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    Chapter 19 - Page 2

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    orders.

    The front of Granite House was then to be lighted by five windows and a
    door, besides a large bay window and some smaller oval ones, which would
    admit plenty of light to enter into the marvelous nave which was to be
    their chief room. This facade, situated at a height of eighty feet above
    the ground, was exposed to the east, and the rising sun saluted it with its
    first rays. It was found to be just at that part of the cliff which was
    between the projection at the mouth of the Mercy and a perpendicular line
    traced above the heap of rocks which formed the Chimneys. Thus the winds
    from the northeast would only strike it obliquely, for it was protected by
    the projection. Besides, until the window-frames were made, the engineer
    meant to close the openings with thick shutters, which would prevent either
    wind or rain from entering, and which could be concealed in need.

    The first work was to make the openings. This would have taken too long
    with the pickaxe alone, and it is known that Harding was an ingenious man.
    He had still a quantity of nitro-glycerine at his disposal, and he employed
    it usefully. By means of this explosive substance the rock was broken open
    at the very places chosen by the engineer. Then, with the pickaxe and
    spade, the windows and doors were properly shaped, the jagged edges were
    smoothed off, and a few days alter the beginning of the work, Granite House
    was abundantly lighted by the rising sun, whose rays penetrated into its
    most secret recesses. Following the plan proposed by Cyrus Harding, the
    space was to be divided into five compartments looking out on the sea; to
    the right, an entry with a door, which would meet the ladder; then a
    kitchen, thirty feet long; a dining-room, measuring forty feet; a sleeping-
    room, of equal size; and lastly, a "Visitor's room," petitioned for by
    Pencroft, and which was next to the great hall. These rooms, or rather this
    suite of rooms, would not occupy all the depth of the cave. There would be
    also a corridor and a storehouse, in which their tools, provisions, and
    stores would be kept. All the productions of the island, the flora as well
    as the fauna, were to be there in the best possible state of preservation,
    and completely sheltered from the damp. There was no want of space, so that
    each object could be methodically arranged. Besides, the colonists had

    still at their disposal the little grotto above the great cavern, which was
    like the garret of the new dwelling.

    This plan settled, it had only to be put into execution. The miners
    became brickmakers again, then the bricks were brought to the foot of
    Granite House. Till then, Harding and his companions had only entered the
    cavern by the long passage. This mode of communication obliged them first
    to
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