| FIRST PART
CHAPTER 18: Four Thousand Leagues Under the Pacific
 (continued)"Well, professor," Captain Nemo replied, "we'll show you better
 than that, I hope.  As for the average depth of this part of
 the Pacific, I'll inform you that it's a mere 4,000 meters." This said, Captain Nemo headed to the hatch and disappeared down
 the ladder.  I followed him and went back to the main lounge.
 The propeller was instantly set in motion, and the log gave our speed
 as twenty miles per hour. Over the ensuing days and weeks, Captain Nemo was very frugal
 with his visits.  I saw him only at rare intervals.  His chief
 officer regularly fixed the positions I found reported on the chart,
 and in such a way that I could exactly plot the Nautilus's course. Conseil and Land spent the long hours with me.  Conseil had told
 his friend about the wonders of our undersea stroll, and the Canadian
 was sorry he hadn't gone along.  But I hoped an opportunity would
 arise for a visit to the forests of Oceania. Almost every day the panels in the lounge were open for some hours,
 and our eyes never tired of probing the mysteries of the underwater world. The Nautilus's general heading was southeast, and it stayed at a depth
 between 100 and 150 meters.  However, from lord-knows-what whim,
 one day it did a diagonal dive by means of its slanting fins,
 reaching strata located 2,000 meters underwater.  The thermometer
 indicated a temperature of 4.25 degrees centigrade, which at this
 depth seemed to be a temperature common to all latitudes. On November 26, at three o'clock in the morning, the Nautilus
 cleared the Tropic of Cancer at longitude 172 degrees.  On the 27th
 it passed in sight of the Hawaiian Islands, where the famous
 Captain Cook met his death on February 14, 1779.  By then we
 had fared 4,860 leagues from our starting point.  When I arrived
 on the platform that morning, I saw the Island of Hawaii two miles
 to leeward, the largest of the seven islands making up this group.
 I could clearly distinguish the tilled soil on its outskirts,
 the various mountain chains running parallel with its coastline,
 and its volcanoes, crowned by Mauna Kea, whose elevation is 5,000
 meters above sea level.  Among other specimens from these waterways,
 our nets brought up some peacock-tailed flabellarian coral,
 polyps flattened into stylish shapes and unique to this part
 of the ocean. |