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"And what takes place then?"
"The preacher," continued l'Encuerado, without the least idea of irreverence, "lowers his neck and then lifts it up again, raises up the hair-like feathers on his crop, and spreads out his tail like a fan. He then addresses the a.s.sembled birds, who strut about with their wings half opened, and answer him with approving gobbles."
The Indian, carried away by his narrative, added gestures to words, strutted about, rounded his arms and lowered his chin upon his breast, in order to imitate the ways of the birds which he was describing.
"But what do they say?" asked Lucien, archly.
"That depends on circ.u.mstances," he replied, scratching his forehead.
"The flock just now surprised must have cried out: 'What is this animal?'--'A dog,' would be the answer of the most knowing among them.
'Fly, my friends, fly!' he would cry; 'dogs are always accompanied by men, and men have guns.' 'A gun! what's that?'--'A machine that goes _boum_ and kills turkeys.' Then I make my appearance; they bustle about, fly away, and spread in every direction; but my gun had time to go _boum_ and to kill this beautiful bird."
I need scarcely say what mirth was excited by this account. While returning to our bivouac, Sumichrast told Lucien that the turkey is a native of America, and that it was introduced by the Jesuits into Europe, where it flourished well. In a domestic state, the color of its plumage altered to a reddish, a white, and a gray and black color. But it never lost the habit of walking about in flocks, and of laying its eggs in thickets, in a shapeless nest, which the young chicks leave the second day after they are hatched. Lastly, the Aztec name of the turkey--_totole_--is applied by the Indians to simpletons and cowards.
Lucien then told l'Encuerado about the magpie and the amphisbaena.
"You killed a _maquiz coatl_--a two-headed serpent!" cried the Indian.
"I only wounded it, for it got away; but it had only one head."
"Then you didn't examine it thoroughly; for it would not turn round when it crawled away."
"I did not notice. I saw it leap up in the air, and that was all."
"Have you searched well under the stones? Let us go back; the skin of the _maquiz coatl_ enables the blind to see. Why did you let it escape?"
"Oh! we shall be sure to find another."
"You can't find them whenever you like; they are very rare," replied the Indian, shaking his head.
While the turkey was roasting under our superintendence, l'Encuerado and Lucien went off to try and find the amphisbaena's hole.
[Ill.u.s.tration]
[Ill.u.s.tration: "It looked like an immense pedestal, surmounted by two bronze statues."]
[Ill.u.s.tration]
CHAPTER XIV.
THE METEOR.--G.o.d ALMIGHTY'S LANTERNS.--THE SKUNK.--THE JALAP-PLANT.--AN AERIAL JOURNEY.--THE ORCHIDS.--BIVOUAC IN THE MOUTH OF A CAVE.--GRINGALET AND THE BEETLES.--A WHITE ANTS' NEST.
The sun left us soon afterwards, and we sat talking by the fire. At last l'Encuerado took away Lucien towards the rocks, and set up one of those interminable chants with which his memory was stored. Our fire lighted up with its red gleam the stone on which they were sitting, making it look like an immense pedestal, surmounted by two bronze statues. Any traveller suddenly entering the valley would have recoiled in terror before this fantastic apparition; and if any wild beast had been prowling near us, our gigantic shadows would certainly have made it keep its distance.
We were just thinking of calling Lucien to come and lie down under the hut, when l'Encuerado shouted out to us. Towards the east, a large luminous disk was s.h.i.+ning brilliantly above the mountain peaks. This luminous globe, lengthening out into the shape of an ellipse, appeared to move along.
In fact, it was descending slowly over the wooded crests. Lucien and l'Encuerado kept plying us with questions in reference to it, which we were unable to answer.
[Ill.u.s.tration]
"What is it?" cried Sumichrast.
"A meteor!" I exclaimed, struck with a sudden idea.
"If I had my gun ready, I would fire at it, at all events."
"You had better not," said I; "the globe may contain electric fluid, and we might draw it down upon us."
Soon afterwards the meteor pa.s.sed by us. We threw ourselves down flat on the earth, dreading this unknown visitor. When I ventured to rise, it was some distance away, and yet appeared to be motionless. Rays incessantly quivering sprang from the centre of it; in the middle the light was white, but at the edges it a.s.sumed first a yellowish, then a red, and lastly a bluish hue. We were suddenly almost blinded by a flash of intense brilliancy; a formidable explosion, repeated by the echoes, burst upon our ears, and all became silence and obscurity.
While we were returning to our bivouac, Lucien and l'Encuerado pressed us with questions.
"What are meteors?" asked Lucien, eagerly.
"Some scientific men," replied Sumichrast, "look upon them as fragments of planets wandering in s.p.a.ce. Getting entangled in our planetary system, they yield to the attraction of our globe, and fall on to its surface in obedience to the law of gravitation."
"But what are they composed of?"
"Generally speaking, of sulphur, chromium, and earth. The phenomenon of 'shooting stars' is connected with that of meteors, and any substance falling on the surface of the earth receives the name of _aerolite_."
"Do you wish to persuade me that stones rain down from the sky?" cried l'Encuerado.
"Yes, certainly; and if I am not mistaken, it was in your country that the largest known aerolite was found, for it weighed no less than fifty hundred-weights. To-morrow morning we will search for the one we have seen, which must have dropped at the end of the valley."
"Are these stones luminous?" rejoined the Indian.
"No; but they take fire, owing to their rapid flight."
"And whence did the meteor come which pa.s.sed so close to us?"
"Either from the moon or the stars, or perhaps from the sun."
L'Encuerado half-closed his eyes, and burst out laughing at what he considered a joke. He laughed, indeed, so heartily, that we could not help joining him.
"Now what do you imagine the sun and moon really are?" asked Lucien.
"G.o.d's lanterns," replied the Indian, gravely.
Our young companion was well accustomed to the artless ignorance of his friend, but still he always endeavored to contend against it; so he set to work to teach him something about our planetary system. The dimensions which he attributed to the heavenly bodies seemed to afford great amus.e.m.e.nt to the Indian. At last, just when the young orator fancied he had convinced his disciple, the latter embraced him, exclaiming:
"What an amusing tale! Oh! how pleased I should be to be able to read such pretty stories as that in a book!"
"Tales, indeed!" cried Lucien, quite indignant.
"Well, the very idea of saying that the earth is a ball, which moves round and round, and that there are stars which are bigger! Many a night have I spent looking at the stars, and I know they are nothing but lanterns, and that's enough!"