my repugnance, quitted me, and placed himself beside
one of the windows. The others continued to converse
with each other in a low tone, and by their glances
towards me I could perceive that I was the object
of their conversation. One in especial seemed
to be urging some proposal affecting me on the being
whom I had first met, and this last by his gesture
seemed about to assent to it, when the child suddenly
quitted his post by the window, placed himself between
me and the other forms, as if in protection, and spoke
quickly and eagerly. By some intuition or instinct
I felt that the child I had before so dreaded was
pleading in my behalf. Ere he had ceased another
stranger entered the room. He appeared older than
the rest, though not old; his countenance less smoothly
serene than theirs, though equally regular in its
features, seemed to me to have more the touch of a
humanity akin to my own. He listened quietly to
the words addressed to him, first by my guide, next
by two others of the group, and lastly by the child;
then turned towards myself, and addressed me, not
by words, but by signs and gestures. These I fancied
that I perfectly understood, and I was not mistaken.
I comprehended that he inquired whence I came.
I extended my arm, and pointed towards the road which
had led me from the chasm in the rock; then an idea
seized me. I drew forth my pocket-book, and sketched
on one of its blank leaves a rough design of the ledge
of the rock, the rope, myself clinging to it; then
of the cavernous rock below, the head of the reptile,
the lifeless form of my friend. I gave this primitive
kind of hieroglyph to my interrogator, who, after
inspecting it gravely, handed it to his next neighbour,
and it thus passed round the group. The being
I had at first encountered then said a few words,
and the child, who approached and looked at my drawing,
nodded as if he comprehended its purport, and, returning
to the window, expanded the wings attached to his form,
shook them once or twice, and then launched himself
into space without. I started up in amaze and
hastened to the window. The child was already
in the air, buoyed on his wings, which he did not
flap to and fro as a bird does, but which were elevated
over his head, and seemed to bear him steadily aloft
without effort of his own. His flight seemed as
swift as an eagle’s; and I observed that it
was towards the rock whence I had descended, of which
the outline loomed visible in the brilliant atmosphere.
In a very few minutes he returned, skimming through
the opening from which he had gone, and dropping on
the floor the rope and grappling-hooks I had left
at the descent from the chasm. Some words in
a low tone passed between the being present; one of
the group touched an automaton, which started forward
and glided from the room; then the last comer, who
had addressed me by gestures, rose, took me by the
hand, and led me into the corridor. There the
platform by which I had mounted awaited us; we placed