[An Antarctic Mystery by Jules Verne]@TWC D-Link bookAn Antarctic Mystery CHAPTER XI 10/13
No, an enormous blower had come alongside the schooner, and almost on the instant a spout of ill-smelling water was ejected from its blow-hole with a noise like a distant roar of artillery.
The whole foredeck to the main hatch was inundated. "That's well done!" growled Hearne, shrugging his shoulders, while his companions shook themselves and cursed the humpback. Besides these two kinds of cetacea we had observed several right-whales, and these are the most usually met with in the southern seas.
They have no fins, and their blubber is very thick. The taking of these fat monsters of the deep is not attended with much danger.
The right-whales are vigorously pursued in the southern seas, where the little shell fish called "whales' food" abound.
The whales subsist entirely upon these small crustaceans. Presently, one of these right-whales, measuring sixty feet in length--that is to say, the animal was the equivalent of a hundred barrels of oil--was seen floating within three cables' lengths of the schooner. "Yes! that's a right-whale," exclaimed Hearne.
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