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Victor Hugo - The Man Who Laughs - Cosmopolitan University 2

Victor Hugo - The Man Who Laughs - Cosmopolitan University 2

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Spun round by the wind, tossed by all the thousand motions of the wave,<br />

she reflected every mad oscillation of the sea. She scarcely pitched at<br />

all--a terrible symptom of a ship's distress. Wrecks merely roll.<br />

Pitching is a convulsion of the strife. <strong>The</strong> helm alone can turn a vessel<br />

to the wind.<br />

In storms, and more especially in the meteors of snow, sea and night<br />

end by melting into amalgamation, resolving into nothing but a smoke.<br />

Mists, whirlwinds, gales, motion in all directions, no basis, no<br />

shelter, no stop. Constant recommencement, one gulf succeeding another.<br />

No horizon visible; intense blackness for background. Through all these<br />

the hooker drifted.<br />

To have got free of the Caskets, to have eluded the rock, was a victory<br />

for the shipwrecked men; but it was a victory which left them in stupor.<br />

<strong>The</strong>y had raised no cheer: at sea such an imprudence is not repeated<br />

twice. To throw down a challenge where they could not cast the lead,<br />

would have been too serious a jest.<br />

<strong>The</strong> repulse of the rock was an impossibility achieved. <strong>The</strong>y were<br />

petrified by it. By degrees, however, they began to hope again. Such are<br />

the insubmergable mirages of the soul! <strong>The</strong>re is no distress so complete<br />

but that even in the most critical moments the inexplicable sunrise of<br />

hope is seen in its depths. <strong>The</strong>se poor wretches were ready to<br />

acknowledge to themselves that they were saved. It was on their lips.<br />

But suddenly something terrible appeared to them in the darkness.<br />

On the port bow arose, standing stark, cut out on the background of<br />

mist, a tall, opaque mass, vertical, right-angled, a tower of the abyss.<br />

<strong>The</strong>y watched it open-mouthed.<br />

<strong>The</strong> storm was driving them towards it.<br />

<strong>The</strong>y knew not what it was. It was the Ortach rock.<br />

CHAPTER XIV.<br />

ORTACH.<br />

<strong>The</strong> reef reappeared. After the Caskets comes Ortach. <strong>The</strong> storm is no<br />

artist; brutal and all-powerful, it never varies its appliances. <strong>The</strong><br />

darkness is inexhaustible. Its snares and perfidies never come to an<br />

end. As for man, he soon comes to the bottom of his resources. <strong>Man</strong><br />

expends his strength, the abyss never.<br />

<strong>The</strong> shipwrecked men turned towards the chief, their hope. He could only<br />

shrug his shoulders. Dismal contempt of helplessness.<br />

A pavement in the midst of the ocean--such is the Ortach rock. <strong>The</strong><br />

Ortach, all of a piece, rises up in a straight line to eighty feet above<br />

the angry beating of the waves. Waves and ships break against it. An<br />

immovable cube, it plunges its rectilinear planes apeak into the

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