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The First Men in the Moon
Points of View
Literature Library   —   H. G. Wells   —   The First Men in the Moon

(continued)

Chapter 16

Points of View

The light grew stronger as we advanced.  In a little time it was nearly as strong as the phosphorescence on Cavor's legs.  Our tunnel was expanding into a cavern, and this new light was at the farther end of it.  I perceived something that set my hopes leaping and bounding.

"Cavor," I said, "it comes from above!  I am certain it comes from above!"

He made no answer, but hurried on.

Indisputably it was a gray light, a silvery light.

In another moment we were beneath it.  It filtered down through a chink in the walls of the cavern, and as I stared up, drip, came a drop of water upon my face.  I started and stood aside—drip, fell another drop quite audibly on the rocky floor.

"Cavor," I said, "if one of us lifts the other, he can reach that crack!"

"I'll lift you," he said, and incontinently hoisted me as though I was a baby.

I thrust an arm into the crack, and just at my finger tips found a little ledge by which I could hold.  I could see the white light was very much brighter now.  I pulled myself up by two fingers with scarcely an effort, though on earth I weigh twelve stone, reached to a still higher corner of rock, and so got my feet on the narrow ledge.  I stood up and searched up the rocks with my fingers;  the cleft broadened out upwardly.  "It's climbable," I said to Cavor.  "Can you jump up to my hand if I hold it down to you?"

I wedged myself between the sides of the cleft, rested knee and foot on the ledge, and extended a hand.  I could not see Cavor, but I could hear the rustle of his movements as he crouched to spring.  Then whack and he was hanging to my arm—and no heavier than a kitten!  I lugged him up until he had a hand on my ledge, and could release me.

"Confound it!" I said, "any one could be a mountaineer on the moon;" and so set myself in earnest to the climbing.  For a few minutes I clambered steadily, and then I looked up again.  The cleft opened out steadily, and the light was brighter.  Only—

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