A Winter Amid the Ice, and Other Thrilling Stories
n agitated night. The grave event which had taken place at Doctor Ox's house actually kept t
re? Would they be obliged to order arrests to be made, that so great a scandal should not be repeated? All these doubts could not b
asse proceeded in person to the Counsellor Niklausse's house. He f
w?" asked V
ce yesterday," r
ctor, Domin
g, either of him or of th
to repeat, the counsellor and the burgomaster had resolved to pay a visit to Docto
xecution forthwith. They left the house and directed their steps towards Doctor Ox's laboratory, which w
ok them forward but thirteen inches per second. This was, indeed, the ordinary gait of the Quiquend
at some calm and tranquil crossway, or at the
nsieur the burgom
y friend," respo
sieur the counsell
w," answere
. The Custos and Schut affair was talked of everywhere, but the people had not yet come to the point of taking the part of one or the other. The Advocate Schut, having never had occasion to plead in a town where attorneys and bailiffs only existed in tradition, had, consequently, never lost a
ently made a short detour, so as not to pass within reach of the tower,
t will fall," s
too," replie
Van Tricasse. "But must it be p
n fact--the
they reached the d
Doctor Ox?
horities of the town, and they were at once int
able to suppose so, as the burgomaster--a thing that had never before happened in his
ectify some of the machinery--But everything was going on well! The pipes intended for the oxygen were already laid. In a few months t
ow to what he was indebted f
d the pleasure. We go abroad but little in our good town of Quiquendone. We count our ste
ng long intervals between his sentences. It seemed to him that Van Tricasse expressed himself with a certain volub
ooked at the burgomast
to his temperament, had taken possession of him. He did not gesticulate as yet, but this could not be far off. As for the counsellor, he rubbed his legs, and breath
everal steps; then he came bac
n a somewhat emphatic tome, "do you
s, Monsieur the burgoma
--it's a very long tim
Niklausse, who, not being abl
," returned Doctor Ox. "The workmen, whom we have had
had to choose in Quiquendon
burgomaster, who seemed to take t
. "A French workman would do in a day what it takes ten of
ose fingers closed together. "In wha
in which everybody uses it,
you must know; and we shall go neither to Paris nor London for our models! As for your project, I beg you to hasten its execution. Our streets have been unpaved for the putting down of y
nder was that those words, to which he was quite unaccustomed
, "the town cannot be depr
n which has been un-lighted fo
d advances, and we do not wish to remain behind. We desire our streets to be lighted within a month, or you must pay
It requires but a spark to inf
our chief of police, reports to us that a discussion took place in your drawing-room
r," replied Doctor Ox, who with diffi
ke place between Dominiqu
he words which passed w
the effect of his words! But of what stuff are you made, monsieur? Do you not know that in Quiquendone nothing more is n
," added
and bristling air, confronted Doctor Ox, ready to do him some violence, if by a gesture
octor did
your house. I am bound to insure the tranquillity of this town, and I do not wish it to be disturbed. Th
e pitch of anger. He was furious, the worthy Van Tricasse, and might certainly be heard outside. At las
ence which shook the house, the bu
r gait became less feverish. The flush on their faces faded away; from being crimson, they became rosy. A quarter of an hour aft