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"
No
;
not
this
time
at
least
;
for
I
am
in
a
hurry
to
continue
our
submarine
tour
of
the
earth
.
So
I
shall
content
myself
with
drawing
from
the
reserve
of
sodium
I
already
possess
.
The
time
for
loading
is
one
day
only
,
and
we
continue
our
voyage
.
So
,
if
you
wish
to
go
over
the
cavern
and
make
the
round
of
the
lagoon
,
you
must
take
advantage
of
to-day
,
M.
Aronnax
.
"
I
thanked
the
Captain
and
went
to
look
for
my
companions
,
who
had
not
yet
left
their
cabin
.
I
invited
them
to
follow
me
without
saying
where
we
were
.
They
mounted
the
platform
.
Conseil
,
who
was
astonished
at
nothing
,
seemed
to
look
upon
it
as
quite
natural
that
he
should
wake
under
a
mountain
,
after
having
fallen
asleep
under
the
waves
.
But
Ned
Land
thought
of
nothing
but
finding
whether
the
cavern
had
any
exit
.
After
breakfast
,
about
ten
o’clock
,
we
went
down
on
to
the
mountain
.
"
Here
we
are
,
once
more
on
land
,
"
said
Conseil
.
"
I
do
not
call
this
land
,
"
said
the
Canadian
.
"
And
besides
,
we
are
not
on
it
,
but
beneath
it
.
"
Between
the
walls
of
the
mountains
and
the
waters
of
the
lake
lay
a
sandy
shore
which
,
at
its
greatest
breadth
,
measured
five
hundred
feet
.
On
this
soil
one
might
easily
make
the
tour
of
the
lake
.
But
the
base
of
the
high
partitions
was
stony
ground
,
with
volcanic
locks
and
enormous
pumice-stones
lying
in
picturesque
heaps
.
All
these
detached
masses
,
covered
with
enamel
,
polished
by
the
action
of
the
subterraneous
fires
,
shone
resplendent
by
the
light
of
our
electric
lantern
.
The
mica
dust
from
the
shore
,
rising
under
our
feet
,
flew
like
a
cloud
of
sparks
.
The
bottom
now
rose
sensibly
,
and
we
soon
arrived
at
long
circuitous
slopes
,
or
inclined
planes
,
which
took
us
higher
by
degrees
;
but
we
were
obliged
to
walk
carefully
among
these
conglomerates
,
bound
by
no
cement
,
the
feet
slipping
on
the
glassy
crystal
,
felspar
,
and
quartz
.
The
volcanic
nature
of
this
enormous
excavation
was
confirmed
on
all
sides
,
and
I
pointed
it
out
to
my
companions
.
"
Picture
to
yourselves
,
"
said
I
,
"
what
this
crater
must
have
been
when
filled
with
boiling
lava
,
and
when
the
level
of
the
incandescent
liquid
rose
to
the
orifice
of
the
mountain
,
as
though
melted
on
the
top
of
a
hot
plate
.
"
"
I
can
picture
it
perfectly
,
"
said
Conseil
.
"
But
,
sir
,
will
you
tell
me
why
the
Great
Architect
has
suspended
operations
,
and
how
it
is
that
the
furnace
is
replaced
by
the
quiet
waters
of
the
lake
?
"
"
Most
probably
,
Conseil
,
because
some
convulsion
beneath
the
ocean
produced
that
very
opening
which
has
served
as
a
passage
for
the
Nautilus
.
Then
the
waters
of
the
Atlantic
rushed
into
the
interior
of
the
mountain
.
There
must
have
been
a
terrible
struggle
between
the
two
elements
,
a
struggle
which
ended
in
the
victory
of
Neptune
.
But
many
ages
have
run
out
since
then
,
and
the
submerged
volcano
is
now
a
peaceable
grotto
.
"
"
Very
well
,
"
replied
Ned
Land
;
"
I
accept
the
explanation
,
sir
;
but
,
in
our
own
interests
,
I
regret
that
the
opening
of
which
you
speak
was
not
made
above
the
level
of
the
sea
.
"