GERMINAL
PART VII
CHAPTER III
AT four o'clock the descent began. Dansaert, who
was personally installed at the marker's office in
the lamp cabin, wrote down the name of each worker
who presented himself and had a lamp given to him.
He took them all, without remark, keeping to the
promise of the placards. When, however, he
noticed Étienne and Catherine at the
wicket, he started and became very red, and was
opening his mouth to refuse their names; then, he
contented himself with the triumph, and a jeer.
Ah! ah! so the strong man was thrown? The
Company was, then, in luck since the terrible
Montsou wrestler had come back to it to ask for
bread? Étienne silently took his lamp and
went towards the shaft with the putter.
But it was there, in the receiving-room, that
Catherine feared the mates' bad words. At the
very entrance she recognized Chaval, in the midst
of some twenty miners, waiting till a cage was
free. He came furiously towards her, but the
sight of Étienne stopped him. Then he
affected to sneer with an offensive shrug of the
shoulders.
Very good! he didn't care a hang, since the other
had come to occupy the place that was still warm;
good riddance! It only concerned the gentleman if
he liked the leavings; and beneath the exhibition
of this contempt he was again seized by a tremor
of jealousy, and his eyes flamed. For the rest,
the mates did not stir, standing silent, with eyes
lowered. They contented themselves with casting a
sidelong look at the new-comers; then, dejected
and without anger, they again stared fixedly at
the mouth of the shaft, with their lamps in their
hands, shivering beneath their thin jackets, in
the constant draughts of this large room. At last
the cage was wedged on to the keeps, and they were
ordered to get in. Catherine and Étienne
were squeezed in one tram, already containing
Pierron and two pikemen. Beside them, in the
other tram, Chaval was loudly saying to Father
Mouque that the directors had made a mistake in
not taking advantage of the opportunity to free
the pits of the blackguards who were corrupting
them; but the old groom, who had already fallen
back into the dog-like resignation of his
existence, no longer grew angry over the death of
his children, and simply replied by a gesture of
conciliation.
The cage freed itself and slipped down into the
darkness. No one spoke. Suddenly, when they were
in the middle third of the descent, there was a
terrible jarring. The iron creaked, and the men
were thrown on to each other.
"By God!" growled Étienne,
"are they going to flatten us? We shall end
by being left here for good, with their confounded
tubbing. And they talk about having repaired
it!"
The cage had, however, cleared the obstacle. It
was now descending beneath so violent a rain, like
a storm, that the workmen anxiously listened to
the pouring. A number of leaks must then have
appeared in the caulking of the joints.
Pierron, who had been working for several days,
when asked about it did not like to show his fear,
which might be considered as an attack on the
management, so he only replied:
"Oh, no danger! it's always like that. No
doubt they've not had time to caulk the
leaks."
The torrent was roaring over their heads, and they
at last reached the pit-eye beneath a veritable
waterspout. Not one of the captains had thought
of climbing up the ladders to investigate the
matter. The pump would be enough, the carpenters
would examine the joints the following night. The
reorganization of work in the galleries gave
considerable trouble. Before allowing the pikemen
to return to their hewing cells, the engineer had
decided that for the first five days all the men
should execute certain works of consolidation
which were extremely urgent. Landslips were
threatening everywhere; the passages had suffered
to such an extent that the timbering had to be
repaired along a length of several hundred metres.
Gangs of ten men were therefore formed below, each
beneath the control of a captain. Then they were
set to work at the most damaged spots. When the
descent was complete, it was found that three
hundred and twenty-two miners had gone down, about
half of those who worked there when the pit was in
full swing.
Chaval belonged to the same gang as Catherine and
Étienne. This was not by chance; he had at
first hidden behind his mates, and had then forced
the captain s hand. This gang went to the end of
the north gallery, nearly three kilometres away,
to clear out a landslip which was stopping up a
gallery in the Dix-Huit-Pouces seam. They
attacked the fallen rocks with shovel and pick.
Étienne, Chaval, and five others cleared
away the rubbish while Catherine, with two
trammers, wheeled the earth up to the upbrow.
They seldom spoke, and the captain never left
them. The putter's two lovers, however, were on
the point of coming to blows. While growling that
he had had enough of this trollop, Chaval was
still thinking of her, and slyly hustling her
about, so that Étienne had threatened to
settle him if he did not leave her alone. They
eyed each other fiercely, and had to be separated.
Towards eight o'clock Dansaert passed to give a
glance at the work. He appeared to be in a very
bad humour, and was furious with the captain;
nothing had gone well, what was the meaning of
such work, the planking would everywhere have to
be done over again! And he went away declaring
that he would come back with the engineer. He had
been waiting for Négrel since morning, and
could not understand the cause of this delay.
Another hour passed by. The captain had stopped
the removal of the rubbish to employ all his
people in supporting the roof. Even the putter
and the two trammers left off wheeling to prepare
and bring pieces of timber. At this end of the
gallery the gang formed a sort of advance guard at
the very extremity of the mine, now without
communication with the other stalls. Three or
four times strange noises, distant rushes, made
the workers turn their heads to listen. What was
it, then? One would have said that the passages
were being emptied and the mates already returning
at a running pace. But the sound was lost in the
deep silence, and they set to wedging their wood
again, dazed by the loud blows of the hammer. At
last they returned to the rubbish, and the
wheeling began once more. Catherine came back
from her first journey in terror, saying that no
one was to be found at the upbrow.
"I called, but there was no reply. They've
all cleared out of the place."
The bewilderment was so great that the ten men
threw down their tools to rush away. The idea
that they were abandoned, left alone at the bottom
of the mine, so far from the pit-eye, drove them
wild. They only kept their lamp and ran in single
file--the men, the boys, the putter; the captain
himself lost his head and shouted out appeals,
more and more frightened at the silence in this
endless desert of galleries. What then had
happened that they did not meet a soul? What
accident could thus have driven away their mates?
Their terror was increased by the uncertainty of
the danger, this threat which they felt there
without knowing what it was.
When they at last came near the pit-eye, a torrent
barred their road. They were at once in water to
the knees, and were no longer able to run,
laboriously fording the flood with the thought
that one minute's delay might mean death.
"By God! it's the tubbing that's given
way," cried Étienne. "I said we
should be left here for good."
Since the descent Pierron had anxiously observed
the increase of the deluge which fell from the
shaft. As with two others he loaded the trains he
raised his head, his face covered with large
drops, and his ears ringing with the roar of the
tempest above. But he trembled especially when he
noticed that the sump beneath him, that pit ten
metres deep. was filling; the water was already
spurting through the floor and covering the metal
plates. This showed that the pump was no longer
sufficient to fight against the leaks. He heard
it panting with the groan of fatigue. Then he
warned Dansaert, who swore angrily,. replying
that they must wait for the engineer. Twice he
returned to the charge without extracting anything
else but exasperated shrugs of the shoulder.
Well! the water was rising; what could he do?
Mouque appeared with Bataille, whom he was leading
to work, and he had to hold him with both hands,
for the sleepy old horse had suddenly reared up,
and, with a shrill neigh, was stretching his
head towards the shaft. "Well, philosopher,
what troubles you? Ah! it's because it rains.
Come along, that doesn't concern you."
But the beast quivered all over his skin, and
Mouque forcibly drew him to the haulage gallery.
Almost at the same moment as Mouque and Bataille
were disappearing at the end of a gallery, there
was a crackling in the air, followed by the
prolonged noise of a fall. It was a piece of
tubbing which had got loose and was falling a
hundred and eighty metres down, rebounding against
the walls. Pierron and the other porters were
able to get out of the way, and the oak plank only
smashed an empty tram. At the same time, a mass
of water, the leaping flood of a broken dyke,
rushed down. Dansaert proposed to go up and
examine; but, while he was still speaking, another
piece rolled down. And in terror before the
threatening catastrophe, he no longer hesitated,
but gave the order to go up, sending captains to
warn the men in their stalls.
Then a terrible hustling began. From every
gallery rows of workers came rushing up, trying to
take the cages by assault. They crushed madly
against each other in order to be taken up at
once. Some who had thought of trying the ladder
passage came down again shouting that it was
already stopped up. That was the terror they all
felt each time that the cage rose; this time it
was able to pass, but who knew if it would be able
to pass again in the midst of the obstacles
obstructing the shaft? The downfall must be
continuing above, for a series of low detonations
was heard, the planks were splitting and bursting
amid the continuous and increasing roar of a
storm. One cage soon became useless, broken in
and no longer sliding between the guides, which
were doubtless broken. The other jarred to such a
degree that the cable would certainly break soon.
And there remained a hundred men to be taken up,
all panting, clinging to one another, bleeding and
half-drowned. Two were killed by falls of
planking. A third, who had seized the cage, fell
back fifty metres up and disappeared in the sump.
Dansaert, however, was trying to arrange matters
in an orderly manner. Armed with a pick he
threatened to open the skull of the first man who
refused to obey; and he tried to arrange them in
file, shouting that the porters were to go up last
after having sent up their mates. He was not
listened to, and he had to prevent the pale and
cowardly Pierron from entering among the first.
At each departure he pushed him aside with a blow.
But his own teeth were chattering, a minute more
and he would be swallowed up; everything was
smashing up there, a flood had broken loose, a
murderous rain of scaffolding. A few men were
still running up when, mad with fear, he jumped
into a tram, allowing Pierron to jump in behind
him. The cage rose.
At this moment the gang to which Étienne
and Chaval belonged had just reached the pit-eye.
They saw the cage disappear and rushed forward,
but they had to draw back from the final downfall
of the tubbing; the shaft was stopped up and the
cage would not come down again. Catherine was
sobbing, and Chaval was choked with shouting
oaths. There were twenty of them; were those
bloody bosses going to abandon them thus? Father
Mouque, who had brought back Bataille without
hurrying, was still holding him by the bridle,
both of them stupefied, the man and the beast, in
the face of this rapid flow of the inundation.
The water was already rising to their thighs.
Étienne in silence, with clenched teeth,
supported Catherine between his arms. And the
twenty yelled with their faces turned up,
obstinately gazing at the shaft like imbeciles,
that shifting hole which was belching out a flood
and from which no help could henceforth come to
them.
At the surface, Dansaert, on arriving, perceived
Négrel running up. By some fatality,
Madame Hennebeau had that morning delayed him on
rising, turning over the leaves of catalogues for
the purchase of wedding presents. It was ten
o'clock.
"Well! what's happening, then?" he
shouted from afar.
"The pit is ruined," replied the head
captain.
And he described the catastrophe in a few
stammered words, while the engineer incredulously
shrugged his shoulders. What! could tubbing be
demolished like that? They were exaggerating; he
would make an examination.
"I suppose no one has been left at the
bottom?"
Dansaert was confused. No, no one; at least, so
he hoped. But some of the men might have been
delayed.
"But," said Négrel, "what in
the name of creation have you come up for, then?
You can't leave your men!"
He immediately gave orders to count the lamps. In
the morning three hundred and twenty-two had been
distributed, and now only two hundred and
fifty-five could be found; but several men
acknowledged that in the hustling and panic they
had dropped theirs and left them behind. An
attempt was made to call over the men, but it was
impossible to establish the exact number. Some of
the miners had gone away, others did not hear
their names. No one was agreed as to the number
of the missing mates. It might be twenty, perhaps
forty. And the engineer could only make out one
thing with certainty: there were men down below,
for their yells could be distinguished through the
sound of the water and the fallen scaffolding, on
leaning over the mouth of the shaft.
Négrel's first care was to send for M.
Hennebeau, and to try to close the pit; but it was
already too late. The colliers who had rushed to
the Deux-Cent-Quarante settlement, as though
pursued by the cracking tubbing, had frightened
the families; and bands of women, old men, and
little ones came running up, shaken by cries and
sobs. They had to be pushed back, and a line of
overseers was formed to keep them off, for they
would have interfered with the operations. Many
of the men who had come up from the shaft remained
there stupidly without thinking of changing their
clothes, riveted by fear before this terrible hole
in which they had nearly remained for ever. The
women, rushing wildly around them, implored them
for names. Was So-and-so among them? and that
one? and this one? They did not know, they
stammered; they shuddered terribly, and made
gestures like madmen, gestures which seemed to be
pushing away some abominable vision which was
always present to them. The crowd rapidly
increased, and lamentations arose from the roads.
And up there on the pit-bank, in Bonnemort's
cabin, on the ground was seated a man, Souvarine,
who had not gone away, who was looking on.
"The names! the names!" cried the
women, with voices choked by tears.
Négrel appeared for a moment, and said
hurriedly:
"As soon as we know the names they shall be
given out, but nothing is lost so far: every one
will be saved. I am going down."
Then, silent with anguish, the crowd waited. The
engineer, in fact, with quiet courage was
preparing to go down. He had had the cage
unfastened, giving orders to replace it at the end
of the cable by a tub; and as he feared that the
water would extinguish his lamp, he had another
fastened beneath the tub, which would protect it.
Several captains, trembling and with white,
disturbed faces, assisted in these preparations.
"You will come with me, Dansaert," said
Négrel, abruptly.
Then, when he saw them all without courage, and
that the head captain was tottering, giddy with
terror, he pushed him aside with a movement of
contempt.
"No, you will be in my way. I would rather
go alone." He was already in the narrow
bucket, which swayed at the end of the cable; and
holding his lamp in one hand and the signal-cord
in the other, he shouted to the engine-man:
"Gently!"
The engine set the drums in movement, and
Négrel disappeared in the gulf, from which
the yells of the wretches below still arose.
At the upper part nothing had moved. He found
that the tubbing here was in good condition.
Balanced in the middle of the shaft he lighted up
the walls as he turned round; the leaks between
the joints were so slight that his lamp did not
suffer. But at three hundred metres, when he
reached the lower tubbing, the lamp was
extinguished, as he expected, for a jet had filled
the tub. After that he was only able to see by
the hanging lamp which preceded him in the
darkness, and, in spite of his courage, he
shuddered and turned pale in the face of the
horror of the disaster. A few pieces of timber
alone remained; the others had fallen in with
their frames. Behind, enormous cavities had been
hollowed out, and the yellow sand, as fine as
flour, was flowing in considerable masses; while
the waters of the Torrent, that subterranean sea
with its unknown tempests and shipwrecks, were
discharging in a flow like a weir. He went down
lower, lost in the midst of these chasms which
continued to multiply, beaten and turned round by
the waterspout of the springs, so badly lighted by
the red star of the lamp moving on below, that he
seemed to distinguish the roads and squares of
some destroyed town far away in the play of the
great moving shadows. No human work was any
longer possible. His only remaining hope was to
attempt to save the men in peril. As he sank down
he heard the cries becoming louder, and he was
obliged to stop; an impassable obstacle barred the
shaft--a mass of scaffolding, the broken joists of
the guides, the split brattices entangled with the
metal-work torn from the pump. As he looked on
for a long time with aching heart, the yelling
suddenly ceased. No doubt, the rapid rise of the
water had forced the wretches to flee into the
galleries, if, indeed, the flood had not already
filled their mouths.
Négrel resigned himself to pulling the
signal-cord as a sign to draw up. Then he had
himself stopped again. He could not conceive the
cause of this sudden accident. He wished to
investigate it, and examined those pieces of the
tubbing which were still in place. At a distance
the tears and cuts in the wood had surprised him.
His lamp, drowned in dampness, was going out, and,
touching with his fingers, he clearly recognized
the marks of the saw and of the wimble--the whole
abominable labour of destruction. Evidently this
catastrophe had been intentionally produced. He
was stupefied, and the pieces of timber, cracking
and falling down with their frames in a last
slide, nearly carried him with them. His courage
fled. The thought of the man who had done that
made his hair stand on end, and froze him with a
supernatural fear of evil, as though, mixed with
the darkness, the man were still there paying for
his immeasurable crime. He shouted and shook the
cord furiously; and it was, indeed, time, for he
perceived that the uppertubbing, a hundred metres
higher, was in its turn beginning to move. The
joints were opening, losing their oakum caulking,
and streams were rushing through. It was now only
a question of hours before the tubbing would all
fall down.
At the surface M. Hennebeau was anxiously waiting
for Négrel.
"Well, what?" he asked.
But the engineer was choked, and could not speak;
he felt faint.
"It is not possible; such a thing was never
seen. Have you examined?"
He nodded with a cautious look. He refused to
talk in the presence of some captains who were
listening, and led his uncle ten metres away, and
not thinking this far enough, drew still farther
back; then, in a low whisper, he at last told of
the outrage, the torn and sawn planks, the pit
bleeding at the neck and groaning. Turning pale,
the manager also lowered his voice, with that
instinctive need of silence in face of the
monstrosity of great orgies and great crimes. It
was useless to look as though they were trembling
before the ten thousand Montsou men; later on they
would see. And they both continued whispering,
overcome at the thought that a man had had the
courage to go down, to hang in the midst of space,
to risk his life twenty times over in his terrible
task. They could not even understand this mad
courage in destruction; they refused to believe,
in spite of the evidence, just as we doubt those
stories of celebrated escapes of prisoners who fly
through windows thirty metres above the ground.
When M. Hennebeau came back to the captains a
nervous spasm was drawing his face. He made a
gesture of despair, and gave orders that the mine
should be evacuated at once. It was a kind of
funeral procession, in silent abandonment, with
glances thrown back at those great masses of
bricks, empty and still standing, but which
nothing henceforth could save.
And as the manager and the engineer came down last
from the receiving-room, the crowd met them with
its clamour, repeating obstinately:
"The names! the names! Tell us the
names!"
Maheude was now there, among the women. She
recollected the noise in the night; her daughter
and the lodger must have gone away together, and
they were certainly down at the bottom. And after
having cried that it was a good thing, that they
deserved to stay there, the heartless cowards, she
had run up, and was standing in the first row,
trembling with anguish. Besides, she no longer
dared to doubt; the discussion going on around her
informed her as to the names of those who were
down. Yes, yes, Catherine was among them,
Étienne also--a mate had seen them. But
there was not always agreement with regard to the
others. No, not this one; on the contrary, that
one, perhaps Chaval, with whom, however, a trammer
declared that he had ascended. The Levaque and
Pierronne, although none of their people were in
danger, cried out and lamented as loudly as the
others. Zacharie, who had come up among the
first, in spite of his inclination to make fun of
everything had weepingly kissed his wife and
mother, and remained near the latter, quivering,
and showing an unexpected degree of affection for
his sister, refusing to believe that she was below
so long as the bosses made no authoritative
statement.
"The names! the names! For pity's sake, the
names!"
Négrel, who was exhausted, shouted to the
overseers:
"Can't you make them be still? It's enough
to kill one with vexation! We don't know the
names!"
Two hours passed away in this manner. In the
first terror no one had thought of the other shaft
at the old Réquillart mine, M. Hennebeau
was about to announce that the rescue would be
attempted from that side, when a rumour ran round:
five men had just escaped the inundation by
climbing up the rotten ladders of the old unused
passage, and Father Mouque was named. This caused
surprise, for no one knew he was below. But the
narrative of the five who had escaped increased
the weeping; fifteen mates had not been able to
follow them, having gone astray, and been walled
up by falls. And it was no longer possible to
assist them, for there were already ten metres of
water in Réquillart. All the names were
known, and the air was filled with the groans of a
slaughtered multitude.
"Will you make them be still?"
Négrel repeated furiously. "Make them
draw back! Yes, yes, to a hundred metres! There
is danger; push them back, push them back!"
It was necessary to struggle against these poor
people. They were imagining all sorts of
misfortunes, and they had to be driven away so
that the deaths might be concealed; the captains
explained to them that the shaft would destroy the
whole mine. This idea rendered them mute with
terror, and they at last allowed themselves to be
driven back step by step; the guards, however, who
kept them back had to be doubled, for they were
fascinated by the spot and continually returned.
Thousands of people were hustling each other along
the road; they were running up from all the
settlements, and even from Montsou. And the man
above, on the pit-bank, the fair man with the
girlish face, smoked cigarettes to occupy himself,
keeping his clear eyes fixed on the pit.
Then the wait began. It was midday; no one had
eaten, but no one moved away. In the misty sky,
of a dirty grey colour, rusty clouds were slowly
passing by. A big dog, behind Rasseneur's hedge,
was barking furiously without cessation, irritated
by the living breath of the crowd. And the crowd
had gradually spread over the neighbouring ground,
forming a circle at a hundred metres round the
pit. The Voreux arose in the centre of the great
space. There was not a soul there, not a sound;
it was a desert. The windows and the doors, left
open, showed the abandonment within; a forgotten
ginger cat, divining the peril in this solitude,
jumped from a staircase and disappeared. No doubt
the stoves of the boilers were scarcely
extinguished, for the tall brick chimney gave out
a light smoke beneath the dark clouds; while the
weathercock on the steeple creaked in the wind
with a short, shrill cry, the only melancholy
voice of these vast buildings which were about to
die.
At two o'clock nothing had moved, M. Hennebeau,
Négrel, and other engineers who had
hastened up, formed a group in black coats and
hats standing in front of the crowd; and they,
too, did not move away, though their legs were
aching with fatigue, and they were feverish and
ill at their impotence in the face of such a
disaster, only whispering occasional words as
though at a dying person's bedside. The upper
tubbing must nearly all have fallen in, for sudden
echoing sounds could be heard as of deep broken
falls, succeeded by silence. The wound was
constantly enlarging; the landslip which had begun
below was rising and approaching the surface.
Négrel was seized by nervous impatience; he
wanted to see, and he was already advancing alone
into this awful void when he was seized by the
shoulders. What was the good? he could prevent
nothing. An old miner, however, circumventing the
overseers, rushed into the shed; but he quietly
reappeared, he had gone for his sabots.
Three o'clock struck. Still nothing. A falling
shower had soaked the crowd, but they had not
withdrawn a step. Rasseneur's dog had begun to
bark again. And it was at twenty minutes past
three only that the first shock was felt. The
Voreux trembled, but continued solid and upright.
Then a second shock followed immediately, and a
long cry came from open mouths; the tarred
screening-shed, after having tottered twice, had
fallen down with a terrible crash. Beneath the
enormous pressure the structures broke and jarred
each other so powerfully that sparks leapt out.
From this moment the earth continued to tremble,
the shocks succeeded one another, subterranean
downfalls, the rumbling of a volcano in eruption.
Afar the dog was no longer barking, but he howled
plaintively as though announcing the oscillations
which he felt coming; and the women, the children,
all these people who were looking on, could not
keep back a clamour of distress at each of these
blows which shook them. In less than ten minutes
the slate roof of the steeple fell in, the
receiving-room and the engine-rooms were split
open, leaving a considerable breach. Then the
sounds ceased, the downfall stopped, and there was
again deep silence.
For an hour the Voreux remained thus, broken into,
as though bombarded by an army of barbarians.
There was no more crying out; the enlarged circle
of spectators merely looked on. Beneath the
piled-up beams of the sifting-shed, fractured
tipping cradles could be made out with broken and
twisted hoppers. But the rubbish had especially
accumulated at the receiving-room, where there had
been a rain of bricks, and large portions of wall
and masses of plaster had fallen in. The iron
scaffold which bore the pulleys had bent,
half-buried in the pit; a cage was still
suspended, a torn cable-end was hanging; then
there was a hash of trains, metal plates, and
ladders. By some chance the lamp cabin remained
standing, exhibiting on the left its bright rows
of little lamps. And at the end of its
disembowelled chamber, the engine could be seen
seated squarely on its massive foundation of
masonry; its copper was shining and its huge steel
limbs seemed to possess indestructible muscles.
The enormous crank, bent in the air, looked like
the powerful knee of some giant quietly reposing
in his strength.
After this hour of respite, M. Hennebeau's hopes
began to rise. The movement of the soil must have
come to an end, and there would be some chance of
saving the engine and the remainder of the
buildings. But he would not yet allow any one to
approach, considering another half-hour's patience
desirable. This waiting became unbearable; the
hope increased the anguish and all hearts were
beating quickly. A dark cloud, growing large at
the horizon, hastened the twilight, a sinister
nightfall over this wreck of earth's tempests.
Since seven o'clock they had been there without
moving or eating.
And suddenly, as the engineers were cautiously
advancing, a supreme convulsion of the soil put
them to flight. Subterranean detonations broke
out; a whole monstrous artillery was cannonading
in the gulf. At the surface, the last buildings
were tipped over and crushed. At first a sort of
whirlpool carried away the rubbish from the
sifting-shed and the receiving-room. Next, the
boiler building burst and disappeared. Then it
was the low square tower, where the pumping-engine
was groaning, which fell on its face like a man
mown down by a bullet. And then a terrible thing
was seen; the engine, dislocated from its massive
foundation, with broken limbs was struggling
against death; it moved, it straightened its
crank, its giant's knee, as though to rise; but,
crushed and swallowed up, it was dying. The
chimney alone, thirty metres high, still remained
standing, though shaken, like a mast in the
tempest. It was thought that it would be crushed
to fragments and fly to powder, when suddenly it
sank in one block, drunk down by the earth, melted
like a colossal candle; and nothing was left, not
even the point of the lightning conductor. It was
done for; the evil beast crouching in this hole,
gorged with human flesh, was no longer breathing
with its thick, long respiration. The Voreux had
been swallowed whole by the abyss.
The crowd rushed away yelling. The women hid
their eyes as they ran. Terror drove the men
along like a pile of dry leaves. They wished not
to shout and they shouted, with swollen breasts,
and arms in the air, before the immense hole which
had been hollowed out. This crater, as of an
extinct volcano, fifteen metres deep, extended
from the road to the canal for a space of at least
forty metres. The whole square of the mine had
followed the buildings, the gigantic platforms,
the footbridges with their rails, a complete train
of trams, three wagons; without counting the wood
supply, a forest of cut timber, gulped down like
straw. At the bottom it was only possible to
distinguish a confused mass of beams, bricks,
iron, plaster, frightful remains, piled up,
entangled, soiled in the fury of the catastrophe.
And the hole became larger, cracks started from
the edges, reaching afar, across the fields. A
fissure ascended as far as Rasseneur's bar, and
his front wall had cracked. Would the settlement
itself pass into it? How far ought they to flee
to reach shelter at the end of this abominable
day, beneath this leaden cloud which also seemed
about to crush the earth?
A cry of pain escaped Négrel. M.
Hennebeau, who had drawn back, was in tears. The
disaster was not complete; one bank of the canal
gave way, and the canal emptied itself like one
bubbling sheet through one of the cracks. It
disappeared there, falling like a cataract down a
deep valley. The mine drank down this river; the
galleries would now be submerged for years. Soon
the crater was filled and a lake of muddy water
occupied the place where once stood the Voreux,
like one of those lakes beneath which sleep
accursed towns. There was a terrified silence,
and nothing now could be heard but the fall of
this water rumbling in the bowels of the earth.
Then on the shaken pit-bank Souvarine rose up. He
had recognized Maheude and Zacharie sobbing before
this downfall, the weight of which was so heavy on
the heads of the wretches who were in agony
beneath. And he threw down his last cigarette; he
went away, without looking back, into the now dark
night. Afar his shadow diminished and mingled
with the darkness. He was going over there, to
the unknown. He was going tranquilly to
extermination, wherever there might be dynamite to
blow up towns and men. He will be there, without
doubt, when the middle class in agony shall hear
the pavement of the streets bursting up beneath
their feet.