第42章 BOOK II.(18)
"Ha!"he exclaimed,"a sensitive and you may almost say a man-eating plant.This doubtless has been the fate of these birds,whose bones now lie bleaching at its feet after they have nourished its lips with their lives.No doubt the plant has use for them still,since their skeletons may serve to fertilize its roots."Wishing to investigate further,Bearwarden placed one of the birds they had shot within the bell of another flower,which immediately contracted with such force that they saw drops of blood squeezed out.After some minutes the flower opened,as beautiful as ever,and discharged an oblong ball compressed to about the size of a hen's egg,though the bird that was placed within it had been as large as a small duck.Towards evening these flowers sent up their most beautiful song,to hear which flocks of birds came from far and near,alighting on the trees,and many were lured to death by the siren strains and the honey.
Before resuming their journey,the travellers paid a parting visit to the bell-shaped lilies on their pyramids of bones.The flowers were closed for the night,and the travellers saw by the moonlight that the white mounds were simply alive with diamond-headed snakes.These coiled themselves,flattened their heads,and set up such a hissing on the explorers'approach that they were glad to retire,and leave this curious contrast of hideousness and beauty to the fire-flies and the moons.Marching along in Indian file,the better to avoid treading on the writhing serpents that strewed the ground,they kept on for about two hours.They frequently passed huge heaps or mounds of bones,evidently the remains of bears or other large animals.The carnivorous plants growing at their centre were often like hollow trees,and might easily have received the three travellers in one embrace.But as before,the mounds were alive with serpents that evidently made them their homes,and raised an angry hiss whenever the men approached.
"The wonder to me,"said Bearwarden,"is,that these snakes do not protect the game,by keeping it from the life-devouring plants.It may be that they do not show themselves by day or when the victims are near,or that the quadrupeds on which these plants live take a pleasure,like deer,in killing them by jumping with all four feet upon their backs or in some other way,and after that are entrapped by the flowers."Shortly after midnight they rested for a half hour,but the dawn found them trudging along steadily,though somewhat wearily,and having about completed the third side of their square.
Accordingly,they soon made a right-angle turn to the left,and had been picking their way over the rough ground for nearly two hours,with the sun already high in the sky,when they noticed a diminution of light.Glancing up,they saw that one of the moons was passing across the sun,and that they were on the eve of a total eclipse.
"Since all but the fifth moon,"said Cortlandt,"revolve exactly in the plane of Jupiter's equator,any inhabitants that settle there will become accustomed to eclipses,for there must be one of the sun,and also of the moons,at each revolution,or about forty-five hundred in every Jovian year.The reason we have seen none before is,because we are not exactly on the equator."They had a glimpse of the coronal streamers as the last portion of the sun was covered,and all the other phenomena that attend an eclipse on earth.For a few minutes there was a total return to night.The twinkling stars and other moons shone tranquilly in the sky,and even the noise of the insects ceased.Presently the edge of the sun that had been first obscured reappeared,and then Nature went through the phenomenon of an accelerated dawn.
Without awaiting a full return of light,the travellers proceeded on their way,and had gone something over a hundred yards when Ayrault,who was marching second,suddenly grasped Bearwarden,who was in front,and pointed to a jet-black mass straight ahead,and about thirty yards from a pool of warm water,from which a cloud of vapour arose.The top of the head was about seven feet high,and the length of the body exceeded thirty feet.The six legs looked as strong as steel cables,and were about a foot through,while a huge,bony proboscis nine feet in length preceded the body.This was carried horizontally between two and three feet from the ground.Presently a large ground sloth came to the pool to drink,lapping up the water at the sides that had partly cooled.In an instant the black armored monster rushed down the slope with the speed of a nineteenth-century locomotive,and seemed about as formidable.The sloth turned in the direction of the sound,and for a moment seemed paralyzed with fear;it then started to run,but it was too late,for the next second the enormously exaggerated ant--for such it was--overtook it.The huge mandible shears that when closed had formed the proboscis,snapped viciously,taking off the sloth's legs and then cutting its body to slivers.The execution was finished in a few seconds,and the ponderous insect carried back about half the sloth to its hiding-place,where it leisurely devoured it.