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III.

… THE La Guayra was a point on the sky-verge;—the sun's face had vanished. The silence and the darkness were deepening together.

—"Si lanmè ka vini plis fó, ça nou ké fai?" (If the sea roughens, what are we to do?) asked Maximilien.

—"Maybe we will meet a steamer," answered Stéphane: "the Orinoco was due to-day."

—"And if she pass in the night?"

—"They can see us." …

—"No, they will not be able to see us at all. There is no moon."

—"They have lights ahead."


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—"I tell thee, they will not see us at all,—pièss! pièss! pièss!"

—"Then they will hear us cry out."

—"NO,—we cannot cry so loud. One can hear nothing but a steam-whistle or a cannon, with the noise of the wind and the water and the machine. … Even on the Fort-de-France packet one cannot hear for the machine. And the machine of the Orinoco is more big than the church of the 'Centre.'"

—"Then we must try to get to La Dominique."

… They could now feel the sweep of the mighty current;—it even seemed to them that they could hear it,—a deep low whispering. At long intervals they saw lights,—the lights of houses in Pointe-Prince, in Fond-Canonville,—in Au Prêcheur. Under them the depth was unfathomed:—hydrographic charts mark it sans-fond. And they passed the great cliffs of Aux Abymes, under which lies the Village of the Abysms.

The red glare in the west disappeared suddenly as if blown out; —the rim of the sea vanished into the void of the gloom;—the night narrowed about them, thickening like a black fog. And the invisible, irresistible power of the sea was now bearing them away from the tall coast,—over profundities unknown,—over the sans-fond,—out to the horizon.