of the real truth. The first supposition,

that the rotatory axis of the earth had been subject to some

accidental modification, and the conjecture that replaced it,

namely, that a certain portion of the terrestrial sphere had been

splintered off and carried into space, had both now to yield

to the representation that the earth had been grazed by an

unknown comet, which had caught up some scattered fragments from

its surface, and was bearing them far away into sidereal regions.

Unfolded lay the past and the present before them; but this

only served to awaken a keener interest about the future.

Could the professor throw any light upon that? they longed

to inquire, but did not yet venture to ask him.

 

Meanwhile Rosette assumed a pompous professional air, and appeared to be

waiting for the entire party to be ceremoniously introduced to him.

Nothing unwilling to humor the vanity of the eccentric little man,

Servadac proceeded to go through the expected formalities.

 

“Allow me to present to you my excellent friend, the Count Timascheff,”

he said.

 

“You are very welcome,” said Rosette, bowing to the count

with a smile of condescension.

 

“Although I am not precisely a voluntary resident on your comet,

Mr. Professor, I beg to acknowledge your courteous reception,”

gravely responded Timascheff.

 

Servadac could not quite conceal his amusement at the count’s irony,

but continued, “This is Lieutenant Procope, the officer in command

of the Dobryna.”

 

The professor bowed again in frigid dignity.

 

“His yacht has conveyed us right round Gallia,” added the captain.

 

“Round Gallia?” eagerly exclaimed the professor.

 

“Yes, entirely round it,” answered Servadac, and without allowing

time for reply, proceeded, “And this is my orderly, Ben Zoof.”

 

“Aide-de-camp to his Excellency the Governor of Gallia,”

interposed Ben Zoof himself, anxious to maintain his master’s

honor as well as his own.

 

Rosette scarcely bent his head.

 

The rest of the population of the Hive were all presented in succession:

the Russian sailors, the Spaniards, young Pablo, and little Nina,

on whom the professor, evidently no lover of children, glared fiercely

through his formidable spectacles. Isaac Hakkabut, after his introduction,

begged to be allowed to ask one question.

 

“How soon may we hope to get back?” he inquired,

 

“Get back!” rejoined Rosette, sharply; “who talks of getting back?

We have hardly started yet.”

 

Seeing that the professor was inclined to get angry, Captain Servadac

adroitly gave a new turn to the conversation by asking him whether

he would gratify them by relating his own recent experiences.

The astronomer seemed pleased with the proposal, and at once commenced

a verbose and somewhat circumlocutory address, of which the following

summary presents the main features.

 

The French Government, being desirous of verifying the

measurement already made of the arc of the meridian of Paris,

appointed a scientific commission for that purpose.

From that commission the name of Palmyrin Rosette was omitted,

apparently for no other reason than his personal unpopularity.

Furious at the slight, the professor resolved to set to work

independently on his own account, and declaring that there

were inaccuracies in the previous geodesic operations,

he determined to re-examine the results of the last triangulation

which had united Formentera to the Spanish coast by a triangle,

one of the sides of which measured over a hundred miles,

the very operation which had already been so successfully

accomplished by Arago and Biot.

 

Accordingly, leaving Paris for the Balearic Isles, he placed his

observatory on the highest point of Formentera, and accompanied

as he was only by his servant, Joseph, led the life of a recluse.

He secured the services of a former assistant, and dispatched him

to a high peak on the coast of Spain, where he had to superintend

a rever-berator, which, with the aid of a glass, could be seen

from Formentera. A few

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