The Crater eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 635 pages of information about The Crater.

The Crater eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 635 pages of information about The Crater.

Mark was walking, with an impatient step, towards the neck just mentioned, and which was at no great distance from the ship-yard, when his eye was attracted towards a sandy beach of several acres in extent, that spread itself along the margin of the rocks, as clear from every impurity as it was a few hours before, when it had been raised from out of the bosom of the ocean.  To him, it appeared that water was trickling through this sand, coming from beneath the lava of the Reef.  At first, he supposed it was merely the remains of some small portion of the ocean that had penetrated to a cavity within, and which was now trickling back through the crevices of the rocks, to find its level, under the great law of nature.  But it looked so pleasant to see once more water of any sort coming upwards from the earth, that the young man jumped down upon the sands, and hastened to the spot for further inquiry.  Scooping up a little of the water in the hollow of his hand, he found it sweet, soft, and deliciously cool.  Here was a discovery, indeed!  The physical comfort for which he most pined was thus presented to him, as by a direct gift from heaven; and no miser who had found a hoard of hidden gold, could have felt so great pleasure, or a tenth part of the gratitude, of our young hermit, if hermit we may call one who did not voluntarily seek his seclusion from the world, and who worshipped God less as a penance than from love and adoration.

Before quitting this new-found treasure, Mark opened a cavity in the sand to receive the water, placing stone around it to make a convenient and clean little basin.  In ten minutes this place was filled with water almost as limpid as air, and every way as delicious as the palate of man could require.  The young man could scarce tear himself away from the spot, but fearful of drinking too much he did so, after a time.  Before quitting the spring, however, he placed a stone of some size at a gap in the rock, a precaution that completely prevented the hogs, should they stroll that way, from descending to the beach and defiling the limpid basin.  As soon as he had leisure, Mark resolved to sink a barrel in the sand, and to build a fence around it; after which the stock might descend and drink at a pool he should form below, at pleasure.

Mark proceeded.  On reaching the narrowest part of the ‘Neck,’ he found that the rocks did not meet, but the Reef still remained an island.  The channel that separated the two points of rock was only about twenty feet wide, however, though it was of fully twice that depth.  The young man found it necessary to go back to the ship-yard (no great distance, by the way), and to bring a plank with which to make a bridge.  This done, he passed on to the newly emerged territory.  As might have been expected, the rocks were found tolerably well furnished with fish, which had got caught in pools and crevices when the water flowed into the sea; and what was of still more importance, another and a much

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The Crater from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.