The Coming Race eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 186 pages of information about The Coming Race.

The Coming Race eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 186 pages of information about The Coming Race.

We selected six veteran miners to watch our descent; and as the cage held only one at a time, the engineer descended first; and when he had gained the ledge at which he had before halted, the cage rearose for me.  I soon gained his side.  We had provided ourselves with a strong coil of rope.

The light struck on my sight as it had done the day before on my friend’s.  The hollow through which it came sloped diagonally:  it seemed to me a diffused atmospheric light, not like that from fire, but soft and silvery, as from a northern star.  Quitting the cage, we descended, one after the other, easily enough, owing to the juts in the side, till we reached the place at which my friend had previously halted, and which was a projection just spacious enough to allow us to stand abreast.  From this spot the chasm widened rapidly like the lower end of a vast funnel, and I saw distinctly the valley, the road, the lamps which my companion had described.  He had exaggerated nothing.  I heard the sounds he had heard—­a mingled indescribable hum as of voices and a dull tramp as of feet.  Straining my eye farther down, I clearly beheld at a distance the outline of some large building.  It could not be mere natural rock, it was too symmetrical, with huge heavy Egyptian-like columns, and the whole lighted as from within.  I had about me a small pocket-telescope, and by the aid of this, I could distinguish, near the building I mention, two forms which seemed human, though I could not be sure.  At least they were living, for they moved, and both vanished within the building.  We now proceeded to attach the end of the rope we had brought with us to the ledge on which we stood, by the aid of clamps and grappling hooks, with which, as well as with necessary tools, we were provided.

We were almost silent in our work.  We toiled like men afraid to speak to each other.  One end of the rope being thus apparently made firm to the ledge, the other, to which we fastened a fragment of the rock, rested on the ground below, a distance of some fifty feet.  I was a younger man and a more active man than my companion, and having served on board ship in my boyhood, this mode of transit was more familiar to me than to him.  In a whisper I claimed the precedence, so that when I gained the ground I might serve to hold the rope more steady for his descent.  I got safely to the ground beneath, and the engineer now began to lower himself.  But he had scarcely accomplished ten feet of the descent, when the fastenings, which we had fancied so secure, gave way, or rather the rock itself proved treacherous and crumbled beneath the strain; and the unhappy man was precipitated to the bottom, falling just at my feet, and bringing down with his fall splinters of the rock, one of which, fortunately but a small one, struck and for the time stunned me.  When I recovered my senses I saw my companion an inanimate mass beside me, life utterly extinct.  While I was bending over his corpse in grief and horror, I heard close

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The Coming Race from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.