<h2> CHAPTER XXIII </h2>
<p><i>The Baron proceeds on his voyage—Convoys a squadron to Gibraltar
—Declines the acceptance of the island of Candia—His chariot
damaged by Pompey's Pillar and Cleopatra's Needle—The Baron out-does
Alexander—Breaks his chariot, and splits a great rock at the Cape of
Good Hope.</i></p>
<p>Taking the reins in my hand, while the music gave a general salute, I
cracked my whip, away they went, and in three hours I found myself just
between the Isle of Wight and the main land of England. Here I remained
four days, until I had received part of my accompaniment, which I was
ordered to take under my convoy. 'Twas a squadron of men-of-war that had
been a long time prepared for the Baltic, but which were now destined for
the Mediterranean. By the assistance of large hooks and eyes, exactly such
as are worn in our hats, but of a greater size, some hundredweight each,
the men-of-war hooked themselves on to the wheels of the vehicle: and, in
fact, nothing could be more simple or convenient, because they could be
hooked or unhooked in an instant with the utmost facility. In short,
having given a general discharge of their artillery, and three cheers, I
cracked my whip, away we went, helter skelter, and in six jiffies I found
myself and all my retinue safe and in good spirits just at the rock of
Gibraltar. Here I unhooked my squadron, and having taken an affectionate
leave of the officers, I suffered them to proceed in their ordinary manner
to the place of their destination. The whole garrison were highly
delighted with the novelty of my vehicle; and at the pressing
solicitations of the governor and officers I went ashore, and took a view
of that barren old rock, about which more powder has been fired away than
would purchase twice as much fertile ground in any part of the world!
Mounting my chariot, I took the reins, and again made forward, in mad
career, down the Mediterranean to the isle of Candia. Here I received
despatches from the Sublime Porte, entreating me to assist in the war
against Russia, with a reward of the whole island of Candia for my
alliance. At first I hesitated, thinking that the island of Candia would
be a most valuable acquisition to the sovereign who at that time employed
me, and that the most delicious wines, sugar, &c., in abundance would
flourish on the island; yet, when I considered the trade of the East India
Company, which would most probably suffer by the intercourse with Persia
through the Mediterranean, I at once rejected the proposal, and had
afterwards the thanks of the Honourable the House of Commons for my
propriety and political discernment.</p>
<p>Having been properly refreshed at Candia, I again proceeded, and in a
short time arrived in the land of Egypt. The land of this country, at
least that part of it near the sea, is very low, so that I came upon it
ere I was aware, and the Pillar of Pompey got entangled in the various
wheels of the machine, and damaged the whole considerably. Still I drove
on through thick and thin, till, passing over that great obelisk, the
Needle of Cleopatra, the work got entangled again, and jolted at a
miserable rate over the mud and swampy ground of all that country; yet my
poor bulls trotted on with astonishing labour across the Isthmus of Suez
into the Red Sea, and left a track, an obscure channel, which has since
been taken by De Tott for the remains of a canal cut by some of the
Ptolemies from the Red Sea to the Mediterranean; but, as you perceive, was
in reality no more than the track of my chariot, the car of Queen Mab.</p>
<p>As the artists at present in that country are nothing wonderful, though
the ancient Egyptians, 'tis said, were most astonishing fellows, I could
not procure any new coach-springs, or have a possibility of setting my
machine to rights in the kingdom of Egypt; and as I could not presume to
attempt another journey overland, and the great mountains of marble beyond
the source of the Nile, I thought it most eligible to make the best way I
could, by sea, to the Cape of Good Hope, where I supposed I should get
some Dutch smiths and carpenters, or perhaps some English artists; and my
vehicle being properly repaired, it was my intention thence to proceed,
overland, through the heart of Africa. The surface of the water, I well
knew, afforded less resistance to the wheels of the machine—it
passed along the waves like the chariot of Neptune; and in short, having
gotten upon the Red Sea, we scudded away to admiration through the pass of
Babelmandeb to the great Western coast of Africa, where Alexander had not
the courage to venture.</p>
<p>And really, my friends, if Alexander had ventured toward the Cape of Good
Hope he most probably would have never returned. It is difficult to
determine whether there were then any inhabitants in the more southern
parts of Africa or not; yet, at any rate, this conqueror of the world
would have made but a nonsensical adventure; his miserable ships, not
contrived for a long voyage, would have become leaky, and foundered,
before he could have doubled the Cape, and left his Majesty fairly beyond
the limits of the then known world. Yet it would have been an august exit
for an Alexander, after having subdued Persia and India, to be wandering
the Lord knows where, to Jup or Ammon, perhaps, or on a voyage to the
moon, as an Indian chief once said to Captain Cook.</p>
<p>But, for my part, I was far more successful than Alexander; I drove on
with the most amazing rapidity, and thinking to halt on shore at the Cape,
I unfortunately drove too close, and shattered the right side wheels of my
vehicle against the rock, now called the Table Mountain. The machine went
against it with such impetuosity as completely shivered the rock in a
horizontal direction; so that the summit of the mountain, in the form of a
semi-sphere, was knocked into the sea, and the steep mountain becoming
thereby flattened at the top, has since received the name of the Table
Mountain, from its similarity to that piece of furniture.</p>
<p>Just as this part of the mountain was knocked off, the ghost of the Cape,
that tremendous sprite which cuts such a figure in the Lusiad, was
discovered sitting squat in an excavation formed for him in the centre of
the mountain. He seemed just like a young bee in his little cell before he
comes forth, or like a bean in a bean-pod; and when the upper part of the
mountain was split across and knocked off, the superior half of his person
was discovered. He appeared of a bottle-blue colour, and started, dazzled
with the unexpected glare of the light: hearing the dreadful rattle of the
wheels, and the loud chirping of the crickets, he was thunder-struck, and
instantly giving a shriek, sunk down ten thousand fathoms into the earth,
while the mountain, vomiting out some smoke, silently closed up, and left
not a trace behind!</p>
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