[An Antarctic Mystery by Jules Verne]@TWC D-Link book
An Antarctic Mystery

CHAPTER XIX
23/27

According to all calculations, therefore, its depth would be four or five times greater, and it would consequently weigh millions of tons.
This is what had happened: The iceberg, having been melted away at its base by contact with warmer waters, had risen little by little; its centre of gravity had become displaced, and its equilibrium could only be re-established by a sudden capsize, which had lifted up the part that had been underneath above the sea-level.

The _Halbrane_, caught in this movement, was hoisted as by an enormous lever.

Numbers of icebergs capsize thus on the polar seas, and form one of the greatest dangers to which approaching vessels are exposed.
Our schooner was caught in a hollow on the west side of the iceberg.
She listed to starboard with her stern raised and her bow lowered.
We could not help thinking that the slightest shake would cause her to slide along the slope of the iceberg into the sea.

The collision had been so violent as to stave in some of the planks of her hull.
After the first collision, the galley situated before the fore-mast had broken its fastenings.

The door between Captain Len Guy's and the mate's cabins was torn away from the hinges.


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