12403 lines
547 KiB
Plaintext
12403 lines
547 KiB
Plaintext
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FROM THE EARTH TO THE MOON
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Table of Contents
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I. The Gun Club
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II. President Barbicane's Communication
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III. Effect of the President's Communication
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IV. Reply From the Observatory of Cambridge
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V. The Romance of the Moon
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VI. The Permissive Limits of Ignorance and Belief in the United States
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VII. The Hymn of the Cannon-Ball
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VIII. History of the Cannon
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IX. The Question of the Powders
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X. One Enemy _V._ Twenty-Five Millions of Friends
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XI. Florida and Texas
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XII. Urbi et Orbi
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XIII. Stones Hill
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XIV. Pickaxe and Trowel
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XV. The Fete of the Casting
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XVI. The Columbiad
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XVII. A Telegraphic Dispatch
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XVIII. The Passenger of the Atlanta
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XIX. A Monster Meeting
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XX. Attack and Riposte
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XXI. How A Frenchman Manages An Affair
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XXII. The New Citizen of the United States
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XXIII. The Projectile-Vehicle
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XXIV. The Telescope of the Rocky Mountains
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XXV. Final Details
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XXVI. Fire!
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XXVII. Foul Weather
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XXVIII. A New Star
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A TRIP AROUND IT
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Preliminary Chapter-- Recapitulating the First Part of
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This Work, and Serving as a Preface to the Second
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I. From Twenty Minutes Past Ten to Forty-Seven Minutes Past Ten P. M.
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II. The First Half Hour
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III. Their Place of Shelter
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IV. A Little Algebra
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V. The Cold of Space
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VI. Question and Answer
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VII. A Moment of Intoxication
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VIII. At Seventy-Eight Thousand Five Hundred and Fourteen Leagues
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IX. The Consequences of A Deviation
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X. The Observers of the Moon
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XI. Fancy and Reality
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XII. Orographic Details
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XIII. Lunar Landscapes
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XIV. The Night of Three Hundred and Fifty-Four Hours and A Half
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XV. Hyperbola or Parabola
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XVI. The Southern Hemisphere
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XVII. Tycho
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XVIII. Grave Questions
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XIX. A Struggle Against the Impossible
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XX. The Soundings of the Susquehanna
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XXI. J. T. Maston Recalled
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XXII. Recovered From the Sea
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XXIII. The End
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FROM THE EARTH TO THE MOON
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CHAPTER I
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THE GUN CLUB
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During the War of the Rebellion, a new and influential club was
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established in the city of Baltimore in the State of Maryland.
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It is well known with what energy the taste for military matters
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became developed among that nation of ship-owners, shopkeepers,
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and mechanics. Simple tradesmen jumped their counters to become
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extemporized captains, colonels, and generals, without having
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ever passed the School of Instruction at West Point;
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nevertheless; they quickly rivaled their compeers of the old
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continent, and, like them, carried off victories by dint of
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lavish expenditure in ammunition, money, and men.
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But the point in which the Americans singularly distanced the
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Europeans was in the science of gunnery. Not, indeed, that
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their weapons retained a higher degree of perfection than
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theirs, but that they exhibited unheard-of dimensions, and
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consequently attained hitherto unheard-of ranges. In point of
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grazing, plunging, oblique, or enfilading, or point-blank
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firing, the English, French, and Prussians have nothing to
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learn; but their cannon, howitzers, and mortars are mere
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pocket-pistols compared with the formidable engines of the
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American artillery.
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This fact need surprise no one. The Yankees, the first
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mechanicians in the world, are engineers-- just as the Italians
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are musicians and the Germans metaphysicians-- by right of birth.
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Nothing is more natural, therefore, than to perceive them
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applying their audacious ingenuity to the science of gunnery.
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Witness the marvels of Parrott, Dahlgren, and Rodman.
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The Armstrong, Palliser, and Beaulieu guns were compelled to bow
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before their transatlantic rivals.
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Now when an American has an idea, he directly seeks a second
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American to share it. If there be three, they elect a president
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and two secretaries. Given four, they name a keeper of records,
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and the office is ready for work; five, they convene a general
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meeting, and the club is fully constituted. So things were
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managed in Baltimore. The inventor of a new cannon associated
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himself with the caster and the borer. Thus was formed the
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nucleus of the "Gun Club." In a single month after its formation
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it numbered 1,833 effective members and 30,565 corresponding members.
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One condition was imposed as a _sine qua non_ upon every
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candidate for admission into the association, and that was the
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condition of having designed, or (more or less) perfected a
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cannon; or, in default of a cannon, at least a firearm of
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some description. It may, however, be mentioned that mere
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inventors of revolvers, fire-shooting carbines, and similar
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small arms, met with little consideration. Artillerists always
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commanded the chief place of favor.
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The estimation in which these gentlemen were held, according to
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one of the most scientific exponents of the Gun Club, was
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"proportional to the masses of their guns, and in the direct
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ratio of the square of the distances attained by their projectiles."
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The Gun Club once founded, it is easy to conceive the result of
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the inventive genius of the Americans. Their military weapons
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attained colossal proportions, and their projectiles, exceeding
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the prescribed limits, unfortunately occasionally cut in two
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some unoffending pedestrians. These inventions, in fact, left
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far in the rear the timid instruments of European artillery.
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It is but fair to add that these Yankees, brave as they have
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ever proved themselves to be, did not confine themselves to
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theories and formulae, but that they paid heavily, _in propria
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persona_, for their inventions. Among them were to be counted
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officers of all ranks, from lieutenants to generals; military
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men of every age, from those who were just making their _debut_
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in the profession of arms up to those who had grown old in the
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gun-carriage. Many had found their rest on the field of battle
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whose names figured in the "Book of Honor" of the Gun Club; and
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of those who made good their return the greater proportion bore
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the marks of their indisputable valor. Crutches, wooden legs,
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artificial arms, steel hooks, caoutchouc jaws, silver craniums,
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platinum noses, were all to be found in the collection; and it
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was calculated by the great statistician Pitcairn that throughout
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the Gun Club there was not quite one arm between four persons
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and two legs between six.
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Nevertheless, these valiant artillerists took no particular
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account of these little facts, and felt justly proud when the
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despatches of a battle returned the number of victims at
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ten-fold the quantity of projectiles expended.
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One day, however-- sad and melancholy day!-- peace was signed
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between the survivors of the war; the thunder of the guns
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gradually ceased, the mortars were silent, the howitzers were
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muzzled for an indefinite period, the cannon, with muzzles
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depressed, were returned into the arsenal, the shot were
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repiled, all bloody reminiscences were effaced; the
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cotton-plants grew luxuriantly in the well-manured fields, all
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mourning garments were laid aside, together with grief; and the
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Gun Club was relegated to profound inactivity.
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Some few of the more advanced and inveterate theorists set
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themselves again to work upon calculations regarding the laws
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of projectiles. They reverted invariably to gigantic shells
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and howitzers of unparalleled caliber. Still in default of
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practical experience what was the value of mere theories?
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Consequently, the clubrooms became deserted, the servants dozed
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in the antechambers, the newspapers grew mouldy on the tables,
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sounds of snoring came from dark corners, and the members of the
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Gun Club, erstwhile so noisy in their seances, were reduced to
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silence by this disastrous peace and gave themselves up wholly
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to dreams of a Platonic kind of artillery.
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"This is horrible!" said Tom Hunter one evening, while rapidly
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carbonizing his wooden legs in the fireplace of the
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smoking-room; "nothing to do! nothing to look forward to! what
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a loathsome existence! When again shall the guns arouse us in
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the morning with their delightful reports?"
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"Those days are gone by," said jolly Bilsby, trying to extend
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his missing arms. "It was delightful once upon a time!
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One invented a gun, and hardly was it cast, when one hastened
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to try it in the face of the enemy! Then one returned to camp
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with a word of encouragement from Sherman or a friendly shake
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of the hand from McClellan. But now the generals are gone
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back to their counters; and in place of projectiles, they
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despatch bales of cotton. By Jove, the future of gunnery in
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America is lost!"
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"Ay! and no war in prospect!" continued the famous James T.
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Maston, scratching with his steel hook his gutta-percha cranium.
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"Not a cloud on the horizon! and that too at such a critical
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period in the progress of the science of artillery! Yes, gentlemen!
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I who address you have myself this very morning perfected a
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model (plan, section, elevation, etc.) of a mortar destined to
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change all the conditions of warfare!"
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"No! is it possible?" replied Tom Hunter, his thoughts reverting
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involuntarily to a former invention of the Hon. J. T. Maston, by
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which, at its first trial, he had succeeded in killing three
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hundred and thirty-seven people.
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"Fact!" replied he. "Still, what is the use of so many studies
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worked out, so many difficulties vanquished? It's mere waste
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of time! The New World seems to have made up its mind to live in
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peace; and our bellicose _Tribune_ predicts some approaching
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catastrophes arising out of this scandalous increase of population."
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"Nevertheless," replied Colonel Blomsberry, "they are always
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struggling in Europe to maintain the principle of nationalities."
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"Well?"
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"Well, there might be some field for enterprise down there; and
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if they would accept our services----"
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"What are you dreaming of?" screamed Bilsby; "work at gunnery
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for the benefit of foreigners?"
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"That would be better than doing nothing here," returned the colonel.
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"Quite so," said J. T. Matson; "but still we need not dream of
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that expedient."
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"And why not?" demanded the colonel.
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"Because their ideas of progress in the Old World are contrary
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to our American habits of thought. Those fellows believe that
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one can't become a general without having served first as an
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ensign; which is as much as to say that one can't point a gun
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without having first cast it oneself!"
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"Ridiculous!" replied Tom Hunter, whittling with his bowie-knife
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the arms of his easy chair; "but if that be the case there, all
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that is left for us is to plant tobacco and distill whale-oil."
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"What!" roared J. T. Maston, "shall we not employ these
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remaining years of our life in perfecting firearms? Shall there
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never be a fresh opportunity of trying the ranges of projectiles?
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Shall the air never again be lighted with the glare of our guns?
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No international difficulty ever arise to enable us to declare
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war against some transatlantic power? Shall not the French sink
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one of our steamers, or the English, in defiance of the rights
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of nations, hang a few of our countrymen?"
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"No such luck," replied Colonel Blomsberry; "nothing of the kind
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is likely to happen; and even if it did, we should not profit by it.
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American susceptibility is fast declining, and we are all going
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to the dogs."
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"It is too true," replied J. T. Maston, with fresh violence;
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"there are a thousand grounds for fighting, and yet we don't fight.
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We save up our arms and legs for the benefit of nations who don't
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know what to do with them! But stop-- without going out of one's
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way to find a cause for war-- did not North America once belong
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to the English?"
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"Undoubtedly," replied Tom Hunter, stamping his crutch with fury.
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"Well, then," replied J. T. Maston, "why should not England in
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her turn belong to the Americans?"
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"It would be but just and fair," returned Colonel Blomsberry.
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"Go and propose it to the President of the United States," cried
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J. T. Maston, "and see how he will receive you."
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"Bah!" growled Bilsby between the four teeth which the war had
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left him; "that will never do!"
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"By Jove!" cried J. T. Maston, "he mustn't count on my vote at
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the next election!"
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"Nor on ours," replied unanimously all the bellicose invalids.
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"Meanwhile," replied J. T. Maston, "allow me to say that, if I
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cannot get an opportunity to try my new mortars on a real field
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of battle, I shall say good-by to the members of the Gun Club,
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and go and bury myself in the prairies of Arkansas!"
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"In that case we will accompany you," cried the others.
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Matters were in this unfortunate condition, and the club was
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threatened with approaching dissolution, when an unexpected
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circumstance occurred to prevent so deplorable a catastrophe.
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On the morrow after this conversation every member of the
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association received a sealed circular couched in the
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following terms:
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BALTIMORE, October 3.
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The president of the Gun Club has the honor to inform his colleagues
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that, at the meeting of the 5th instant, he will bring before
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them a communication of an extremely interesting nature. He requests,
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therefore, that they will make it convenient to attend in
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accordance with the present invitation. Very cordially,
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IMPEY BARBICANE, P.G.C.
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CHAPTER II
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PRESIDENT BARBICANE'S COMMUNICATION
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On the 5th of October, at eight p.m., a dense crowd pressed
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toward the saloons of the Gun Club at No. 21 Union Square.
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All the members of the association resident in Baltimore attended
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the invitation of their president. As regards the corresponding
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members, notices were delivered by hundreds throughout the streets
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of the city, and, large as was the great hall, it was quite
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inadequate to accommodate the crowd of _savants_. They overflowed
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into the adjoining rooms, down the narrow passages, into the
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outer courtyards. There they ran against the vulgar herd who
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pressed up to the doors, each struggling to reach the front ranks,
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all eager to learn the nature of the important communication of
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President Barbicane; all pushing, squeezing, crushing with that
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perfect freedom of action which is so peculiar to the masses when
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educated in ideas of "self-government."
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On that evening a stranger who might have chanced to be in
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Baltimore could not have gained admission for love or money into
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the great hall. That was reserved exclusively for resident or
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corresponding members; no one else could possibly have obtained
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a place; and the city magnates, municipal councilors, and
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"select men" were compelled to mingle with the mere townspeople
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in order to catch stray bits of news from the interior.
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Nevertheless the vast hall presented a curious spectacle.
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Its immense area was singularly adapted to the purpose.
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Lofty pillars formed of cannon, superposed upon huge mortars as a
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base, supported the fine ironwork of the arches, a perfect piece
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of cast-iron lacework. Trophies of blunderbuses, matchlocks,
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arquebuses, carbines, all kinds of firearms, ancient and modern,
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were picturesquely interlaced against the walls. The gas lit
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up in full glare myriads of revolvers grouped in the form of
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lustres, while groups of pistols, and candelabra formed of
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muskets bound together, completed this magnificent display
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of brilliance. Models of cannon, bronze castings, sights covered
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with dents, plates battered by the shots of the Gun Club,
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assortments of rammers and sponges, chaplets of shells, wreaths
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of projectiles, garlands of howitzers-- in short, all the
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apparatus of the artillerist, enchanted the eye by this
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wonderful arrangement and induced a kind of belief that their
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real purpose was ornamental rather than deadly.
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At the further end of the saloon the president, assisted by four
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secretaries, occupied a large platform. His chair, supported by
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a carved gun-carriage, was modeled upon the ponderous proportions
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of a 32-inch mortar. It was pointed at an angle of ninety degrees,
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and suspended upon truncheons, so that the president could balance
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himself upon it as upon a rocking-chair, a very agreeable fact in
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the very hot weather. Upon the table (a huge iron plate supported
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upon six carronades) stood an inkstand of exquisite elegance, made
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of a beautifully chased Spanish piece, and a sonnette, which, when
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required, could give forth a report equal to that of a revolver.
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During violent debates this novel kind of bell scarcely sufficed
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to drown the clamor of these excitable artillerists.
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In front of the table benches arranged in zigzag form, like the
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circumvallations of a retrenchment, formed a succession of
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bastions and curtains set apart for the use of the members of
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the club; and on this especial evening one might say, "All the
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world was on the ramparts." The president was sufficiently well
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known, however, for all to be assured that he would not put his
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colleagues to discomfort without some very strong motive.
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Impey Barbicane was a man of forty years of age, calm, cold,
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austere; of a singularly serious and self-contained demeanor,
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punctual as a chronometer, of imperturbable temper and immovable
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character; by no means chivalrous, yet adventurous withal, and
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always bringing practical ideas to bear upon the very rashest
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enterprises; an essentially New Englander, a Northern colonist,
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a descendant of the old anti-Stuart Roundheads, and the
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implacable enemy of the gentlemen of the South, those ancient
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cavaliers of the mother country. In a word, he was a Yankee to
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the backbone.
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Barbicane had made a large fortune as a timber merchant.
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Being nominated director of artillery during the war, he proved
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himself fertile in invention. Bold in his conceptions, he
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contributed powerfully to the progress of that arm and gave an
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immense impetus to experimental researches.
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He was personage of the middle height, having, by a rare
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exception in the Gun Club, all his limbs complete. His strongly
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marked features seemed drawn by square and rule; and if it be
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true that, in order to judge a man's character one must look at
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his profile, Barbicane, so examined, exhibited the most certain
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indications of energy, audacity, and _sang-froid_.
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At this moment he was sitting in his armchair, silent, absorbed,
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lost in reflection, sheltered under his high-crowned hat-- a
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kind of black cylinder which always seems firmly screwed upon
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the head of an American.
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Just when the deep-toned clock in the great hall struck eight,
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Barbicane, as if he had been set in motion by a spring, raised
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himself up. A profound silence ensued, and the speaker, in a
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somewhat emphatic tone of voice, commenced as follows:
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"My brave, colleagues, too long already a paralyzing peace has
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plunged the members of the Gun Club in deplorable inactivity.
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After a period of years full of incidents we have been compelled
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to abandon our labors, and to stop short on the road of progress.
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I do not hesitate to state, baldly, that any war which would
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recall us to arms would be welcome!" (Tremendous applause!)
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"But war, gentlemen, is impossible under existing circumstances;
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and, however we may desire it, many years may elapse before our
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cannon shall again thunder in the field of battle. We must make
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up our minds, then, to seek in another train of ideas some field
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for the activity which we all pine for."
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The meeting felt that the president was now approaching the
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critical point, and redoubled their attention accordingly.
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"For some months past, my brave colleagues," continued
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Barbicane, "I have been asking myself whether, while confining
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ourselves to our own particular objects, we could not enter upon
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some grand experiment worthy of the nineteenth century; and
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whether the progress of artillery science would not enable us to
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carry it out to a successful issue. I have been considering,
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working, calculating; and the result of my studies is the conviction
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that we are safe to succeed in an enterprise which to any other
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country would appear wholly impracticable. This project, the result
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of long elaboration, is the object of my present communication.
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It is worthy of yourselves, worthy of the antecedents of the Gun
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Club; and it cannot fail to make some noise in the world."
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A thrill of excitement ran through the meeting.
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Barbicane, having by a rapid movement firmly fixed his hat upon
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his head, calmly continued his harangue:
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"There is no one among you, my brave colleagues, who has not
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seen the Moon, or, at least, heard speak of it. Don't be
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surprised if I am about to discourse to you regarding the Queen
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of the Night. It is perhaps reserved for us to become the
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Columbuses of this unknown world. Only enter into my plans, and
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second me with all your power, and I will lead you to its
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conquest, and its name shall be added to those of the thirty-six
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states which compose this Great Union."
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"Three cheers for the Moon!" roared the Gun Club, with one voice.
|
|
|
|
"The moon, gentlemen, has been carefully studied," continued
|
|
Barbicane; "her mass, density, and weight; her constitution,
|
|
motions, distance, as well as her place in the solar system,
|
|
have all been exactly determined. Selenographic charts have
|
|
been constructed with a perfection which equals, if it does not
|
|
even surpass, that of our terrestrial maps. Photography has
|
|
given us proofs of the incomparable beauty of our satellite; all
|
|
is known regarding the moon which mathematical science,
|
|
astronomy, geology, and optics can learn about her. But up to
|
|
the present moment no direct communication has been established
|
|
with her."
|
|
|
|
A violent movement of interest and surprise here greeted this
|
|
remark of the speaker.
|
|
|
|
"Permit me," he continued, "to recount to you briefly how
|
|
certain ardent spirits, starting on imaginary journeys, have
|
|
penetrated the secrets of our satellite. In the seventeenth
|
|
century a certain David Fabricius boasted of having seen with
|
|
his own eyes the inhabitants of the moon. In 1649 a Frenchman,
|
|
one Jean Baudoin, published a `Journey performed from the Earth
|
|
to the Moon by Domingo Gonzalez,' a Spanish adventurer. At the
|
|
same period Cyrano de Bergerac published that celebrated
|
|
`Journeys in the Moon' which met with such success in France.
|
|
Somewhat later another Frenchman, named Fontenelle, wrote `The
|
|
Plurality of Worlds,' a _chef-d'oeuvre_ of its time. About 1835
|
|
a small treatise, translated from the New York _American_, related
|
|
how Sir John Herschel, having been despatched to the Cape of
|
|
Good Hope for the purpose of making there some astronomical
|
|
calculations, had, by means of a telescope brought to perfection
|
|
by means of internal lighting, reduced the apparent distance of
|
|
the moon to eighty yards! He then distinctly perceived caverns
|
|
frequented by hippopotami, green mountains bordered by golden
|
|
lace-work, sheep with horns of ivory, a white species of deer
|
|
and inhabitants with membranous wings, like bats. This _brochure_,
|
|
the work of an American named Locke, had a great sale. But, to
|
|
bring this rapid sketch to a close, I will only add that a
|
|
certain Hans Pfaal, of Rotterdam, launching himself in a balloon
|
|
filled with a gas extracted from nitrogen, thirty-seven times
|
|
lighter than hydrogen, reached the moon after a passage of
|
|
nineteen hours. This journey, like all previous ones, was purely
|
|
imaginary; still, it was the work of a popular American author--
|
|
I mean Edgar Poe!"
|
|
|
|
"Cheers for Edgar Poe!" roared the assemblage, electrified by
|
|
their president's words.
|
|
|
|
"I have now enumerated," said Barbicane, "the experiments which
|
|
I call purely paper ones, and wholly insufficient to establish
|
|
serious relations with the Queen of the Night. Nevertheless, I
|
|
am bound to add that some practical geniuses have attempted to
|
|
establish actual communication with her. Thus, a few days ago,
|
|
a German geometrician proposed to send a scientific expedition
|
|
to the steppes of Siberia. There, on those vast plains, they
|
|
were to describe enormous geometric figures, drawn in characters
|
|
of reflecting luminosity, among which was the proposition
|
|
regarding the `square of the hypothenuse,' commonly called the
|
|
`Ass's Bridge' by the French. `Every intelligent being,' said
|
|
the geometrician, `must understand the scientific meaning of
|
|
that figure. The Selenites, do they exist, will respond by a
|
|
similar figure; and, a communication being thus once
|
|
established, it will be easy to form an alphabet which shall
|
|
enable us to converse with the inhabitants of the moon.' So
|
|
spoke the German geometrician; but his project was never put
|
|
into practice, and up to the present day there is no bond
|
|
in existence between the Earth and her satellite. It is
|
|
reserved for the practical genius of Americans to establish a
|
|
communication with the sidereal world. The means of arriving
|
|
thither are simple, easy, certain, infallible-- and that is the
|
|
purpose of my present proposal."
|
|
|
|
A storm of acclamations greeted these words. There was not a
|
|
single person in the whole audience who was not overcome,
|
|
carried away, lifted out of himself by the speaker's words!
|
|
|
|
Long-continued applause resounded from all sides.
|
|
|
|
As soon as the excitement had partially subsided, Barbicane
|
|
resumed his speech in a somewhat graver voice.
|
|
|
|
"You know," said he, "what progress artillery science has made
|
|
during the last few years, and what a degree of perfection
|
|
firearms of every kind have reached. Moreover, you are well
|
|
aware that, in general terms, the resisting power of cannon and
|
|
the expansive force of gunpowder are practically unlimited.
|
|
Well! starting from this principle, I ask myself whether,
|
|
supposing sufficient apparatus could be obtained constructed
|
|
upon the conditions of ascertained resistance, it might not be
|
|
possible to project a shot up to the moon?"
|
|
|
|
At these words a murmur of amazement escaped from a thousand
|
|
panting chests; then succeeded a moment of perfect silence,
|
|
resembling that profound stillness which precedes the bursting
|
|
of a thunderstorm. In point of fact, a thunderstorm did peal
|
|
forth, but it was the thunder of applause, or cries, and of
|
|
uproar which made the very hall tremble. The president
|
|
attempted to speak, but could not. It was fully ten minutes
|
|
before he could make himself heard.
|
|
|
|
"Suffer me to finish," he calmly continued. "I have looked at
|
|
the question in all its bearings, I have resolutely attacked it,
|
|
and by incontrovertible calculations I find that a projectile
|
|
endowed with an initial velocity of 12,000 yards per second, and
|
|
aimed at the moon, must necessarily reach it. I have the honor,
|
|
my brave colleagues, to propose a trial of this little experiment."
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER III
|
|
|
|
|
|
EFFECT OF THE PRESIDENT'S COMMUNICATION
|
|
|
|
|
|
It is impossible to describe the effect produced by the last
|
|
words of the honorable president-- the cries, the shouts, the
|
|
succession of roars, hurrahs, and all the varied vociferations
|
|
which the American language is capable of supplying. It was a
|
|
scene of indescribable confusion and uproar. They shouted, they
|
|
clapped, they stamped on the floor of the hall. All the weapons
|
|
in the museum discharged at once could not have more violently set
|
|
in motion the waves of sound. One need not be surprised at this.
|
|
There are some cannoneers nearly as noisy as their own guns.
|
|
|
|
Barbicane remained calm in the midst of this enthusiastic
|
|
clamor; perhaps he was desirous of addressing a few more words
|
|
to his colleagues, for by his gestures he demanded silence,
|
|
and his powerful alarum was worn out by its violent reports.
|
|
No attention, however, was paid to his request. He was presently
|
|
torn from his seat and passed from the hands of his faithful
|
|
colleagues into the arms of a no less excited crowd.
|
|
|
|
Nothing can astound an American. It has often been asserted
|
|
that the word "impossible" in not a French one. People have
|
|
evidently been deceived by the dictionary. In America, all is
|
|
easy, all is simple; and as for mechanical difficulties, they
|
|
are overcome before they arise. Between Barbicane's proposition
|
|
and its realization no true Yankee would have allowed even the
|
|
semblance of a difficulty to be possible. A thing with them is
|
|
no sooner said than done.
|
|
|
|
The triumphal progress of the president continued throughout
|
|
the evening. It was a regular torchlight procession. Irish, Germans,
|
|
French, Scotch, all the heterogeneous units which make up the
|
|
population of Maryland shouted in their respective vernaculars;
|
|
and the "vivas," "hurrahs," and "bravos" were intermingled in
|
|
inexpressible enthusiasm.
|
|
|
|
Just at this crisis, as though she comprehended all this
|
|
agitation regarding herself, the moon shone forth with
|
|
serene splendor, eclipsing by her intense illumination all the
|
|
surrounding lights. The Yankees all turned their gaze toward
|
|
her resplendent orb, kissed their hands, called her by all kinds
|
|
of endearing names. Between eight o'clock and midnight one
|
|
optician in Jones'-Fall Street made his fortune by the sale of
|
|
opera-glasses.
|
|
|
|
Midnight arrived, and the enthusiasm showed no signs of diminution.
|
|
It spread equally among all classes of citizens-- men of science,
|
|
shopkeepers, merchants, porters, chair-men, as well as "greenhorns,"
|
|
were stirred in their innermost fibres. A national enterprise was
|
|
at stake. The whole city, high and low, the quays bordering the
|
|
Patapsco, the ships lying in the basins, disgorged a crowd drunk
|
|
with joy, gin, and whisky. Every one chattered, argued, discussed,
|
|
disputed, applauded, from the gentleman lounging upon the barroom
|
|
settee with his tumbler of sherry-cobbler before him down to the
|
|
waterman who got drunk upon his "knock-me-down" in the dingy taverns
|
|
of Fell Point.
|
|
|
|
About two A.M., however, the excitement began to subside.
|
|
President Barbicane reached his house, bruised, crushed, and
|
|
squeezed almost to a mummy. Hercules could not have resisted a
|
|
similar outbreak of enthusiasm. The crowd gradually deserted
|
|
the squares and streets. The four railways from Philadelphia
|
|
and Washington, Harrisburg and Wheeling, which converge at
|
|
Baltimore, whirled away the heterogeneous population to the four
|
|
corners of the United States, and the city subsided into
|
|
comparative tranquility.
|
|
|
|
On the following day, thanks to the telegraphic wires, five
|
|
hundred newspapers and journals, daily, weekly, monthly, or
|
|
bi-monthly, all took up the question. They examined it under
|
|
all its different aspects, physical, meteorological, economical,
|
|
or moral, up to its bearings on politics or civilization.
|
|
They debated whether the moon was a finished world, or whether
|
|
it was destined to undergo any further transformation. Did it
|
|
resemble the earth at the period when the latter was destitute
|
|
as yet of an atmosphere? What kind of spectacle would its hidden
|
|
hemisphere present to our terrestrial spheroid? Granting that
|
|
the question at present was simply that of sending a projectile
|
|
up to the moon, every one must see that that involved the
|
|
commencement of a series of experiments. All must hope that
|
|
some day America would penetrate the deepest secrets of that
|
|
mysterious orb; and some even seemed to fear lest its conquest
|
|
should not sensibly derange the equilibrium of Europe.
|
|
|
|
The project once under discussion, not a single paragraph
|
|
suggested a doubt of its realization. All the papers,
|
|
pamphlets, reports-- all the journals published by the
|
|
scientific, literary, and religious societies enlarged upon its
|
|
advantages; and the Society of Natural History of Boston, the
|
|
Society of Science and Art of Albany, the Geographical and
|
|
Statistical Society of New York, the Philosophical Society of
|
|
Philadelphia, and the Smithsonian of Washington sent innumerable
|
|
letters of congratulation to the Gun Club, together with offers
|
|
of immediate assistance and money.
|
|
|
|
From that day forward Impey Barbicane became one of the greatest
|
|
citizens of the United States, a kind of Washington of science.
|
|
A single trait of feeling, taken from many others, will serve to
|
|
show the point which this homage of a whole people to a single
|
|
individual attained.
|
|
|
|
Some few days after this memorable meeting of the Gun Club, the
|
|
manager of an English company announced, at the Baltimore
|
|
theatre, the production of "Much ado about Nothing." But the
|
|
populace, seeing in that title an allusion damaging to
|
|
Barbicane's project, broke into the auditorium, smashed the
|
|
benches, and compelled the unlucky director to alter his playbill.
|
|
Being a sensible man, he bowed to the public will and replaced
|
|
the offending comedy by "As you like it"; and for many weeks he
|
|
realized fabulous profits.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER IV
|
|
|
|
|
|
REPLY FROM THE OBSERVATORY OF CAMBRIDGE
|
|
|
|
|
|
Barbicane, however, lost not one moment amid all the enthusiasm
|
|
of which he had become the object. His first care was to
|
|
reassemble his colleagues in the board-room of the Gun Club.
|
|
There, after some discussion, it was agreed to consult the
|
|
astronomers regarding the astronomical part of the enterprise.
|
|
Their reply once ascertained, they could then discuss the
|
|
mechanical means, and nothing should be wanting to ensure the
|
|
success of this great experiment.
|
|
|
|
A note couched in precise terms, containing special
|
|
interrogatories, was then drawn up and addressed to the
|
|
Observatory of Cambridge in Massachusetts. This city, where the
|
|
first university of the United States was founded, is justly
|
|
celebrated for its astronomical staff. There are to be found
|
|
assembled all the most eminent men of science. Here is to be
|
|
seen at work that powerful telescope which enabled Bond to
|
|
resolve the nebula of Andromeda, and Clarke to discover the
|
|
satellite of Sirius. This celebrated institution fully justified
|
|
on all points the confidence reposed in it by the Gun Club.
|
|
So, after two days, the reply so impatiently awaited was placed
|
|
in the hands of President Barbicane.
|
|
|
|
It was couched in the following terms:
|
|
|
|
_The Director of the Cambridge Observatory to the President
|
|
of the Gun Club at Baltimore._
|
|
|
|
|
|
CAMBRIDGE, October 7.
|
|
On the receipt of your favor of the 6th instant, addressed to
|
|
the Observatory of Cambridge in the name of the members of the
|
|
Baltimore Gun Club, our staff was immediately called together,
|
|
and it was judged expedient to reply as follows:
|
|
|
|
The questions which have been proposed to it are these--
|
|
|
|
"1. Is it possible to transmit a projectile up to the moon?
|
|
|
|
"2. What is the exact distance which separates the earth from
|
|
its satellite?
|
|
|
|
"3. What will be the period of transit of the projectile when
|
|
endowed with sufficient initial velocity? and, consequently, at
|
|
what moment ought it to be discharged in order that it may touch
|
|
the moon at a particular point?
|
|
|
|
"4. At what precise moment will the moon present herself in the
|
|
most favorable position to be reached by the projectile?
|
|
|
|
"5. What point in the heavens ought the cannon to be aimed at
|
|
which is intended to discharge the projectile?
|
|
|
|
"6. What place will the moon occupy in the heavens at the moment
|
|
of the projectile's departure?"
|
|
|
|
Regarding the _first_ question, "Is it possible to transmit a
|
|
projectile up to the moon?"
|
|
|
|
_Answer._-- Yes; provided it possess an initial velocity of
|
|
1,200 yards per second; calculations prove that to be sufficient.
|
|
In proportion as we recede from the earth the action of gravitation
|
|
diminishes in the inverse ratio of the square of the distance;
|
|
that is to say, _at three times a given distance the action is
|
|
nine times less._ Consequently, the weight of a shot will decrease,
|
|
and will become reduced to _zero_ at the instant that the attraction
|
|
of the moon exactly counterpoises that of the earth; that is to say
|
|
at 47/52 of its passage. At that instant the projectile will
|
|
have no weight whatever; and, if it passes that point, it will
|
|
fall into the moon by the sole effect of the lunar attraction.
|
|
The _theoretical possibility_ of the experiment is therefore
|
|
absolutely demonstrated; its _success_ must depend upon the power
|
|
of the engine employed.
|
|
|
|
As to the _second_ question, "What is the exact distance which
|
|
separates the earth from its satellite?"
|
|
|
|
_Answer._-- The moon does not describe a _circle_ round the
|
|
earth, but rather an _ellipse_, of which our earth occupies one
|
|
of the _foci_; the consequence, therefore, is, that at certain
|
|
times it approaches nearer to, and at others it recedes farther
|
|
from, the earth; in astronomical language, it is at one time in
|
|
_apogee_, at another in _perigee_. Now the difference between
|
|
its greatest and its least distance is too considerable to be
|
|
left out of consideration. In point of fact, in its apogee the
|
|
moon is 247,552 miles, and in its perigee, 218,657 miles only
|
|
distant; a fact which makes a difference of 28,895 miles, or
|
|
more than one-ninth of the entire distance. The perigee
|
|
distance, therefore, is that which ought to serve as the basis
|
|
of all calculations.
|
|
|
|
To the _third_ question.
|
|
|
|
_Answer._-- If the shot should preserve continuously its initial
|
|
velocity of 12,000 yards per second, it would require little
|
|
more than nine hours to reach its destination; but, inasmuch as
|
|
that initial velocity will be continually decreasing, it will
|
|
occupy 300,000 seconds, that is 83hrs. 20m. in reaching the
|
|
point where the attraction of the earth and moon will be _in
|
|
equilibrio_. From this point it will fall into the moon in
|
|
50,000 seconds, or 13hrs. 53m. 20sec. It will be desirable,
|
|
therefore, to discharge it 97hrs. 13m. 20sec. before the arrival
|
|
of the moon at the point aimed at.
|
|
|
|
Regarding question _four_, "At what precise moment will the moon
|
|
present herself in the most favorable position, etc.?"
|
|
|
|
_Answer._-- After what has been said above, it will be
|
|
necessary, first of all, to choose the period when the moon will
|
|
be in perigee, and _also_ the moment when she will be crossing
|
|
the zenith, which latter event will further diminish the entire
|
|
distance by a length equal to the radius of the earth, _i. e._
|
|
3,919 miles; the result of which will be that the final passage
|
|
remaining to be accomplished will be 214,976 miles. But although
|
|
the moon passes her perigee every month, she does not reach the
|
|
zenith always _at exactly the same moment_. She does not appear
|
|
under these two conditions simultaneously, except at long
|
|
intervals of time. It will be necessary, therefore, to wait for
|
|
the moment when her passage in perigee shall coincide with that
|
|
in the zenith. Now, by a fortunate circumstance, on the 4th of
|
|
December in the ensuing year the moon _will_ present these
|
|
two conditions. At midnight she will be in perigee, that is,
|
|
at her shortest distance from the earth, and at the same moment
|
|
she will be crossing the zenith.
|
|
|
|
On the _fifth_ question, "At what point in the heavens ought the
|
|
cannon to be aimed?"
|
|
|
|
_Answer._-- The preceding remarks being admitted, the cannon
|
|
ought to be pointed to the zenith of the place. Its fire,
|
|
therefore, will be perpendicular to the plane of the horizon;
|
|
and the projectile will soonest pass beyond the range of the
|
|
terrestrial attraction. But, in order that the moon should
|
|
reach the zenith of a given place, it is necessary that the
|
|
place should not exceed in latitude the declination of the
|
|
luminary; in other words, it must be comprised within the
|
|
degrees 0@ and 28@ of lat. N. or S. In every other spot the fire
|
|
must necessarily be oblique, which would seriously militate
|
|
against the success of the experiment.
|
|
|
|
As to the _sixth_ question, "What place will the moon occupy in
|
|
the heavens at the moment of the projectile's departure?"
|
|
|
|
_Answer._-- At the moment when the projectile shall be discharged
|
|
into space, the moon, which travels daily forward 13@ 10' 35'',
|
|
will be distant from the zenith point by four times that quantity,
|
|
_i. e._ by 52@ 41' 20'', a space which corresponds to the path
|
|
which she will describe during the entire journey of the projectile.
|
|
But, inasmuch as it is equally necessary to take into account the
|
|
deviation which the rotary motion of the earth will impart to the
|
|
shot, and as the shot cannot reach the moon until after a deviation
|
|
equal to 16 radii of the earth, which, calculated upon the moon's
|
|
orbit, are equal to about eleven degrees, it becomes necessary to
|
|
add these eleven degrees to those which express the retardation of
|
|
the moon just mentioned: that is to say, in round numbers, about
|
|
sixty-four degrees. Consequently, at the moment of firing the
|
|
visual radius applied to the moon will describe, with the vertical
|
|
line of the place, an angle of sixty-four degrees.
|
|
|
|
These are our answers to the questions proposed to the
|
|
Observatory of Cambridge by the members of the Gun Club:
|
|
|
|
To sum up--
|
|
|
|
1st. The cannon ought to be planted in a country situated
|
|
between 0@ and 28@ of N. or S. lat.
|
|
|
|
2nd. It ought to be pointed directly toward the zenith of the place.
|
|
|
|
3rd. The projectile ought to be propelled with an initial
|
|
velocity of 12,000 yards per second.
|
|
|
|
4th. It ought to be discharged at 10hrs. 46m. 40sec. of the 1st
|
|
of December of the ensuing year.
|
|
|
|
5th. It will meet the moon four days after its discharge,
|
|
precisely at midnight on the 4th of December, at the moment of
|
|
its transit across the zenith.
|
|
|
|
The members of the Gun Club ought, therefore, without delay, to
|
|
commence the works necessary for such an experiment, and to be
|
|
prepared to set to work at the moment determined upon; for, if
|
|
they should suffer this 4th of December to go by, they will not
|
|
find the moon again under the same conditions of perigee and of
|
|
zenith until eighteen years and eleven days afterward.
|
|
|
|
The staff of the Cambridge Observatory place themselves entirely
|
|
at their disposal in respect of all questions of theoretical
|
|
astronomy; and herewith add their congratulations to those of
|
|
all the rest of America.
|
|
For the Astronomical Staff,
|
|
J. M. BELFAST,
|
|
_Director of the Observatory of Cambridge._
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER V
|
|
|
|
|
|
THE ROMANCE OF THE MOON
|
|
|
|
|
|
An observer endued with an infinite range of vision, and placed
|
|
in that unknown center around which the entire world revolves,
|
|
might have beheld myriads of atoms filling all space during the
|
|
chaotic epoch of the universe. Little by little, as ages went
|
|
on, a change took place; a general law of attraction manifested
|
|
itself, to which the hitherto errant atoms became obedient:
|
|
these atoms combined together chemically according to their
|
|
affinities, formed themselves into molecules, and composed those
|
|
nebulous masses with which the depths of the heavens are strewed.
|
|
These masses became immediately endued with a rotary motion
|
|
around their own central point. This center, formed of
|
|
indefinite molecules, began to revolve around its own axis
|
|
during its gradual condensation; then, following the immutable
|
|
laws of mechanics, in proportion as its bulk diminished by
|
|
condensation, its rotary motion became accelerated, and these
|
|
two effects continuing, the result was the formation of one
|
|
principal star, the center of the nebulous mass.
|
|
|
|
By attentively watching, the observer would then have perceived
|
|
the other molecules of the mass, following the example of this
|
|
central star, become likewise condensed by gradually accelerated
|
|
rotation, and gravitating round it in the shape of innumerable stars.
|
|
Thus was formed the _Nebulae_, of which astronomers have reckoned
|
|
up nearly 5,000.
|
|
|
|
Among these 5,000 nebulae there is one which has received the
|
|
name of the Milky Way, and which contains eighteen millions of
|
|
stars, each of which has become the center of a solar world.
|
|
|
|
If the observer had then specially directed his attention to one
|
|
of the more humble and less brilliant of these stellar bodies,
|
|
a star of the fourth class, that which is arrogantly called the
|
|
Sun, all the phenomena to which the formation of the Universe is to
|
|
be ascribed would have been successively fulfilled before his eyes.
|
|
In fact, he would have perceived this sun, as yet in the gaseous
|
|
state, and composed of moving molecules, revolving round its axis
|
|
in order to accomplish its work of concentration. This motion,
|
|
faithful to the laws of mechanics, would have been accelerated
|
|
with the diminution of its volume; and a moment would have arrived
|
|
when the centrifugal force would have overpowered the centripetal,
|
|
which causes the molecules all to tend toward the center.
|
|
|
|
Another phenomenon would now have passed before the observer's
|
|
eye, and the molecules situated on the plane of the equator,
|
|
escaping like a stone from a sling of which the cord had
|
|
suddenly snapped, would have formed around the sun sundry
|
|
concentric rings resembling that of Saturn. In their turn,
|
|
again, these rings of cosmical matter, excited by a rotary
|
|
motion about the central mass, would have been broken up and
|
|
decomposed into secondary nebulosities, that is to say,
|
|
into planets. Similarly he would have observed these planets
|
|
throw off one or more rings each, which became the origin of the
|
|
secondary bodies which we call satellites.
|
|
|
|
Thus, then, advancing from atom to molecule, from molecule to
|
|
nebulous mass, from that to principal star, from star to sun,
|
|
from sun to planet, and hence to satellite, we have the whole
|
|
series of transformations undergone by the heavenly bodies
|
|
during the first days of the world.
|
|
|
|
Now, of those attendant bodies which the sun maintains in their
|
|
elliptical orbits by the great law of gravitation, some few in
|
|
turn possess satellites. Uranus has eight, Saturn eight, Jupiter
|
|
four, Neptune possibly three, and the Earth one. This last, one
|
|
of the least important of the entire solar system, we call the
|
|
Moon; and it is she whom the daring genius of the Americans
|
|
professed their intention of conquering.
|
|
|
|
The moon, by her comparative proximity, and the constantly
|
|
varying appearances produced by her several phases, has always
|
|
occupied a considerable share of the attention of the
|
|
inhabitants of the earth.
|
|
|
|
From the time of Thales of Miletus, in the fifth century B.C.,
|
|
down to that of Copernicus in the fifteenth and Tycho Brahe in
|
|
the sixteenth century A.D., observations have been from time to
|
|
time carried on with more or less correctness, until in the
|
|
present day the altitudes of the lunar mountains have been
|
|
determined with exactitude. Galileo explained the phenomena of
|
|
the lunar light produced during certain of her phases by the
|
|
existence of mountains, to which he assigned a mean altitude of
|
|
27,000 feet. After him Hevelius, an astronomer of Dantzic,
|
|
reduced the highest elevations to 15,000 feet; but the
|
|
calculations of Riccioli brought them up again to 21,000 feet.
|
|
|
|
At the close of the eighteenth century Herschel, armed with a powerful
|
|
telescope, considerably reduced the preceding measurements.
|
|
He assigned a height of 11,400 feet to the maximum elevations,
|
|
and reduced the mean of the different altitudes to little more
|
|
than 2,400 feet. But Herschel's calculations were in their turn
|
|
corrected by the observations of Halley, Nasmyth, Bianchini,
|
|
Gruithuysen, and others; but it was reserved for the labors of
|
|
Boeer and Maedler finally to solve the question. They succeeded
|
|
in measuring 1,905 different elevations, of which six exceed
|
|
15,000 feet, and twenty-two exceed 14,400 feet. The highest
|
|
summit of all towers to a height of 22,606 feet above the surface
|
|
of the lunar disc. At the same period the examination of the moon
|
|
was completed. She appeared completely riddled with craters, and
|
|
her essentially volcanic character was apparent at each observation.
|
|
By the absence of refraction in the rays of the planets occulted
|
|
by her we conclude that she is absolutely devoid of an atmosphere.
|
|
The absence of air entails the absence of water. It became,
|
|
therefore, manifest that the Selenites, to support life under
|
|
such conditions, must possess a special organization of their
|
|
own, must differ remarkably from the inhabitants of the earth.
|
|
|
|
At length, thanks to modern art, instruments of still higher
|
|
perfection searched the moon without intermission, not leaving
|
|
a single point of her surface unexplored; and notwithstanding
|
|
that her diameter measures 2,150 miles, her surface equals the
|
|
one-fifteenth part of that of our globe, and her bulk the
|
|
one-forty-ninth part of that of the terrestrial spheroid-- not
|
|
one of her secrets was able to escape the eyes of the
|
|
astronomers; and these skillful men of science carried to an
|
|
even greater degree their prodigious observations.
|
|
|
|
Thus they remarked that, during full moon, the disc appeared
|
|
scored in certain parts with white lines; and, during the
|
|
phases, with black. On prosecuting the study of these with
|
|
still greater precision, they succeeded in obtaining an exact
|
|
account of the nature of these lines. They were long and narrow
|
|
furrows sunk between parallel ridges, bordering generally upon
|
|
the edges of the craters. Their length varied between ten and 100
|
|
miles, and their width was about 1,600 yards. Astronomers called
|
|
them chasms, but they could not get any further. Whether these
|
|
chasms were the dried-up beds of ancient rivers or not they were
|
|
unable thoroughly to ascertain.
|
|
|
|
The Americans, among others, hoped one day or other to
|
|
determine this geological question. They also undertook to
|
|
examine the true nature of that system of parallel ramparts
|
|
discovered on the moon's surface by Gruithuysen, a learned
|
|
professor of Munich, who considered them to be "a system of
|
|
fortifications thrown up by the Selenitic engineers." These two
|
|
points, yet obscure, as well as others, no doubt, could not be
|
|
definitely settled except by direct communication with the moon.
|
|
|
|
Regarding the degree of intensity of its light, there was
|
|
nothing more to learn on this point. It was known that it is
|
|
300,000 times weaker than that of the sun, and that its heat has
|
|
no appreciable effect upon the thermometer. As to the
|
|
phenomenon known as the "ashy light," it is explained naturally
|
|
by the effect of the transmission of the solar rays from the
|
|
earth to the moon, which give the appearance of completeness to
|
|
the lunar disc, while it presents itself under the crescent form
|
|
during its first and last phases.
|
|
|
|
Such was the state of knowledge acquired regarding the earth's
|
|
satellite, which the Gun Club undertook to perfect in all its
|
|
aspects, cosmographic, geological, political, and moral.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER VI
|
|
|
|
|
|
PERMISSIVE LIMITS OF IGNORANCE AND BELIEF IN THE UNITED STATES
|
|
|
|
|
|
The immediate result of Barbicane's proposition was to place upon
|
|
the orders of the day all the astronomical facts relative to the
|
|
Queen of the Night. Everybody set to work to study assiduously.
|
|
One would have thought that the moon had just appeared for the
|
|
first time, and that no one had ever before caught a glimpse of
|
|
her in the heavens. The papers revived all the old anecdotes in
|
|
which the "sun of the wolves" played a part; they recalled the
|
|
influences which the ignorance of past ages ascribed to her; in
|
|
short, all America was seized with selenomania, or had become moon-mad.
|
|
|
|
The scientific journals, for their part, dealt more especially with
|
|
the questions which touched upon the enterprise of the Gun Club.
|
|
The letter of the Observatory of Cambridge was published by them,
|
|
and commented upon with unreserved approval.
|
|
|
|
Until that time most people had been ignorant of the mode in which
|
|
the distance which separates the moon from the earth is calculated.
|
|
They took advantage of this fact to explain to them that this
|
|
distance was obtained by measuring the parallax of the moon.
|
|
The term parallax proving "caviare to the general," they further
|
|
explained that it meant the angle formed by the inclination of two
|
|
straight lines drawn from either extremity of the earth's radius
|
|
to the moon. On doubts being expressed as to the correctness of
|
|
this method, they immediately proved that not only was the mean
|
|
distance 234,347 miles, but that astronomers could not possibly
|
|
be in error in their estimate by more than seventy miles either way.
|
|
|
|
To those who were not familiar with the motions of the moon,
|
|
they demonstrated that she possesses two distinct motions, the
|
|
first being that of rotation upon her axis, the second being
|
|
that of revolution round the earth, accomplishing both together
|
|
in an equal period of time, that is to say, in twenty-seven and
|
|
one-third days.
|
|
|
|
The motion of rotation is that which produces day and night on
|
|
the surface of the moon; save that there is only one day and one
|
|
night in the lunar month, each lasting three hundred and
|
|
fifty-four and one-third hours. But, happily for her, the face
|
|
turned toward the terrestrial globe is illuminated by it with an
|
|
intensity equal to that of fourteen moons. As to the other
|
|
face, always invisible to us, it has of necessity three hundred
|
|
and fifty-four hours of absolute night, tempered only by that
|
|
"pale glimmer which falls upon it from the stars."
|
|
|
|
Some well-intentioned, but rather obstinate persons, could not
|
|
at first comprehend how, if the moon displays invariably the
|
|
same face to the earth during her revolution, she can describe
|
|
one turn round herself. To such they answered, "Go into your
|
|
dining-room, and walk round the table in such a way as to always
|
|
keep your face turned toward the center; by the time you will
|
|
have achieved one complete round you will have completed one
|
|
turn around yourself, since your eye will have traversed
|
|
successively every point of the room. Well, then, the room is
|
|
the heavens, the table is the earth, and the moon is yourself."
|
|
And they would go away delighted.
|
|
|
|
So, then the moon displays invariably the same face to the
|
|
earth; nevertheless, to be quite exact, it is necessary to add
|
|
that, in consequence of certain fluctuations of north and south,
|
|
and of west and east, termed her libration, she permits rather
|
|
more than half, that is to say, five-sevenths, to be seen.
|
|
|
|
As soon as the ignoramuses came to understand as much as the
|
|
director of the observatory himself knew, they began to worry
|
|
themselves regarding her revolution round the earth, whereupon
|
|
twenty scientific reviews immediately came to the rescue.
|
|
They pointed out to them that the firmament, with its infinitude
|
|
of stars, may be considered as one vast dial-plate, upon which the
|
|
moon travels, indicating the true time to all the inhabitants of
|
|
the earth; that it is during this movement that the Queen of
|
|
Night exhibits her different phases; that the moon is _full_
|
|
when she is in _opposition_ with the sun, that is when the three
|
|
bodies are on the same straight line, the earth occupying the
|
|
center; that she is _new_ when she is in _conjunction_ with the
|
|
sun, that is, when she is between it and the earth; and, lastly
|
|
that she is in her _first_ or _last_ quarter, when she makes
|
|
with the sun and the earth an angle of which she herself occupies
|
|
the apex.
|
|
|
|
Regarding the altitude which the moon attains above the horizon,
|
|
the letter of the Cambridge Observatory had said all that was to
|
|
be said in this respect. Every one knew that this altitude
|
|
varies according to the latitude of the observer. But the only
|
|
zones of the globe in which the moon passes the zenith, that is,
|
|
the point directly over the head of the spectator, are of
|
|
necessity comprised between the twenty-eighth parallels and
|
|
the equator. Hence the importance of the advice to try the
|
|
experiment upon some point of that part of the globe, in order
|
|
that the projectile might be discharged perpendicularly, and so
|
|
the soonest escape the action of gravitation. This was an
|
|
essential condition to the success of the enterprise, and
|
|
continued actively to engage the public attention.
|
|
|
|
Regarding the path described by the moon in her revolution round
|
|
the earth, the Cambridge Observatory had demonstrated that this
|
|
path is a re-entering curve, not a perfect circle, but an
|
|
ellipse, of which the earth occupies one of the _foci_. It was
|
|
also well understood that it is farthest removed from the earth
|
|
during its _apogee_, and approaches most nearly to it at its _perigee_.
|
|
|
|
Such was then the extent of knowledge possessed by every
|
|
American on the subject, and of which no one could decently
|
|
profess ignorance. Still, while these principles were being
|
|
rapidly disseminated many errors and illusory fears proved less
|
|
easy to eradicate.
|
|
|
|
For instance, some worthy persons maintained that the moon was
|
|
an ancient comet which, in describing its elongated orbit round
|
|
the sun, happened to pass near the earth, and became confined
|
|
within her circle of attraction. These drawing-room astronomers
|
|
professed to explain the charred aspect of the moon-- a disaster
|
|
which they attributed to the intensity of the solar heat; only,
|
|
on being reminded that comets have an atmosphere, and that the
|
|
moon has little or none, they were fairly at a loss for a reply.
|
|
|
|
Others again, belonging to the doubting class, expressed certain
|
|
fears as to the position of the moon. They had heard it said
|
|
that, according to observations made in the time of the Caliphs,
|
|
her revolution had become accelerated in a certain degree.
|
|
Hence they concluded, logically enough, that an acceleration of
|
|
motion ought to be accompanied by a corresponding diminution in
|
|
the distance separating the two bodies; and that, supposing the
|
|
double effect to be continued to infinity, the moon would end by
|
|
one day falling into the earth. However, they became reassured
|
|
as to the fate of future generations on being apprised that,
|
|
according to the calculations of Laplace, this acceleration of
|
|
motion is confined within very restricted limits, and that a
|
|
proportional diminution of speed will be certain to succeed it.
|
|
So, then, the stability of the solar system would not be deranged
|
|
in ages to come.
|
|
|
|
There remains but the third class, the superstitious.
|
|
These worthies were not content merely to rest in ignorance;
|
|
they must know all about things which had no existence whatever,
|
|
and as to the moon, they had long known all about her. One set
|
|
regarded her disc as a polished mirror, by means of which people
|
|
could see each other from different points of the earth and
|
|
interchange their thoughts. Another set pretended that out of
|
|
one thousand new moons that had been observed, nine hundred and
|
|
fifty had been attended with remarkable disturbances, such as
|
|
cataclysms, revolutions, earthquakes, the deluge, etc. Then they
|
|
believed in some mysterious influence exercised by her over human
|
|
destinies-- that every Selenite was attached to some inhabitant
|
|
of the earth by a tie of sympathy; they maintained that the
|
|
entire vital system is subject to her control, etc. But in time
|
|
the majority renounced these vulgar errors, and espoused the true
|
|
side of the question. As for the Yankees, they had no other
|
|
ambition than to take possession of this new continent of the sky,
|
|
and to plant upon the summit of its highest elevation the star-
|
|
spangled banner of the United States of America.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER VII
|
|
|
|
|
|
THE HYMN OF THE CANNON-BALL
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Observatory of Cambridge in its memorable letter had treated the
|
|
question from a purely astronomical point of view. The mechanical
|
|
part still remained.
|
|
|
|
President Barbicane had, without loss of time, nominated a
|
|
working committee of the Gun Club. The duty of this committee
|
|
was to resolve the three grand questions of the cannon, the
|
|
projectile, and the powder. It was composed of four members of
|
|
great technical knowledge, Barbicane (with a casting vote in
|
|
case of equality), General Morgan, Major Elphinstone, and J. T.
|
|
Maston, to whom were confided the functions of secretary. On the
|
|
8th of October the committee met at the house of President
|
|
Barbicane, 3 Republican Street. The meeting was opened by the
|
|
president himself.
|
|
|
|
"Gentlemen," said he, "we have to resolve one of the most
|
|
important problems in the whole of the noble science of gunnery.
|
|
It might appear, perhaps, the most logical course to devote our
|
|
first meeting to the discussion of the engine to be employed.
|
|
Nevertheless, after mature consideration, it has appeared to me
|
|
that the question of the projectile must take precedence of that
|
|
of the cannon, and that the dimensions of the latter must
|
|
necessarily depend on those of the former."
|
|
|
|
"Suffer me to say a word," here broke in J. T. Maston.
|
|
Permission having been granted, "Gentlemen," said he with an
|
|
inspired accent, "our president is right in placing the question
|
|
of the projectile above all others. The ball we are about to
|
|
discharge at the moon is our ambassador to her, and I wish to
|
|
consider it from a moral point of view. The cannon-ball,
|
|
gentlemen, to my mind, is the most magnificent manifestation of
|
|
human power. If Providence has created the stars and the planets,
|
|
man has called the cannon-ball into existence. Let Providence
|
|
claim the swiftness of electricity and of light, of the stars,
|
|
the comets, and the planets, of wind and sound-- we claim to
|
|
have invented the swiftness of the cannon-ball, a hundred times
|
|
superior to that of the swiftest horses or railway train.
|
|
How glorious will be the moment when, infinitely exceeding all
|
|
hitherto attained velocities, we shall launch our new projectile
|
|
with the rapidity of seven miles a second! Shall it not,
|
|
gentlemen-- shall it not be received up there with the honors
|
|
due to a terrestrial ambassador?"
|
|
|
|
Overcome with emotion the orator sat down and applied himself to
|
|
a huge plate of sandwiches before him.
|
|
|
|
"And now," said Barbicane, "let us quit the domain of poetry and
|
|
come direct to the question."
|
|
|
|
"By all means," replied the members, each with his mouth full
|
|
of sandwich.
|
|
|
|
"The problem before us," continued the president, "is how to
|
|
communicate to a projectile a velocity of 12,000 yards per second.
|
|
Let us at present examine the velocities hitherto attained.
|
|
General Morgan will be able to enlighten us on this point."
|
|
|
|
"And the more easily," replied the general, "that during the war
|
|
I was a member of the committee of experiments. I may say,
|
|
then, that the 100-pounder Dahlgrens, which carried a distance
|
|
of 5,000 yards, impressed upon their projectile an initial
|
|
velocity of 500 yards a second. The Rodman Columbiad threw a
|
|
shot weighing half a ton a distance of six miles, with a
|
|
velocity of 800 yards per second-- a result which Armstrong and
|
|
Palisser have never obtained in England."
|
|
|
|
"This," replied Barbicane, "is, I believe, the maximum velocity
|
|
ever attained?"
|
|
|
|
"It is so," replied the general.
|
|
|
|
"Ah!" groaned J. T. Maston, "if my mortar had not burst----"
|
|
|
|
"Yes," quietly replied Barbicane, "but it did burst. We must
|
|
take, then, for our starting point, this velocity of 800 yards.
|
|
We must increase it twenty-fold. Now, reserving for another
|
|
discussion the means of producing this velocity, I will call
|
|
your attention to the dimensions which it will be proper to
|
|
assign to the shot. You understand that we have nothing to do
|
|
here with projectiles weighing at most but half a ton."
|
|
|
|
"Why not?" demanded the major.
|
|
|
|
"Because the shot," quickly replied J. T. Maston, "must be big
|
|
enough to attract the attention of the inhabitants of the moon,
|
|
if there are any?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes," replied Barbicane, "and for another reason more important still."
|
|
|
|
"What mean you?" asked the major.
|
|
|
|
"I mean that it is not enough to discharge a projectile, and
|
|
then take no further notice of it; we must follow it throughout
|
|
its course, up to the moment when it shall reach its goal."
|
|
|
|
"What?" shouted the general and the major in great surprise.
|
|
|
|
"Undoubtedly," replied Barbicane composedly, "or our experiment
|
|
would produce no result."
|
|
|
|
"But then," replied the major, "you will have to give this
|
|
projectile enormous dimensions."
|
|
|
|
"No! Be so good as to listen. You know that optical
|
|
instruments have acquired great perfection; with certain
|
|
instruments we have succeeded in obtaining enlargements of 6,000
|
|
times and reducing the moon to within forty miles' distance.
|
|
Now, at this distance, any objects sixty feet square would be
|
|
perfectly visible.
|
|
|
|
"If, then, the penetrative power of telescopes has not been
|
|
further increased, it is because that power detracts from their
|
|
light; and the moon, which is but a reflecting mirror, does not
|
|
give back sufficient light to enable us to perceive objects of
|
|
lesser magnitude."
|
|
|
|
"Well, then, what do you propose to do?" asked the general.
|
|
"Would you give your projectile a diameter of sixty feet?"
|
|
|
|
"Not so."
|
|
|
|
"Do you intend, then, to increase the luminous power of the moon?"
|
|
|
|
"Exactly so. If I can succeed in diminishing the density of the
|
|
atmosphere through which the moon's light has to travel I shall
|
|
have rendered her light more intense. To effect that object it
|
|
will be enough to establish a telescope on some elevated mountain.
|
|
That is what we will do."
|
|
|
|
"I give it up," answered the major. "You have such a way of
|
|
simplifying things. And what enlargement do you expect to
|
|
obtain in this way?"
|
|
|
|
"One of 48,000 times, which should bring the moon within an
|
|
apparent distance of five miles; and, in order to be visible,
|
|
objects need not have a diameter of more than nine feet."
|
|
|
|
"So, then," cried J. T. Maston, "our projectile need not be more
|
|
than nine feet in diameter."
|
|
|
|
"Let me observe, however," interrupted Major Elphinstone, "this
|
|
will involve a weight such as----"
|
|
|
|
"My dear major," replied Barbicane, "before discussing its
|
|
weight permit me to enumerate some of the marvels which our
|
|
ancestors have achieved in this respect. I don't mean to
|
|
pretend that the science of gunnery has not advanced, but it
|
|
is as well to bear in mind that during the middle ages they
|
|
obtained results more surprising, I will venture to say, than ours.
|
|
For instance, during the siege of Constantinople by Mahomet II.,
|
|
in 1453, stone shot of 1,900 pounds weight were employed. At Malta,
|
|
in the time of the knights, there was a gun of the fortress of St.
|
|
Elmo which threw a projectile weighing 2,500 pounds. And, now,
|
|
what is the extent of what we have seen ourselves? Armstrong guns
|
|
discharging shot of 500 pounds, and the Rodman guns projectiles
|
|
of half a ton! It seems, then, that if projectiles have gained
|
|
in range, they have lost far more in weight. Now, if we turn our
|
|
efforts in that direction, we ought to arrive, with the progress
|
|
on science, at ten times the weight of the shot of Mahomet II.
|
|
and the Knights of Malta."
|
|
|
|
"Clearly," replied the major; "but what metal do you calculate
|
|
upon employing?"
|
|
|
|
"Simply cast iron," said General Morgan.
|
|
|
|
"But," interrupted the major, "since the weight of a shot is
|
|
proportionate to its volume, an iron ball of nine feet in
|
|
diameter would be of tremendous weight."
|
|
|
|
"Yes, if it were solid, not if it were hollow."
|
|
|
|
"Hollow? then it would be a shell?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, a shell," replied Barbicane; "decidely it must be. A solid
|
|
shot of 108 inches would weigh more than 200,000 pounds, a weight
|
|
evidently far too great. Still, as we must reserve a certain
|
|
stability for our projectile, I propose to give it a weight of
|
|
20,000 pounds."
|
|
|
|
"What, then, will be the thickness of the sides?" asked the major.
|
|
|
|
"If we follow the usual proportion," replied Morgan, "a diameter
|
|
of 108 inches would require sides of two feet thickness, or less."
|
|
|
|
"That would be too much," replied Barbicane; "for you will
|
|
observe that the question is not that of a shot intended to
|
|
pierce an iron plate; it will suffice to give it sides strong
|
|
enough to resist the pressure of the gas. The problem,
|
|
therefore, is this-- What thickness ought a cast-iron shell to
|
|
have in order not to weight more than 20,000 pounds? Our clever
|
|
secretary will soon enlighten us upon this point."
|
|
|
|
"Nothing easier." replied the worthy secretary of the committee;
|
|
and, rapidly tracing a few algebraical formulae upon paper,
|
|
among which _n_^2 and _x_^2 frequently appeared, he presently said:
|
|
|
|
"The sides will require a thickness of less than two inches."
|
|
|
|
"Will that be enough?" asked the major doubtfully.
|
|
|
|
"Clearly not!" replied the president.
|
|
|
|
"What is to be done, then?" said Elphinstone, with a puzzled air.
|
|
|
|
"Employ another metal instead of iron."
|
|
|
|
"Copper?" said Morgan.
|
|
|
|
"No! that would be too heavy. I have better than that to offer."
|
|
|
|
"What then?" asked the major.
|
|
|
|
"Aluminum!" replied Barbicane.
|
|
|
|
"Aluminum?" cried his three colleagues in chorus.
|
|
|
|
"Unquestionably, my friends. This valuable metal possesses the
|
|
whiteness of silver, the indestructibility of gold, the tenacity
|
|
of iron, the fusibility of copper, the lightness of glass. It is
|
|
easily wrought, is very widely distributed, forming the base of
|
|
most of the rocks, is three times lighter than iron, and seems to
|
|
have been created for the express purpose of furnishing us with
|
|
the material for our projectile."
|
|
|
|
"But, my dear president," said the major, "is not the cost price
|
|
of aluminum extremely high?"
|
|
|
|
"It was so at its first discovery, but it has fallen now to nine
|
|
dollars a pound."
|
|
|
|
"But still, nine dollars a pound!" replied the major, who was
|
|
not willing readily to give in; "even that is an enormous price."
|
|
|
|
"Undoubtedly, my dear major; but not beyond our reach."
|
|
|
|
"What will the projectile weigh then?" asked Morgan.
|
|
|
|
"Here is the result of my calculations," replied Barbicane.
|
|
"A shot of 108 inches in diameter, and twelve inches in
|
|
thickness, would weigh, in cast-iron, 67,440 pounds; cast in
|
|
aluminum, its weight will be reduced to 19,250 pounds."
|
|
|
|
"Capital!" cried the major; "but do you know that, at nine
|
|
dollars a pound, this projectile will cost----"
|
|
|
|
"One hundred and seventy-three thousand and fifty dollars ($173,050).
|
|
I know it quite well. But fear not, my friends; the money will not
|
|
be wanting for our enterprise. I will answer for it. Now what say
|
|
you to aluminum, gentlemen?"
|
|
|
|
"Adopted!" replied the three members of the committee. So ended
|
|
the first meeting. The question of the projectile was
|
|
definitely settled.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER VII
|
|
|
|
|
|
HISTORY OF THE CANNON
|
|
|
|
|
|
The resolutions passed at the last meeting produced a great
|
|
effect out of doors. Timid people took fright at the idea of
|
|
a shot weighing 20,000 pounds being launched into space; they
|
|
asked what cannon could ever transmit a sufficient velocity to
|
|
such a mighty mass. The minutes of the second meeting were
|
|
destined triumphantly to answer such questions. The following
|
|
evening the discussion was renewed.
|
|
|
|
"My dear colleagues," said Barbicane, without further preamble,
|
|
"the subject now before us is the construction of the engine,
|
|
its length, its composition, and its weight. It is probable
|
|
that we shall end by giving it gigantic dimensions; but however
|
|
great may be the difficulties in the way, our mechanical genius
|
|
will readily surmount them. Be good enough, then, to give me
|
|
your attention, and do not hesitate to make objections at the close.
|
|
I have no fear of them. The problem before us is how to communicate
|
|
an initial force of 12,000 yards per second to a shell of 108
|
|
inches in diameter, weighing 20,000 pounds. Now when a projectile
|
|
is launched into space, what happens to it? It is acted upon by
|
|
three independent forces: the resistance of the air, the attraction
|
|
of the earth, and the force of impulsion with which it is endowed.
|
|
Let us examine these three forces. The resistance of the air is of
|
|
little importance. The atmosphere of the earth does not exceed
|
|
forty miles. Now, with the given rapidity, the projectile will
|
|
have traversed this in five seconds, and the period is too brief
|
|
for the resistance of the medium to be regarded otherwise than
|
|
as insignificant. Proceding, then, to the attraction of the earth,
|
|
that is, the weight of the shell, we know that this weight will
|
|
diminish in the inverse ratio of the square of the distance.
|
|
When a body left to itself falls to the surface of the earth, it
|
|
falls five feet in the first second; and if the same body were
|
|
removed 257,542 miles further off, in other words, to the distance
|
|
of the moon, its fall would be reduced to about half a line in the
|
|
first second. That is almost equivalent to a state of perfect rest.
|
|
Our business, then, is to overcome progressively this action
|
|
of gravitation. The mode of accomplishing that is by the force
|
|
of impulsion."
|
|
|
|
"There's the difficulty," broke in the major.
|
|
|
|
"True," replied the president; "but we will overcome that, for
|
|
the force of impulsion will depend on the length of the engine
|
|
and the powder employed, the latter being limited only by the
|
|
resisting power of the former. Our business, then, to-day is
|
|
with the dimensions of the cannon."
|
|
|
|
"Now, up to the present time," said Barbicane, "our longest guns
|
|
have not exceeded twenty-five feet in length. We shall
|
|
therefore astonish the world by the dimensions we shall be
|
|
obliged to adopt. It must evidently be, then, a gun of great
|
|
range, since the length of the piece will increase the detention
|
|
of the gas accumulated behind the projectile; but there is no
|
|
advantage in passing certain limits."
|
|
|
|
"Quite so," said the major. "What is the rule in such a case?"
|
|
|
|
"Ordinarily the length of a gun is twenty to twenty-five times
|
|
the diameter of the shot, and its weight two hundred and
|
|
thirty-five to two hundred and forty times that of the shot."
|
|
|
|
"That is not enough," cried J. T. Maston impetuously.
|
|
|
|
"I agree with you, my good friend; and, in fact, following this
|
|
proportion for a projectile nine feet in diameter, weighing 30,000
|
|
pounds, the gun would only have a length of two hundred and twenty-
|
|
five feet, and a weight of 7,200,000 pounds."
|
|
|
|
"Ridiculous!" rejoined Maston. "As well take a pistol."
|
|
|
|
"I think so too," replied Barbicane; "that is why I propose to
|
|
quadruple that length, and to construct a gun of nine hundred feet."
|
|
|
|
The general and the major offered some objections; nevertheless,
|
|
the proposition, actively supported by the secretary, was
|
|
definitely adopted.
|
|
|
|
"But," said Elphinstone, "what thickness must we give it?"
|
|
|
|
"A thickness of six feet," replied Barbicane.
|
|
|
|
"You surely don't think of mounting a mass like that upon a
|
|
carriage?" asked the major.
|
|
|
|
"It would be a superb idea, though," said Maston.
|
|
|
|
"But impracticable," replied Barbicane. "No, I think of sinking
|
|
this engine in the earth alone, binding it with hoops of wrought
|
|
iron, and finally surrounding it with a thick mass of masonry of
|
|
stone and cement. The piece once cast, it must be bored with
|
|
great precision, so as to preclude any possible windage. So there
|
|
will be no loss whatever of gas, and all the expansive force of
|
|
the powder will be employed in the propulsion."
|
|
|
|
"One simple question," said Elphinstone: "is our gun to be rifled?"
|
|
|
|
"No, certainly not," replied Barbicane; "we require an enormous
|
|
initial velocity; and you are well aware that a shot quits a
|
|
rifled gun less rapidly than it does a smooth-bore."
|
|
|
|
"True," rejoined the major.
|
|
|
|
The committee here adjourned for a few minutes to tea and sandwiches.
|
|
|
|
On the discussion being renewed, "Gentlemen," said Barbicane,
|
|
"we must now take into consideration the metal to be employed.
|
|
Our cannon must be possessed of great tenacity, great hardness,
|
|
be infusible by heat, indissoluble, and inoxidable by the
|
|
corrosive action of acids."
|
|
|
|
"There is no doubt about that," replied the major; "and as we
|
|
shall have to employ an immense quantity of metal, we shall not
|
|
be at a loss for choice."
|
|
|
|
"Well, then," said Morgan, "I propose the best alloy hitherto
|
|
known, which consists of one hundred parts of copper, twelve of
|
|
tin, and six of brass."
|
|
|
|
"I admit," replied the president, "that this composition has
|
|
yielded excellent results, but in the present case it would be
|
|
too expensive, and very difficult to work. I think, then, that
|
|
we ought to adopt a material excellent in its way and of low
|
|
price, such as cast iron. What is your advice, major?"
|
|
|
|
"I quite agree with you," replied Elphinstone.
|
|
|
|
"In fact," continued Barbicane, "cast iron costs ten times less
|
|
than bronze; it is easy to cast, it runs readily from the moulds
|
|
of sand, it is easy of manipulation, it is at once economical of
|
|
money and of time. In addition, it is excellent as a material,
|
|
and I well remember that during the war, at the siege of
|
|
Atlanta, some iron guns fired one thousand rounds at intervals
|
|
of twenty minutes without injury."
|
|
|
|
"Cast iron is very brittle, though," replied Morgan.
|
|
|
|
"Yes, but it possesses great resistance. I will now ask our
|
|
worthy secretary to calculate the weight of a cast-iron gun with
|
|
a bore of nine feet and a thickness of six feet of metal."
|
|
|
|
"In a moment," replied Maston. Then, dashing off some
|
|
algebraical formulae with marvelous facility, in a minute or two
|
|
he declared the following result:
|
|
|
|
"The cannon will weigh 68,040 tons. And, at two cents a pound,
|
|
it will cost----"
|
|
|
|
"Two million five hundred and ten thousand seven hundred and
|
|
one dollars."
|
|
|
|
Maston, the major, and the general regarded Barbicane with
|
|
uneasy looks.
|
|
|
|
"Well, gentlemen," replied the president, "I repeat what I
|
|
said yesterday. Make yourselves easy; the millions will not
|
|
be wanting."
|
|
|
|
With this assurance of their president the committee separated,
|
|
after having fixed their third meeting for the following evening.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER IX
|
|
|
|
|
|
THE QUESTION OF THE POWDERS
|
|
|
|
|
|
There remained for consideration merely the question of powders.
|
|
The public awaited with interest its final decision. The size
|
|
of the projectile, the length of the cannon being settled, what
|
|
would be the quantity of powder necessary to produce impulsion?
|
|
|
|
It is generally asserted that gunpowder was invented in the
|
|
fourteenth century by the monk Schwartz, who paid for his grand
|
|
discovery with his life. It is, however, pretty well proved
|
|
that this story ought to be ranked among the legends of the
|
|
middle ages. Gunpowder was not invented by any one; it was the
|
|
lineal successor of the Greek fire, which, like itself, was
|
|
composed of sulfur and saltpeter. Few persons are acquainted
|
|
with the mechanical power of gunpowder. Now this is precisely
|
|
what is necessary to be understood in order to comprehend the
|
|
importance of the question submitted to the committee.
|
|
|
|
A litre of gunpowder weighs about two pounds; during combustion
|
|
it produces 400 litres of gas. This gas, on being liberated and
|
|
acted upon by temperature raised to 2,400 degrees, occupies a
|
|
space of 4,000 litres: consequently the volume of powder is to
|
|
the volume of gas produced by its combustion as 1 to 4,000.
|
|
One may judge, therefore, of the tremendous pressure on this
|
|
gas when compressed within a space 4,000 times too confined.
|
|
All this was, of course, well known to the members of the committee
|
|
when they met on the following evening.
|
|
|
|
The first speaker on this occasion was Major Elphinstone, who
|
|
had been the director of the gunpowder factories during the war.
|
|
|
|
"Gentlemen," said this distinguished chemist, "I begin with
|
|
some figures which will serve as the basis of our calculation.
|
|
The old 24-pounder shot required for its discharge sixteen pounds
|
|
of powder."
|
|
|
|
"You are certain of this amount?" broke in Barbicane.
|
|
|
|
"Quite certain," replied the major. "The Armstrong cannon
|
|
employs only seventy-five pounds of powder for a projectile
|
|
of eight hundred pounds, and the Rodman Columbiad uses only one
|
|
hundred and sixty pounds of powder to send its half ton shot a
|
|
distance of six miles. These facts cannot be called in question,
|
|
for I myself raised the point during the depositions taken before
|
|
the committee of artillery."
|
|
|
|
"Quite true," said the general.
|
|
|
|
"Well," replied the major, "these figures go to prove that the
|
|
quantity of powder is not increased with the weight of the shot;
|
|
that is to say, if a 24-pounder shot requires sixteen pounds of
|
|
powder;-- in other words, if in ordinary guns we employ a
|
|
quantity of powder equal to two-thirds of the weight of the
|
|
projectile, this proportion is not constant. Calculate, and you
|
|
will see that in place of three hundred and thirty-three pounds
|
|
of powder, the quantity is reduced to no more than one hundred
|
|
and sixty pounds."
|
|
|
|
"What are you aiming at?" asked the president.
|
|
|
|
"If you push your theory to extremes, my dear major," said J. T.
|
|
Maston, "you will get to this, that as soon as your shot becomes
|
|
sufficiently heavy you will not require any powder at all."
|
|
|
|
"Our friend Maston is always at his jokes, even in serious
|
|
matters," cried the major; "but let him make his mind easy, I am
|
|
going presently to propose gunpowder enough to satisfy his
|
|
artillerist's propensities. I only keep to statistical facts
|
|
when I say that, during the war, and for the very largest guns,
|
|
the weight of the powder was reduced, as the result of
|
|
experience, to a tenth part of the weight of the shot."
|
|
|
|
"Perfectly correct," said Morgan; "but before deciding the
|
|
quantity of powder necessary to give the impulse, I think it
|
|
would be as well----"
|
|
|
|
"We shall have to employ a large-grained powder," continued the
|
|
major; "its combustion is more rapid than that of the small."
|
|
|
|
"No doubt about that," replied Morgan; "but it is very
|
|
destructive, and ends by enlarging the bore of the pieces."
|
|
|
|
"Granted; but that which is injurious to a gun destined to
|
|
perform long service is not so to our Columbiad. We shall
|
|
run no danger of an explosion; and it is necessary that our
|
|
powder should take fire instantaneously in order that its
|
|
mechanical effect may be complete."
|
|
|
|
"We must have," said Maston, "several touch-holes, so as to fire
|
|
it at different points at the same time."
|
|
|
|
"Certainly," replied Elphinstone; "but that will render the
|
|
working of the piece more difficult. I return then to my
|
|
large-grained powder, which removes those difficulties.
|
|
In his Columbiad charges Rodman employed a powder as large
|
|
as chestnuts, made of willow charcoal, simply dried in cast-
|
|
iron pans. This powder was hard and glittering, left no trace
|
|
upon the hand, contained hydrogen and oxygen in large proportion,
|
|
took fire instantaneously, and, though very destructive, did not
|
|
sensibly injure the mouth-piece."
|
|
|
|
Up to this point Barbicane had kept aloof from the discussion;
|
|
he left the others to speak while he himself listened; he had
|
|
evidently got an idea. He now simply said, "Well, my friends,
|
|
what quantity of powder do you propose?"
|
|
|
|
The three members looked at one another.
|
|
|
|
"Two hundred thousand pounds." at last said Morgan.
|
|
|
|
"Five hundred thousand," added the major.
|
|
|
|
"Eight hundred thousand," screamed Maston.
|
|
|
|
A moment of silence followed this triple proposal; it was at
|
|
last broken by the president.
|
|
|
|
"Gentlemen," he quietly said, "I start from this principle, that
|
|
the resistance of a gun, constructed under the given conditions,
|
|
is unlimited. I shall surprise our friend Maston, then, by
|
|
stigmatizing his calculations as timid; and I propose to double
|
|
his 800,000 pounds of powder."
|
|
|
|
"Sixteen hundred thousand pounds?" shouted Maston, leaping from
|
|
his seat.
|
|
|
|
"Just so."
|
|
|
|
"We shall have to come then to my ideal of a cannon half a mile
|
|
long; for you see 1,600,000 pounds will occupy a space of about
|
|
20,000 cubic feet; and since the contents of your cannon do not
|
|
exceed 54,000 cubic feet, it would be half full; and the bore
|
|
will not be more than long enough for the gas to communicate to
|
|
the projectile sufficient impulse."
|
|
|
|
"Nevertheless," said the president, "I hold to that quantity
|
|
of powder. Now, 1,600,000 pounds of powder will create
|
|
6,000,000,000 litres of gas. Six thousand millions!
|
|
You quite understand?"
|
|
|
|
"What is to be done then?" said the general.
|
|
|
|
"The thing is very simple; we must reduce this enormous quantity
|
|
of powder, while preserving to it its mechanical power."
|
|
|
|
"Good; but by what means?"
|
|
|
|
"I am going to tell you," replied Barbicane quietly.
|
|
|
|
"Nothing is more easy than to reduce this mass to one quarter of
|
|
its bulk. You know that curious cellular matter which
|
|
constitutes the elementary tissues of vegetable? This substance
|
|
is found quite pure in many bodies, especially in cotton, which
|
|
is nothing more than the down of the seeds of the cotton plant.
|
|
Now cotton, combined with cold nitric acid, become transformed
|
|
into a substance eminently insoluble, combustible, and explosive.
|
|
It was first discovered in 1832, by Braconnot, a French chemist,
|
|
who called it xyloidine. In 1838 another Frenchman, Pelouze,
|
|
investigated its different properties, and finally, in 1846,
|
|
Schonbein, professor of chemistry at Bale, proposed its employment
|
|
for purposes of war. This powder, now called pyroxyle, or
|
|
fulminating cotton, is prepared with great facility by simply
|
|
plunging cotton for fifteen minutes in nitric acid, then washing
|
|
it in water, then drying it, and it is ready for use."
|
|
|
|
"Nothing could be more simple," said Morgan.
|
|
|
|
"Moreover, pyroxyle is unaltered by moisture-- a valuable
|
|
property to us, inasmuch as it would take several days to charge
|
|
the cannon. It ignites at 170 degrees in place of 240, and its
|
|
combustion is so rapid that one may set light to it on the top
|
|
of the ordinary powder, without the latter having time to ignite."
|
|
|
|
"Perfect!" exclaimed the major.
|
|
|
|
"Only it is more expensive."
|
|
|
|
"What matter?" cried J. T. Maston.
|
|
|
|
"Finally, it imparts to projectiles a velocity four times
|
|
superior to that of gunpowder. I will even add, that if we mix
|
|
it with one-eighth of its own weight of nitrate of potassium,
|
|
its expansive force is again considerably augmented."
|
|
|
|
"Will that be necessary?" asked the major.
|
|
|
|
"I think not," replied Barbicane. "So, then, in place of
|
|
1,600,000 pounds of powder, we shall have but 400,000 pounds of
|
|
fulminating cotton; and since we can, without danger, compress
|
|
500 pounds of cotton into twenty-seven cubic feet, the whole
|
|
quantity will not occupy a height of more than 180 feet within
|
|
the bore of the Columbiad. In this way the shot will have more
|
|
than 700 feet of bore to traverse under a force of 6,000,000,000
|
|
litres of gas before taking its flight toward the moon."
|
|
|
|
At this juncture J. T. Maston could not repress his emotion; he
|
|
flung himself into the arms of his friend with the violence of
|
|
a projectile, and Barbicane would have been stove in if he had
|
|
not been boom-proof.
|
|
|
|
This incident terminated the third meeting of the committee.
|
|
|
|
Barbicane and his bold colleagues, to whom nothing seemed
|
|
impossible, had succeeding in solving the complex problems of
|
|
projectile, cannon, and powder. Their plan was drawn up, and it
|
|
only remained to put it into execution.
|
|
|
|
"A mere matter of detail, a bagatelle," said J. T. Maston.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER X
|
|
|
|
|
|
ONE ENEMY _v._ TWENTY-FIVE MILLIONS OF FRIENDS
|
|
|
|
|
|
The American public took a lively interest in the smallest
|
|
details of the enterprise of the Gun Club. It followed day by
|
|
day the discussion of the committee. The most simple
|
|
preparations for the great experiment, the questions of figures
|
|
which it involved, the mechanical difficulties to be resolved--
|
|
in one word, the entire plan of work-- roused the popular
|
|
excitement to the highest pitch.
|
|
|
|
The purely scientific attraction was suddenly intensified by the
|
|
following incident:
|
|
|
|
We have seen what legions of admirers and friends Barbicane's
|
|
project had rallied round its author. There was, however,
|
|
one single individual alone in all the States of the Union who
|
|
protested against the attempt of the Gun Club. He attacked it
|
|
furiously on every opportunity, and human nature is such that
|
|
Barbicane felt more keenly the opposition of that one man than
|
|
he did the applause of all the others. He was well aware of the
|
|
motive of this antipathy, the origin of this solitary enmity,
|
|
the cause of its personality and old standing, and in what
|
|
rivalry of self-love it had its rise.
|
|
|
|
This persevering enemy the president of the Gun Club had never seen.
|
|
Fortunate that it was so, for a meeting between the two men would
|
|
certainly have been attended with serious consequences. This rival
|
|
was a man of science, like Barbicane himself, of a fiery, daring,
|
|
and violent disposition; a pure Yankee. His name was Captain
|
|
Nicholl; he lived at Philadelphia.
|
|
|
|
Most people are aware of the curious struggle which arose during
|
|
the Federal war between the guns and armor of iron-plated ships.
|
|
The result was the entire reconstruction of the navy of both the
|
|
continents; as the one grew heavier, the other became thicker
|
|
in proportion. The Merrimac, the Monitor, the Tennessee, the
|
|
Weehawken discharged enormous projectiles themselves, after
|
|
having been armor-clad against the projectiles of others. In fact
|
|
they did to others that which they would not they should do to them--
|
|
that grand principle of immortality upon which rests the whole art
|
|
of war.
|
|
|
|
Now if Barbicane was a great founder of shot, Nicholl was a
|
|
great forger of plates; the one cast night and day at Baltimore,
|
|
the other forged day and night at Philadelphia. As soon as ever
|
|
Barbicane invented a new shot, Nicholl invented a new plate;
|
|
each followed a current of ideas essentially opposed to the other.
|
|
Happily for these citizens, so useful to their country, a distance
|
|
of from fifty to sixty miles separated them from one another, and
|
|
they had never yet met. Which of these two inventors had the
|
|
advantage over the other it was difficult to decide from the
|
|
results obtained. By last accounts, however, it would seem that
|
|
the armor-plate would in the end have to give way to the shot;
|
|
nevertheless, there were competent judges who had their doubts
|
|
on the point.
|
|
|
|
At the last experiment the cylindro-conical projectiles of
|
|
Barbicane stuck like so many pins in the Nicholl plates.
|
|
On that day the Philadelphia iron-forger then believed himself
|
|
victorious, and could not evince contempt enough for his rival;
|
|
but when the other afterward substituted for conical shot simple
|
|
600-pound shells, at very moderate velocity, the captain was
|
|
obliged to give in. In fact, these projectiles knocked his best
|
|
metal plate to shivers.
|
|
|
|
Matters were at this stage, and victory seemed to rest with the
|
|
shot, when the war came to an end on the very day when Nicholl
|
|
had completed a new armor-plate of wrought steel. It was a
|
|
masterpiece of its kind, and bid defiance to all the projectiles
|
|
of the world. The captain had it conveyed to the Polygon at
|
|
Washington, challenging the president of the Gun Club to break it.
|
|
Barbicane, peace having been declared, declined to try the experiment.
|
|
|
|
Nicholl, now furious, offered to expose his plate to the shock
|
|
of any shot, solid, hollow, round, or conical. Refused by the
|
|
president, who did not choose to compromise his last success.
|
|
|
|
Nicholl, disgusted by this obstinacy, tried to tempt Barbicane
|
|
by offering him every chance. He proposed to fix the plate
|
|
within two hundred yards of the gun. Barbicane still obstinate
|
|
in refusal. A hundred yards? Not even seventy-five!
|
|
|
|
"At fifty then!" roared the captain through the newspapers.
|
|
"At twenty-five yards! and I'll stand behind!"
|
|
|
|
Barbicane returned for answer that, even if Captain Nicholl
|
|
would be so good as to stand in front, he would not fire any more.
|
|
|
|
Nicholl could not contain himself at this reply; threw out hints
|
|
of cowardice; that a man who refused to fire a cannon-shot was
|
|
pretty near being afraid of it; that artillerists who fight at
|
|
six miles distance are substituting mathematical formulae for
|
|
individual courage.
|
|
|
|
To these insinuations Barbicane returned no answer; perhaps he
|
|
never heard of them, so absorbed was he in the calculations for
|
|
his great enterprise.
|
|
|
|
When his famous communication was made to the Gun Club, the
|
|
captain's wrath passed all bounds; with his intense jealousy was
|
|
mingled a feeling of absolute impotence. How was he to invent
|
|
anything to beat this 900-feet Columbiad? What armor-plate
|
|
could ever resist a projectile of 30,000 pounds weight?
|
|
Overwhelmed at first under this violent shock, he by and by
|
|
recovered himself, and resolved to crush the proposal by weight
|
|
of his arguments.
|
|
|
|
He then violently attacked the labors of the Gun Club, published
|
|
a number of letters in the newspapers, endeavored to prove Barbicane
|
|
ignorant of the first principles of gunnery. He maintained that
|
|
it was absolutely impossible to impress upon any body whatever
|
|
a velocity of 12,000 yards per second; that even with such a
|
|
velocity a projectile of such a weight could not transcend the
|
|
limits of the earth's atmosphere. Further still, even regarding
|
|
the velocity to be acquired, and granting it to be sufficient,
|
|
the shell could not resist the pressure of the gas developed by
|
|
the ignition of 1,600,000 pounds of powder; and supposing it to
|
|
resist that pressure, it would be less able to support that
|
|
temperature; it would melt on quitting the Columbiad, and fall
|
|
back in a red-hot shower upon the heads of the imprudent spectators.
|
|
|
|
Barbicane continued his work without regarding these attacks.
|
|
|
|
Nicholl then took up the question in its other aspects. Without
|
|
touching upon its uselessness in all points of view, he regarded
|
|
the experiment as fraught with extreme danger, both to the
|
|
citizens, who might sanction by their presence so reprehensible
|
|
a spectacle, and also to the towns in the neighborhood of this
|
|
deplorable cannon. He also observed that if the projectile did
|
|
not succeed in reaching its destination (a result absolutely
|
|
impossible), it must inevitably fall back upon the earth, and
|
|
that the shock of such a mass, multiplied by the square of its
|
|
velocity, would seriously endanger every point of the globe.
|
|
Under the circumstances, therefore, and without interfering with
|
|
the rights of free citizens, it was a case for the intervention
|
|
of Government, which ought not to endanger the safety of all for
|
|
the pleasure of one individual.
|
|
|
|
In spite of all his arguments, however, Captain Nicholl
|
|
remained alone in his opinion. Nobody listened to him, and he
|
|
did not succeed in alienating a single admirer from the
|
|
president of the Gun Club. The latter did not even take the
|
|
pains to refute the arguments of his rival.
|
|
|
|
Nicholl, driven into his last entrenchments, and not able to
|
|
fight personally in the cause, resolved to fight with money.
|
|
He published, therefore, in the Richmond _Inquirer_ a series of
|
|
wagers, conceived in these terms, and on an increasing scale:
|
|
|
|
No. 1 ($1,000).-- That the necessary funds for the experiment
|
|
of the Gun Club will not be forthcoming.
|
|
|
|
No. 2 ($2,000).-- That the operation of casting a cannon of 900
|
|
feet is impracticable, and cannot possibly succeed.
|
|
|
|
No. 3 ($3,000).-- That is it impossible to load the Columbiad,
|
|
and that the pyroxyle will take fire spontaneously under the
|
|
pressure of the projectile.
|
|
|
|
No. 4 ($4,000).-- That the Columbiad will burst at the first fire.
|
|
|
|
No. 5 ($5,000).-- That the shot will not travel farther than six miles,
|
|
and that it will fall back again a few seconds after its discharge.
|
|
|
|
It was an important sum, therefore, which the captain risked in
|
|
his invincible obstinacy. He had no less than $15,000 at stake.
|
|
|
|
Notwithstanding the importance of the challenge, on the 19th of
|
|
May he received a sealed packet containing the following
|
|
superbly laconic reply:
|
|
"BALTIMORE, October 19.
|
|
"Done.
|
|
"BARBICANE."
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XI
|
|
|
|
|
|
FLORIDA AND TEXAS
|
|
|
|
|
|
One question remained yet to be decided; it was necessary to
|
|
choose a favorable spot for the experiment. According to the
|
|
advice of the Observatory of Cambridge, the gun must be fired
|
|
perpendicularly to the plane of the horizon, that is to say,
|
|
toward the zenith. Now the moon does not traverse the zenith,
|
|
except in places situated between 0@ and 28@ of latitude. It
|
|
became, then, necessary to determine exactly that spot on the
|
|
globe where the immense Columbiad should be cast.
|
|
|
|
On the 20th of October, at a general meeting of the Gun Club,
|
|
Barbicane produced a magnificent map of the United States.
|
|
"Gentlemen," said he, in opening the discussion, "I presume that
|
|
we are all agreed that this experiment cannot and ought not to
|
|
be tried anywhere but within the limits of the soil of the Union.
|
|
Now, by good fortune, certain frontiers of the United States
|
|
extend downward as far as the 28th parallel of the north latitude.
|
|
If you will cast your eye over this map, you will see that we have at
|
|
our disposal the whole of the southern portion of Texas and Florida."
|
|
|
|
It was finally agreed, then, that the Columbiad must be cast on
|
|
the soil of either Texas or Florida. The result, however, of
|
|
this decision was to create a rivalry entirely without precedent
|
|
between the different towns of these two States.
|
|
|
|
The 28th parallel, on reaching the American coast, traverses the
|
|
peninsula of Florida, dividing it into two nearly equal portions.
|
|
Then, plunging into the Gulf of Mexico, it subtends the arc
|
|
formed by the coast of Alabama, Mississippi, and Louisiana;
|
|
then skirting Texas, off which it cuts an angle, it continues
|
|
its course over Mexico, crosses the Sonora, Old California,
|
|
and loses itself in the Pacific Ocean. It was, therefore,
|
|
only those portions of Texas and Florida which were situated
|
|
below this parallel which came within the prescribed conditions
|
|
of latitude.
|
|
|
|
Florida, in its southern part, reckons no cities of importance;
|
|
it is simply studded with forts raised against the roving Indians.
|
|
One solitary town, Tampa Town, was able to put in a claim in favor
|
|
of its situation.
|
|
|
|
In Texas, on the contrary, the towns are much more numerous
|
|
and important. Corpus Christi, in the county of Nueces, and all
|
|
the cities situated on the Rio Bravo, Laredo, Comalites, San
|
|
Ignacio on the Web, Rio Grande City on the Starr, Edinburgh in
|
|
the Hidalgo, Santa Rita, Elpanda, Brownsville in the Cameron,
|
|
formed an imposing league against the pretensions of Florida.
|
|
So, scarcely was the decision known, when the Texan and Floridan
|
|
deputies arrived at Baltimore in an incredibly short space of time.
|
|
From that very moment President Barbicane and the influential
|
|
members of the Gun Club were besieged day and night by
|
|
formidable claims. If seven cities of Greece contended for
|
|
the honor of having given birth to a Homer, here were two entire
|
|
States threatening to come to blows about the question of a cannon.
|
|
|
|
The rival parties promenaded the streets with arms in their hands;
|
|
and at every occasion of their meeting a collision was to be
|
|
apprehended which might have been attended with disastrous results.
|
|
Happily the prudence and address of President Barbicane averted
|
|
the danger. These personal demonstrations found a division in
|
|
the newspapers of the different States. The New York _Herald_ and
|
|
the _Tribune_ supported Texas, while the _Times_ and the _American
|
|
Review_ espoused the cause of the Floridan deputies. The members
|
|
of the Gun Club could not decide to which to give the preference.
|
|
|
|
Texas produced its array of twenty-six counties; Florida replied
|
|
that twelve counties were better than twenty-six in a country
|
|
only one-sixth part of the size.
|
|
|
|
Texas plumed itself upon its 330,000 natives; Florida, with a
|
|
far smaller territory, boasted of being much more densely
|
|
populated with 56,000.
|
|
|
|
The Texans, through the columns of the _Herald_ claimed that
|
|
some regard should be had to a State which grew the best cotton
|
|
in all America, produced the best green oak for the service of
|
|
the navy, and contained the finest oil, besides iron mines, in
|
|
which the yield was fifty per cent. of pure metal.
|
|
|
|
To this the _American Review_ replied that the soil of Florida,
|
|
although not equally rich, afforded the best conditions for the
|
|
moulding and casting of the Columbiad, consisting as it did of
|
|
sand and argillaceous earth.
|
|
|
|
"That may be all very well," replied the Texans; "but you must
|
|
first get to this country. Now the communications with Florida
|
|
are difficult, while the coast of Texas offers the bay of
|
|
Galveston, which possesses a circumference of fourteen leagues,
|
|
and is capable of containing the navies of the entire world!"
|
|
|
|
"A pretty notion truly," replied the papers in the interest of
|
|
Florida, "that of Galveston bay _below the 29th parallel!_
|
|
Have we not got the bay of Espiritu Santo, opening precisely upon
|
|
_the 28th degree_, and by which ships can reach Tampa Town by
|
|
direct route?"
|
|
|
|
"A fine bay; half choked with sand!"
|
|
|
|
"Choked yourselves!" returned the others.
|
|
|
|
Thus the war went on for several days, when Florida endeavored
|
|
to draw her adversary away on to fresh ground; and one morning
|
|
the _Times_ hinted that, the enterprise being essentially
|
|
American, it ought not to be attempted upon other than purely
|
|
American territory.
|
|
|
|
To these words Texas retorted, "American! are we not as much so
|
|
as you? Were not Texas and Florida both incorporated into the
|
|
Union in 1845?"
|
|
|
|
"Undoubtedly," replied the _Times_; "but we have belonged to the
|
|
Americans ever since 1820."
|
|
|
|
"Yes!" returned the _Tribune_; "after having been Spaniards or
|
|
English for two hundred years, you were sold to the United
|
|
States for five million dollars!"
|
|
|
|
"Well! and why need we blush for that? Was not Louisiana bought
|
|
from Napoleon in 1803 at the price of sixteen million dollars?"
|
|
|
|
"Scandalous!" roared the Texas deputies. "A wretched little
|
|
strip of country like Florida to dare to compare itself to
|
|
Texas, who, in place of selling herself, asserted her own
|
|
independence, drove out the Mexicans in March 2, 1846, and
|
|
declared herself a federal republic after the victory gained by
|
|
Samuel Houston, on the banks of the San Jacinto, over the troops
|
|
of Santa Anna!-- a country, in fine, which voluntarily annexed
|
|
itself to the United States of America!"
|
|
|
|
"Yes; because it was afraid of the Mexicans!" replied Florida.
|
|
|
|
"Afraid!" From this moment the state of things became intolerable.
|
|
A sanguinary encounter seemed daily imminent between the two
|
|
parties in the streets of Baltimore. It became necessary to keep
|
|
an eye upon the deputies.
|
|
|
|
President Barbicane knew not which way to look. Notes, documents,
|
|
letters full of menaces showered down upon his house. Which side
|
|
ought he to take? As regarded the appropriation of the soil, the
|
|
facility of communication, the rapidity of transport, the claims
|
|
of both States were evenly balanced. As for political prepossessions,
|
|
they had nothing to do with the question.
|
|
|
|
This dead block had existed for some little time, when Barbicane
|
|
resolved to get rid of it all at once. He called a meeting of
|
|
his colleagues, and laid before them a proposition which, it will
|
|
be seen, was profoundly sagacious.
|
|
|
|
"On carefully considering," he said, "what is going on now
|
|
between Florida and Texas, it is clear that the same
|
|
difficulties will recur with all the towns of the favored State.
|
|
The rivalry will descend from State to city, and so on downward.
|
|
Now Texas possesses eleven towns within the prescribed
|
|
conditions, which will further dispute the honor and create us
|
|
new enemies, while Florida has only one. I go in, therefore,
|
|
for Florida and Tampa Town."
|
|
|
|
This decision, on being made known, utterly crushed the
|
|
Texan deputies. Seized with an indescribable fury, they
|
|
addressed threatening letters to the different members of the
|
|
Gun Club by name. The magistrates had but one course to take,
|
|
and they took it. They chartered a special train, forced the
|
|
Texans into it whether they would or no; and they quitted the
|
|
city with a speed of thirty miles an hour.
|
|
|
|
Quickly, however, as they were despatched, they found time to
|
|
hurl one last and bitter sarcasm at their adversaries.
|
|
|
|
Alluding to the extent of Florida, a mere peninsula confined
|
|
between two seas, they pretended that it could never sustain
|
|
the shock of the discharge, and that it would "bust up" at the
|
|
very first shot.
|
|
|
|
"Very well, let it bust up!" replied the Floridans, with a
|
|
brevity of the days of ancient Sparta.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XII
|
|
|
|
|
|
URBI ET ORBI
|
|
|
|
|
|
The astronomical, mechanical, and topographical difficulties
|
|
resolved, finally came the question of finance. The sum
|
|
required was far too great for any individual, or even any
|
|
single State, to provide the requisite millions.
|
|
|
|
President Barbicane undertook, despite of the matter being a
|
|
purely American affair, to render it one of universal interest,
|
|
and to request the financial co-operation of all peoples.
|
|
It was, he maintained, the right and duty of the whole earth
|
|
to interfere in the affairs of its satellite. The subscription
|
|
opened at Baltimore extended properly to the whole world-- _Urbi
|
|
et orbi_.
|
|
|
|
This subscription was successful beyond all expectation;
|
|
notwithstanding that it was a question not of lending but of
|
|
giving the money. It was a purely disinterested operation in
|
|
the strictest sense of the term, and offered not the slightest
|
|
chance of profit.
|
|
|
|
The effect, however, of Barbicane's communication was not
|
|
confined to the frontiers of the United States; it crossed
|
|
the Atlantic and Pacific, invading simultaneously Asia and
|
|
Europe, Africa and Oceanica. The observatories of the Union
|
|
placed themselves in immediate communication with those of
|
|
foreign countries. Some, such as those of Paris, Petersburg,
|
|
Berlin, Stockholm, Hamburg, Malta, Lisbon, Benares, Madras,
|
|
and others, transmitted their good wishes; the rest maintained
|
|
a prudent silence, quietly awaiting the result. As for the
|
|
observatory at Greenwich, seconded as it was by the twenty-
|
|
two astronomical establishments of Great Britain, it spoke
|
|
plainly enough. It boldly denied the possibility of success,
|
|
and pronounced in favor of the theories of Captain Nicholl.
|
|
But this was nothing more than mere English jealousy.
|
|
|
|
On the 8th of October President Barbicane published a manifesto
|
|
full of enthusiasm, in which he made an appeal to "all persons
|
|
of good will upon the face of the earth." This document,
|
|
translated into all languages, met with immense success.
|
|
|
|
Subscription lists were opened in all the principal cities of
|
|
the Union, with a central office at the Baltimore Bank, 9
|
|
Baltimore Street.
|
|
|
|
In addition, subscriptions were received at the following banks
|
|
in the different states of the two continents:
|
|
|
|
At Vienna, with S. M. de Rothschild.
|
|
At Petersburg, Stieglitz and Co.
|
|
At Paris, The Credit Mobilier.
|
|
At Stockholm, Tottie and Arfuredson.
|
|
At London, N. M. Rothschild and Son.
|
|
At Turin, Ardouin and Co.
|
|
At Berlin, Mendelssohn.
|
|
At Geneva, Lombard, Odier and Co.
|
|
At Constantinople, The Ottoman Bank.
|
|
At Brussels, J. Lambert.
|
|
At Madrid, Daniel Weisweller.
|
|
At Amsterdam, Netherlands Credit Co.
|
|
At Rome, Torlonia and Co.
|
|
At Lisbon, Lecesne.
|
|
At Copenhagen, Private Bank.
|
|
At Rio de Janeiro, Private Bank.
|
|
At Montevideo, Private Bank.
|
|
At Valparaiso and Lima, Thomas la Chambre and Co.
|
|
At Mexico, Martin Daran and Co.
|
|
|
|
Three days after the manifesto of President Barbicane $4,000,000
|
|
were paid into the different towns of the Union. With such a
|
|
balance the Gun Club might begin operations at once. But some
|
|
days later advices were received to the effect that foreign
|
|
subscriptions were being eagerly taken up. Certain countries
|
|
distinguished themselves by their liberality; others untied
|
|
their purse-strings with less facility--a matter of temperament.
|
|
Figures are, however, more eloquent than words, and here is the
|
|
official statement of the sums which were paid in to the credit
|
|
of the Gun Club at the close of the subscription.
|
|
|
|
Russia paid in as her contingent the enormous sum of 368,733 roubles.
|
|
No one need be surprised at this, who bears in mind the scientific
|
|
taste of the Russians, and the impetus which they have given to
|
|
astronomical studies--thanks to their numerous observatories.
|
|
|
|
France began by deriding the pretensions of the Americans.
|
|
The moon served as a pretext for a thousand stale puns and
|
|
a score of ballads, in which bad taste contested the palm
|
|
with ignorance. But as formerly the French paid before singing,
|
|
so now they paid after having had their laugh, and they subscribed
|
|
for a sum of 1,253,930 francs. At that price they had a right
|
|
to enjoy themselves a little.
|
|
|
|
Austria showed herself generous in the midst of her financial crisis.
|
|
Her public contributions amounted to the sum of 216,000 florins--
|
|
a perfect godsend.
|
|
|
|
Fifty-two thousand rix-dollars were the remittance of Sweden
|
|
and Norway; the amount is large for the country, but it would
|
|
undoubtedly have been considerably increased had the
|
|
subscription been opened in Christiana simultaneously with that
|
|
at Stockholm. For some reason or other the Norwegians do not
|
|
like to send their money to Sweden.
|
|
|
|
Prussia, by a remittance of 250,000 thalers, testified her high
|
|
approval of the enterprise.
|
|
|
|
Turkey behaved generously; but she had a personal interest in
|
|
the matter. The moon, in fact, regulates the cycle of her years
|
|
and her fast of Ramadan. She could not do less than give
|
|
1,372,640 piastres; and she gave them with an eagerness which
|
|
denoted, however, some pressure on the part of the government.
|
|
|
|
Belgium distinguished herself among the second-rate states by
|
|
a grant of 513,000 francs-- about two centimes per head of
|
|
her population.
|
|
|
|
Holland and her colonies interested themselves to the extent of
|
|
110,000 florins, only demanding an allowance of five per cent.
|
|
discount for paying ready money.
|
|
|
|
Denmark, a little contracted in territory, gave nevertheless
|
|
9,000 ducats, proving her love for scientific experiments.
|
|
|
|
The Germanic Confederation pledged itself to 34,285 florins.
|
|
It was impossible to ask for more; besides, they would not have
|
|
given it.
|
|
|
|
Though very much crippled, Italy found 200,000 lire in the
|
|
pockets of her people. If she had had Venetia she would have
|
|
done better; but she had not.
|
|
|
|
The States of the Church thought that they could not send less
|
|
than 7,040 Roman crowns; and Portugal carried her devotion to
|
|
science as far as 30,000 cruzados. It was the widow's mite--
|
|
eighty-six piastres; but self-constituted empires are always
|
|
rather short of money.
|
|
|
|
Two hundred and fifty-seven francs, this was the modest
|
|
contribution of Switzerland to the American work. One must
|
|
freely admit that she did not see the practical side of
|
|
the matter. It did not seem to her that the mere despatch of
|
|
a shot to the moon could possibly establish any relation of
|
|
affairs with her; and it did not seem prudent to her to embark
|
|
her capital in so hazardous an enterprise. After all, perhaps
|
|
she was right.
|
|
|
|
As to Spain, she could not scrape together more than 110 reals.
|
|
She gave as an excuse that she had her railways to finish.
|
|
The truth is, that science is not favorably regarded in that
|
|
country, it is still in a backward state; and moreover, certain
|
|
Spaniards, not by any means the least educated, did not form a
|
|
correct estimate of the bulk of the projectile compared with
|
|
that of the moon. They feared that it would disturb the
|
|
established order of things. In that case it were better to
|
|
keep aloof; which they did to the tune of some reals.
|
|
|
|
There remained but England; and we know the contemptuous
|
|
antipathy with which she received Barbicane's proposition.
|
|
The English have but one soul for the whole twenty-six millions
|
|
of inhabitants which Great Britain contains. They hinted that
|
|
the enterprise of the Gun Club was contrary to the "principle of
|
|
non-intervention." And they did not subscribe a single farthing.
|
|
|
|
At this intimation the Gun Club merely shrugged its shoulders
|
|
and returned to its great work. When South America, that is to
|
|
say, Peru, Chili, Brazil, the provinces of La Plata and Columbia,
|
|
had poured forth their quota into their hands, the sum of $300,000,
|
|
it found itself in possession of a considerable capital, of which
|
|
the following is a statement:
|
|
|
|
United States subscriptions, . . $4,000,000
|
|
Foreign subscriptions . . . $1,446,675
|
|
-----------
|
|
Total, . . . . $5,446,675
|
|
|
|
|
|
Such was the sum which the public poured into the treasury of
|
|
the Gun Club.
|
|
|
|
Let no one be surprised at the vastness of the amount. The work
|
|
of casting, boring, masonry, the transport of workmen, their
|
|
establishment in an almost uninhabited country, the construction
|
|
of furnaces and workshops, the plant, the powder, the projectile,
|
|
and incipient expenses, would, according to the estimates, absorb
|
|
nearly the whole. Certain cannon-shots in the Federal war cost
|
|
one thousand dollars apiece. This one of President Barbicane,
|
|
unique in the annals of gunnery, might well cost five thousand
|
|
times more.
|
|
|
|
On the 20th of October a contract was entered into with the
|
|
manufactory at Coldspring, near New York, which during the war
|
|
had furnished the largest Parrott, cast-iron guns. It was
|
|
stipulated between the contracting parties that the manufactory
|
|
of Coldspring should engage to transport to Tampa Town,
|
|
in southern Florida, the necessary materials for casting
|
|
the Columbiad. The work was bound to be completed at latest
|
|
by the 15th of October following, and the cannon delivered
|
|
in good condition under penalty of a forfeit of one hundred
|
|
dollars a day to the moment when the moon should again present
|
|
herself under the same conditions-- that is to say, in eighteen
|
|
years and eleven days.
|
|
|
|
The engagement of the workmen, their pay, and all the necessary
|
|
details of the work, devolved upon the Coldspring Company.
|
|
|
|
This contract, executed in duplicate, was signed by Barbicane,
|
|
president of the Gun Club, of the one part, and T. Murchison
|
|
director of the Coldspring manufactory, of the other, who thus
|
|
executed the deed on behalf of their respective principals.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XIII
|
|
|
|
|
|
STONES HILL
|
|
|
|
|
|
When the decision was arrived at by the Gun Club, to the
|
|
disparagement of Texas, every one in America, where reading is
|
|
a universal acquirement, set to work to study the geography
|
|
of Florida. Never before had there been such a sale for works
|
|
like "Bertram's Travels in Florida," "Roman's Natural History of
|
|
East and West Florida," "William's Territory of Florida," and
|
|
"Cleland on the Cultivation of the Sugar-Cane in Florida."
|
|
It became necessary to issue fresh editions of these works.
|
|
|
|
Barbicane had something better to do than to read. He desired
|
|
to see things with his own eyes, and to mark the exact position
|
|
of the proposed gun. So, without a moment's loss of time, he
|
|
placed at the disposal of the Cambridge Observatory the funds
|
|
necessary for the construction of a telescope, and entered into
|
|
negotiations with the house of Breadwill and Co., of Albany, for
|
|
the construction of an aluminum projectile of the required size.
|
|
He then quitted Baltimore, accompanied by J. T. Maston, Major
|
|
Elphinstone, and the manager of the Coldspring factory.
|
|
|
|
On the following day, the four fellow-travelers arrived at
|
|
New Orleans. There they immediately embarked on board the
|
|
_Tampico_, a despatch-boat belonging to the Federal navy, which
|
|
the government had placed at their disposal; and, getting up
|
|
steam, the banks of Louisiana speedily disappeared from sight.
|
|
|
|
The passage was not long. Two days after starting, the _Tampico_,
|
|
having made four hundred and eighty miles, came in sight of the
|
|
coast of Florida. On a nearer approach Barbicane found himself
|
|
in view of a low, flat country of somewhat barren aspect.
|
|
After coasting along a series of creeks abounding in lobsters
|
|
and oysters, the _Tampico_ entered the bay of Espiritu Santo,
|
|
where she finally anchored in a small natural harbor, formed by
|
|
the _embouchure_ of the River Hillisborough, at seven P.M., on
|
|
the 22d of October.
|
|
|
|
Our four passengers disembarked at once. "Gentlemen," said
|
|
Barbicane, "we have no time to lose; tomorrow we must obtain
|
|
horses, and proceed to reconnoiter the country."
|
|
|
|
Barbicane had scarcely set his foot on shore when three thousand
|
|
of the inhabitants of Tampa Town came forth to meet him, an
|
|
honor due to the president who had signalized their country by
|
|
his choice.
|
|
|
|
Declining, however, every kind of ovation, Barbicane ensconced
|
|
himself in a room of the Franklin Hotel.
|
|
|
|
On the morrow some of the small horses of the Spanish breed,
|
|
full of vigor and of fire, stood snorting under his windows;
|
|
but instead of four steeds, here were fifty, together with
|
|
their riders. Barbicane descended with his three fellow-
|
|
travelers; and much astonished were they all to find themselves
|
|
in the midst of such a cavalcade. He remarked that every
|
|
horseman carried a carbine slung across his shoulders and
|
|
pistols in his holsters.
|
|
|
|
On expressing his surprise at these preparations, he was
|
|
speedily enlightened by a young Floridan, who quietly said:
|
|
|
|
"Sir, there are Seminoles there."
|
|
|
|
"What do you mean by Seminoles?"
|
|
|
|
"Savages who scour the prairies. We thought it best, therefore,
|
|
to escort you on your road."
|
|
|
|
"Pooh!" cried J. T. Maston, mounting his steed.
|
|
|
|
"All right," said the Floridan; "but it is true enough, nevertheless."
|
|
|
|
"Gentlemen," answered Barbicane, "I thank you for your kind
|
|
attention; but it is time to be off."
|
|
|
|
It was five A.M. when Barbicane and his party, quitting Tampa Town,
|
|
made their way along the coast in the direction of Alifia Creek.
|
|
This little river falls into Hillisborough Bay twelve miles above
|
|
Tampa Town. Barbicane and his escort coasted along its right bank
|
|
to the eastward. Soon the waves of the bay disappeared behind a
|
|
bend of rising ground, and the Floridan "champagne" alone offered
|
|
itself to view.
|
|
|
|
Florida, discovered on Palm Sunday, in 1512, by Juan Ponce de
|
|
Leon, was originally named _Pascha Florida_. It little deserved
|
|
that designation, with its dry and parched coasts. But after
|
|
some few miles of tract the nature of the soil gradually changes
|
|
and the country shows itself worthy of the name. Cultivated plains
|
|
soon appear, where are united all the productions of the northern
|
|
and tropical floras, terminating in prairies abounding with
|
|
pineapples and yams, tobacco, rice, cotton-plants, and sugar-canes,
|
|
which extend beyond reach of sight, flinging their riches broadcast
|
|
with careless prodigality.
|
|
|
|
Barbicane appeared highly pleased on observing the progressive
|
|
elevation of the land; and in answer to a question of J. T.
|
|
Maston, replied:
|
|
|
|
"My worthy friend, we cannot do better than sink our Columbiad
|
|
in these high grounds."
|
|
|
|
"To get nearer the moon, perhaps?" said the secretary of the Gun Club.
|
|
|
|
"Not exactly," replied Barbicane, smiling; "do you not see that
|
|
among these elevated plateaus we shall have a much easier work
|
|
of it? No struggles with the water-springs, which will save us
|
|
long expensive tubings; and we shall be working in daylight
|
|
instead of down a deep and narrow well. Our business, then, is
|
|
to open our trenches upon ground some hundreds of yards above
|
|
the level of the sea."
|
|
|
|
"You are right, sir," struck in Murchison, the engineer; "and, if I
|
|
mistake not, we shall ere long find a suitable spot for our purpose."
|
|
|
|
"I wish we were at the first stroke of the pickaxe," said the president.
|
|
|
|
"And I wish we were at the _last_," cried J. T. Maston.
|
|
|
|
About ten A.M. the little band had crossed a dozen miles.
|
|
To fertile plains succeeded a region of forests. There perfumes
|
|
of the most varied kinds mingled together in tropical profusion.
|
|
These almost impenetrable forests were composed of pomegranates,
|
|
orange-trees, citrons, figs, olives, apricots, bananas, huge vines,
|
|
whose blossoms and fruits rivaled each other in color and perfume.
|
|
Beneath the odorous shade of these magnificent trees fluttered and
|
|
warbled a little world of brilliantly plumaged birds.
|
|
|
|
J. T. Maston and the major could not repress their admiration on
|
|
finding themselves in the presence of the glorious beauties of
|
|
this wealth of nature. President Barbicane, however, less
|
|
sensitive to these wonders, was in haste to press forward;
|
|
the very luxuriance of the country was displeasing to him.
|
|
They hastened onward, therefore, and were compelled to ford
|
|
several rivers, not without danger, for they were infested
|
|
with huge alligators from fifteen to eighteen feet long.
|
|
Maston courageously menaced them with his steel hook, but he
|
|
only succeeded in frightening some pelicans and teal, while
|
|
tall flamingos stared stupidly at the party.
|
|
|
|
At length these denizens of the swamps disappeared in their
|
|
turn; smaller trees became thinly scattered among less dense
|
|
thickets-- a few isolated groups detached in the midst of
|
|
endless plains over which ranged herds of startled deer.
|
|
|
|
"At last," cried Barbicane, rising in his stirrups, "here we are
|
|
at the region of pines!"
|
|
|
|
"Yes! and of savages too," replied the major.
|
|
|
|
In fact, some Seminoles had just came in sight upon the horizon;
|
|
they rode violently backward and forward on their fleet horses,
|
|
brandishing their spears or discharging their guns with a dull report.
|
|
These hostile demonstrations, however, had no effect upon Barbicane
|
|
and his companions.
|
|
|
|
They were then occupying the center of a rocky plain, which the
|
|
sun scorched with its parching rays. This was formed by a
|
|
considerable elevation of the soil, which seemed to offer to the
|
|
members of the Gun Club all the conditions requisite for the
|
|
construction of their Columbiad.
|
|
|
|
"Halt!" said Barbicane, reining up. "Has this place any
|
|
local appellation?"
|
|
|
|
"It is called Stones Hill," replied one of the Floridans.
|
|
|
|
Barbicane, without saying a word, dismounted, seized his instruments,
|
|
and began to note his position with extreme exactness. The little
|
|
band, drawn up in the rear, watched his proceedings in profound silence.
|
|
|
|
At this moment the sun passed the meridian. Barbicane, after a
|
|
few moments, rapidly wrote down the result of his observations,
|
|
and said:
|
|
|
|
"This spot is situated eighteen hundred feet above the level of
|
|
the sea, in 27@ 7' N. lat. and 5@ 7' W. long. of the meridian
|
|
of Washington. It appears to me by its rocky and barren character
|
|
to offer all the conditions requisite for our experiment. On that
|
|
plain will be raised our magazines, workshops, furnaces, and
|
|
workmen's huts; and here, from this very spot," said he, stamping
|
|
his foot on the summit of Stones Hill, "hence shall our projectile
|
|
take its flight into the regions of the Solar World."
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XIV
|
|
|
|
|
|
PICKAXE AND TROWEL
|
|
|
|
|
|
The same evening Barbicane and his companions returned to Tampa
|
|
Town; and Murchison, the engineer, re-embarked on board the
|
|
Tampico for New Orleans. His object was to enlist an army of
|
|
workmen, and to collect together the greater part of the materials.
|
|
The members of the Gun Club remained at Tampa Town, for the
|
|
purpose of setting on foot the preliminary works by the aid of
|
|
the people of the country.
|
|
|
|
Eight days after its departure, the Tampico returned into the
|
|
bay of Espiritu Santo, with a whole flotilla of steamboats.
|
|
Murchison had succeeded in assembling together fifteen
|
|
hundred artisans. Attracted by the high pay and considerable
|
|
bounties offered by the Gun Club, he had enlisted a choice
|
|
legion of stokers, iron-founders, lime-burners, miners,
|
|
brickmakers, and artisans of every trade, without distinction
|
|
of color. As many of these people brought their families with
|
|
them, their departure resembled a perfect emigration.
|
|
|
|
On the 31st of October, at ten o'clock in the morning, the troop
|
|
disembarked on the quays of Tampa Town; and one may imagine the
|
|
activity which pervaded that little town, whose population was
|
|
thus doubled in a single day.
|
|
|
|
During the first few days they were busy discharging the cargo
|
|
brought by the flotilla, the machines, and the rations, as well
|
|
as a large number of huts constructed of iron plates, separately
|
|
pieced and numbered. At the same period Barbicane laid the
|
|
first sleepers of a railway fifteen miles in length, intended to
|
|
unite Stones Hill with Tampa Town. On the first of November
|
|
Barbicane quitted Tampa Town with a detachment of workmen; and
|
|
on the following day the whole town of huts was erected round
|
|
Stones Hill. This they enclosed with palisades; and in respect
|
|
of energy and activity, it might have been mistaken for one of
|
|
the great cities of the Union. Everything was placed under a
|
|
complete system of discipline, and the works were commenced in
|
|
most perfect order.
|
|
|
|
The nature of the soil having been carefully examined, by means
|
|
of repeated borings, the work of excavation was fixed for the
|
|
4th of November.
|
|
|
|
On that day Barbicane called together his foremen and addressed
|
|
them as follows: "You are well aware, my friends, of the
|
|
object with which I have assembled you together in this wild
|
|
part of Florida. Our business is to construct a cannon measuring
|
|
nine feet in its interior diameter, six feet thick, and with a
|
|
stone revetment of nineteen and a half feet in thickness. We have,
|
|
therefore, a well of sixty feet in diameter to dig down to a
|
|
depth of nine hundred feet. This great work must be completed
|
|
within eight months, so that you have 2,543,400 cubic feet of
|
|
earth to excavate in 255 days; that is to say, in round numbers,
|
|
2,000 cubic feet per day. That which would present no difficulty
|
|
to a thousand navvies working in open country will be of course
|
|
more troublesome in a comparatively confined space. However, the
|
|
thing must be done, and I reckon for its accomplishment upon your
|
|
courage as much as upon your skill."
|
|
|
|
At eight o'clock the next morning the first stroke of the
|
|
pickaxe was struck upon the soil of Florida; and from that
|
|
moment that prince of tools was never inactive for one moment
|
|
in the hands of the excavators. The gangs relieved each other
|
|
every three hours.
|
|
|
|
On the 4th of November fifty workmen commenced digging, in the
|
|
very center of the enclosed space on the summit of Stones Hill,
|
|
a circular hole sixty feet in diameter. The pickaxe first
|
|
struck upon a kind of black earth, six inches in thickness,
|
|
which was speedily disposed of. To this earth succeeded two
|
|
feet of fine sand, which was carefully laid aside as being
|
|
valuable for serving the casting of the inner mould. After the
|
|
sand appeared some compact white clay, resembling the chalk of
|
|
Great Britain, which extended down to a depth of four feet.
|
|
Then the iron of the picks struck upon the hard bed of the soil;
|
|
a kind of rock formed of petrified shells, very dry, very solid,
|
|
and which the picks could with difficulty penetrate. At this
|
|
point the excavation exhibited a depth of six and a half feet
|
|
and the work of the masonry was begun.
|
|
|
|
At the bottom of the excavation they constructed a wheel of oak,
|
|
a kind of circle strongly bolted together, and of immense strength.
|
|
The center of this wooden disc was hollowed out to a diameter
|
|
equal to the exterior diameter of the Columbiad. Upon this wheel
|
|
rested the first layers of the masonry, the stones of which were
|
|
bound together by hydraulic cement, with irresistible tenacity.
|
|
The workmen, after laying the stones from the circumference to
|
|
the center, were thus enclosed within a kind of well twenty-one
|
|
feet in diameter. When this work was accomplished, the miners
|
|
resumed their picks and cut away the rock from underneath the wheel
|
|
itself, taking care to support it as they advanced upon blocks of
|
|
great thickness. At every two feet which the hole gained in depth
|
|
they successively withdrew the blocks. The wheel then sank little
|
|
by little, and with it the massive ring of masonry, on the upper
|
|
bed of which the masons labored incessantly, always reserving some
|
|
vent holes to permit the escape of gas during the operation of
|
|
the casting.
|
|
|
|
This kind of work required on the part of the workmen extreme
|
|
nicety and minute attention. More than one, in digging
|
|
underneath the wheel, was dangerously injured by the splinters
|
|
of stone. But their ardor never relaxed, night or day. By day
|
|
they worked under the rays of the scorching sun; by night, under
|
|
the gleam of the electric light. The sounds of the picks against
|
|
the rock, the bursting of mines, the grinding of the machines,
|
|
the wreaths of smoke scattered through the air, traced around
|
|
Stones Hill a circle of terror which the herds of buffaloes and
|
|
the war parties of the Seminoles never ventured to pass.
|
|
Nevertheless, the works advanced regularly, as the steam-cranes
|
|
actively removed the rubbish. Of unexpected obstacles there was
|
|
little account; and with regard to foreseen difficulties, they
|
|
were speedily disposed of.
|
|
|
|
At the expiration of the first month the well had attained the
|
|
depth assigned for that lapse of time, namely, 112 feet. This depth
|
|
was doubled in December, and trebled in January.
|
|
|
|
During the month of February the workmen had to contend with a
|
|
sheet of water which made its way right across the outer soil.
|
|
It became necessary to employ very powerful pumps and
|
|
compressed-air engines to drain it off, so as to close up the
|
|
orifice from whence it issued; just as one stops a leak on
|
|
board ship. They at last succeeded in getting the upper hand of
|
|
these untoward streams; only, in consequence of the loosening of
|
|
the soil, the wheel partly gave way, and a slight partial
|
|
settlement ensued. This accident cost the life of several workmen.
|
|
|
|
No fresh occurrence thenceforward arrested the progress of the
|
|
operation; and on the tenth of June, twenty days before the
|
|
expiration of the period fixed by Barbicane, the well, lined
|
|
throughout with its facing of stone, had attained the depth of
|
|
900 feet. At the bottom the masonry rested upon a massive block
|
|
measuring thirty feet in thickness, while on the upper portion
|
|
it was level with the surrounding soil.
|
|
|
|
President Barbicane and the members of the Gun Club warmly
|
|
congratulated their engineer Murchison; the cyclopean work had
|
|
been accomplished with extraordinary rapidity.
|
|
|
|
During these eight months Barbicane never quitted Stones Hill
|
|
for a single instant. Keeping ever close by the work of
|
|
excavation, he busied himself incessantly with the welfare
|
|
and health of his workpeople, and was singularly fortunate
|
|
in warding off the epidemics common to large communities of
|
|
men, and so disastrous in those regions of the globe which
|
|
are exposed to the influences of tropical climates.
|
|
|
|
Many workmen, it is true, paid with their lives for the rashness
|
|
inherent in these dangerous labors; but these mishaps are impossible
|
|
to be avoided, and they are classed among the details with which
|
|
the Americans trouble themselves but little. They have in fact
|
|
more regard for human nature in general than for the individual
|
|
in particular.
|
|
|
|
Nevertheless, Barbicane professed opposite principles to these,
|
|
and put them in force at every opportunity. So, thanks to his
|
|
care, his intelligence, his useful intervention in all
|
|
difficulties, his prodigious and humane sagacity, the average of
|
|
accidents did not exceed that of transatlantic countries, noted
|
|
for their excessive precautions-- France, for instance, among
|
|
others, where they reckon about one accident for every two
|
|
hundred thousand francs of work.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XV
|
|
|
|
|
|
THE FETE OF THE CASTING
|
|
|
|
|
|
During the eight months which were employed in the work of
|
|
excavation the preparatory works of the casting had been carried
|
|
on simultaneously with extreme rapidity. A stranger arriving at
|
|
Stones Hill would have been surprised at the spectacle offered
|
|
to his view.
|
|
|
|
At 600 yards from the well, and circularly arranged around it as
|
|
a central point, rose 1,200 reverberating ovens, each six feet
|
|
in diameter, and separated from each other by an interval of
|
|
three feet. The circumference occupied by these 1,200 ovens
|
|
presented a length of two miles. Being all constructed on the
|
|
same plan, each with its high quadrangular chimney, they
|
|
produced a most singular effect.
|
|
|
|
It will be remembered that on their third meeting the committee
|
|
had decided to use cast iron for the Columbiad, and in particular
|
|
the white description. This metal, in fact, is the most
|
|
tenacious, the most ductile, and the most malleable, and
|
|
consequently suitable for all moulding operations; and when
|
|
smelted with pit coal, is of superior quality for all
|
|
engineering works requiring great resisting power, such as
|
|
cannon, steam boilers, hydraulic presses, and the like.
|
|
|
|
Cast iron, however, if subjected to only one single fusion,
|
|
is rarely sufficiently homogeneous; and it requires a second
|
|
fusion completely to refine it by dispossessing it of its last
|
|
earthly deposits. So long before being forwarded to Tampa Town,
|
|
the iron ore, molten in the great furnaces of Coldspring, and
|
|
brought into contact with coal and silicium heated to a high
|
|
temperature, was carburized and transformed into cast iron.
|
|
After this first operation, the metal was sent on to Stones Hill.
|
|
They had, however, to deal with 136,000,000 pounds of iron, a
|
|
quantity far too costly to send by railway. The cost of
|
|
transport would have been double that of material. It appeared
|
|
preferable to freight vessels at New York, and to load them with
|
|
the iron in bars. This, however, required not less than sixty-
|
|
eight vessels of 1,000 tons, a veritable fleet, which, quitting
|
|
New York on the 3rd of May, on the 10th of the same month ascended
|
|
the Bay of Espiritu Santo, and discharged their cargoes, without
|
|
dues, in the port at Tampa Town. Thence the iron was transported
|
|
by rail to Stones Hill, and about the middle of January this
|
|
enormous mass of metal was delivered at its destination.
|
|
|
|
It will easily be understood that 1,200 furnaces were not too
|
|
many to melt simultaneously these 60,000 tons of iron. Each of
|
|
these furnaces contained nearly 140,000 pounds weight of metal.
|
|
They were all built after the model of those which served for
|
|
the casting of the Rodman gun; they were trapezoidal in shape,
|
|
with a high elliptical arch. These furnaces, constructed of
|
|
fireproof brick, were especially adapted for burning pit coal,
|
|
with a flat bottom upon which the iron bars were laid. This bottom,
|
|
inclined at an angle of 25 degrees, allowed the metal to flow into
|
|
the receiving troughs; and the 1,200 converging trenches carried
|
|
the molten metal down to the central well.
|
|
|
|
The day following that on which the works of the masonry and
|
|
boring had been completed, Barbicane set to work upon the
|
|
central mould. His object now was to raise within the center of
|
|
the well, and with a coincident axis, a cylinder 900 feet high,
|
|
and nine feet in diameter, which should exactly fill up the
|
|
space reserved for the bore of the Columbiad. This cylinder was
|
|
composed of a mixture of clay and sand, with the addition of a
|
|
little hay and straw. The space left between the mould and the
|
|
masonry was intended to be filled up by the molten metal, which
|
|
would thus form the walls six feet in thickness. This cylinder,
|
|
in order to maintain its equilibrium, had to be bound by iron
|
|
bands, and firmly fixed at certain intervals by cross-clamps
|
|
fastened into the stone lining; after the castings these would
|
|
be buried in the block of metal, leaving no external projection.
|
|
|
|
This operation was completed on the 8th of July, and the run of
|
|
the metal was fixed for the following day.
|
|
|
|
"This _fete_ of the casting will be a grand ceremony," said J.
|
|
T. Maston to his friend Barbicane.
|
|
|
|
"Undoubtedly," said Barbicane; "but it will not be a public _fete_"
|
|
|
|
"What! will you not open the gates of the enclosure to all comers?"
|
|
|
|
"I must be very careful, Maston. The casting of the Columbiad
|
|
is an extremely delicate, not to say a dangerous operation, and
|
|
I should prefer its being done privately. At the discharge of
|
|
the projectile, a _fete_ if you like-- till then, no!"
|
|
|
|
The president was right. The operation involved unforeseen
|
|
dangers, which a great influx of spectators would have hindered
|
|
him from averting. It was necessary to preserve complete
|
|
freedom of movement. No one was admitted within the enclosure
|
|
except a delegation of members of the Gun Club, who had made the
|
|
voyage to Tampa Town. Among these was the brisk Bilsby, Tom
|
|
Hunter, Colonel Blomsberry, Major Elphinstone, General Morgan,
|
|
and the rest of the lot to whom the casting of the Columbiad was
|
|
a matter of personal interest. J. T. Maston became their cicerone.
|
|
He omitted no point of detail; he conducted them throughout the
|
|
magazines, workshops, through the midst of the engines, and
|
|
compelled them to visit the whole 1,200 furnaces one after
|
|
the other. At the end of the twelve-hundredth visit they were
|
|
pretty well knocked up.
|
|
|
|
The casting was to take place at twelve o'clock precisely.
|
|
The previous evening each furnace had been charged with 114,000
|
|
pounds weight of metal in bars disposed cross-ways to each other,
|
|
so as to allow the hot air to circulate freely between them.
|
|
At daybreak the 1,200 chimneys vomited their torrents of flame
|
|
into the air, and the ground was agitated with dull tremblings.
|
|
As many pounds of metal as there were to cast, so many pounds of
|
|
coal were there to burn. Thus there were 68,000 tons of coal
|
|
which projected in the face of the sun a thick curtain of smoke.
|
|
The heat soon became insupportable within the circle of furnaces,
|
|
the rumbling of which resembled the rolling of thunder. The powerful
|
|
ventilators added their continuous blasts and saturated with
|
|
oxygen the glowing plates. The operation, to be successful,
|
|
required to be conducted with great rapidity. On a signal given
|
|
by a cannon-shot each furnace was to give vent to the molten
|
|
iron and completely to empty itself. These arrangements made,
|
|
foremen and workmen waited the preconcerted moment with an
|
|
impatience mingled with a certain amount of emotion. Not a soul
|
|
remained within the enclosure. Each superintendent took his
|
|
post by the aperture of the run.
|
|
|
|
Barbicane and his colleagues, perched on a neighboring eminence,
|
|
assisted at the operation. In front of them was a piece of
|
|
artillery ready to give fire on the signal from the engineer.
|
|
Some minutes before midday the first driblets of metal began to
|
|
flow; the reservoirs filled little by little; and, by the time
|
|
that the whole melting was completely accomplished, it was kept
|
|
in abeyance for a few minutes in order to facilitate the
|
|
separation of foreign substances.
|
|
|
|
Twelve o'clock struck! A gunshot suddenly pealed forth and shot
|
|
its flame into the air. Twelve hundred melting-troughs were
|
|
simultaneously opened and twelve hundred fiery serpents crept
|
|
toward the central well, unrolling their incandescent curves.
|
|
There, down they plunged with a terrific noise into a depth of
|
|
900 feet. It was an exciting and a magnificent spectacle.
|
|
The ground trembled, while these molten waves, launching into the
|
|
sky their wreaths of smoke, evaporated the moisture of the mould
|
|
and hurled it upward through the vent-holes of the stone lining
|
|
in the form of dense vapor-clouds. These artificial clouds
|
|
unrolled their thick spirals to a height of 1,000 yards into
|
|
the air. A savage, wandering somewhere beyond the limits of the
|
|
horizon, might have believed that some new crater was forming in
|
|
the bosom of Florida, although there was neither any eruption,
|
|
nor typhoon, nor storm, nor struggle of the elements, nor any of
|
|
those terrible phenomena which nature is capable of producing.
|
|
No, it was man alone who had produced these reddish vapors,
|
|
these gigantic flames worthy of a volcano itself, these
|
|
tremendous vibrations resembling the shock of an earthquake,
|
|
these reverberations rivaling those of hurricanes and storms;
|
|
and it was his hand which precipitated into an abyss, dug by
|
|
himself, a whole Niagara of molten metal!
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XVI
|
|
|
|
|
|
THE COLUMBIAD
|
|
|
|
|
|
Had the casting succeeded? They were reduced to mere conjecture.
|
|
There was indeed every reason to expect success, since the mould
|
|
has absorbed the entire mass of the molten metal; still some
|
|
considerable time must elapse before they could arrive at any
|
|
certainty upon the matter.
|
|
|
|
The patience of the members of the Gun Club was sorely tried during
|
|
this period of time. But they could do nothing. J. T. Maston
|
|
escaped roasting by a miracle. Fifteen days after the casting
|
|
an immense column of smoke was still rising in the open sky and
|
|
the ground burned the soles of the feet within a radius of two
|
|
hundred feet round the summit of Stones Hill. It was impossible
|
|
to approach nearer. All they could do was to wait with what
|
|
patience they might.
|
|
|
|
"Here we are at the 10th of August," exclaimed J. T. Maston one
|
|
morning, "only four months to the 1st of December! We shall
|
|
never be ready in time!" Barbicane said nothing, but his
|
|
silence covered serious irritation.
|
|
|
|
However, daily observations revealed a certain change going on
|
|
in the state of the ground. About the 15th of August the vapors
|
|
ejected had sensibly diminished in intensity and thickness.
|
|
Some days afterward the earth exhaled only a slight puff of
|
|
smoke, the last breath of the monster enclosed within its circle
|
|
of stone. Little by little the belt of heat contracted, until
|
|
on the 22nd of August, Barbicane, his colleagues, and the
|
|
engineer were enabled to set foot on the iron sheet which lay
|
|
level upon the summit of Stones Hill.
|
|
|
|
"At last!" exclaimed the president of the Gun Club, with an
|
|
immense sigh of relief.
|
|
|
|
The work was resumed the same day. They proceeded at once to
|
|
extract the interior mould, for the purpose of clearing out the
|
|
boring of the piece. Pickaxes and boring irons were set to work
|
|
without intermission. The clayey and sandy soils had acquired
|
|
extreme hardness under the action of the heat; but, by the aid
|
|
of the machines, the rubbish on being dug out was rapidly carted
|
|
away on railway wagons; and such was the ardor of the work, so
|
|
persuasive the arguments of Barbicane's dollars, that by the 3rd
|
|
of September all traces of the mould had entirely disappeared.
|
|
|
|
Immediately the operation of boring was commenced; and by the
|
|
aid of powerful machines, a few weeks later, the inner surface
|
|
of the immense tube had been rendered perfectly cylindrical, and
|
|
the bore of the piece had acquired a thorough polish.
|
|
|
|
At length, on the 22d of September, less than a twelvemonth
|
|
after Barbicane's original proposition, the enormous weapon,
|
|
accurately bored, and exactly vertically pointed, was ready
|
|
for work. There was only the moon now to wait for; and they
|
|
were pretty sure that she would not fail in the rendezvous.
|
|
|
|
The ecstasy of J. T. Maston knew no bounds, and he narrowly
|
|
escaped a frightful fall while staring down the tube. But for
|
|
the strong hand of Colonel Blomsberry, the worthy secretary,
|
|
like a modern Erostratus, would have found his death in the
|
|
depths of the Columbiad.
|
|
|
|
The cannon was then finished; there was no possible doubt as to
|
|
its perfect completion. So, on the 6th of October, Captain
|
|
Nicholl opened an account between himself and President Barbicane,
|
|
in which he debited himself to the latter in the sum of two
|
|
thousand dollars. One may believe that the captain's wrath was
|
|
increased to its highest point, and must have made him seriously ill.
|
|
However, he had still three bets of three, four, and five
|
|
thousand dollars, respectively; and if he gained two out of these,
|
|
his position would not be very bad. But the money question did
|
|
not enter into his calculations; it was the success of his rival
|
|
in casting a cannon against which iron plates sixty feet thick
|
|
would have been ineffectual, that dealt him a terrible blow.
|
|
|
|
After the 23rd of September the enclosure of Stones hill was
|
|
thrown open to the public; and it will be easily imagined what
|
|
was the concourse of visitors to this spot! There was an
|
|
incessant flow of people to and from Tampa Town and the place,
|
|
which resembled a procession, or rather, in fact, a pilgrimage.
|
|
|
|
It was already clear to be seen that, on the day of the
|
|
experiment itself, the aggregate of spectators would be counted
|
|
by millions; for they were already arriving from all parts of
|
|
the earth upon this narrow strip of promontory. Europe was
|
|
emigrating to America.
|
|
|
|
Up to that time, however, it must be confessed, the curiosity
|
|
of the numerous comers was but scantily gratified. Most had
|
|
counted upon witnessing the spectacle of the casting, and they
|
|
were treated to nothing but smoke. This was sorry food for
|
|
hungry eyes; but Barbicane would admit no one to that operation.
|
|
Then ensued grumbling, discontent, murmurs; they blamed the
|
|
president, taxed him with dictatorial conduct. His proceedings
|
|
were declared "un-American." There was very nearly a riot round
|
|
Stones Hill; but Barbicane remained inflexible. When, however,
|
|
the Columbiad was entirely finished, this state of closed doors
|
|
could no longer be maintained; besides it would have been bad
|
|
taste, and even imprudence, to affront the public feeling.
|
|
Barbicane, therefore, opened the enclosure to all comers; but,
|
|
true to his practical disposition, he determined to coin money
|
|
out of the public curiosity.
|
|
|
|
It was something, indeed, to be enabled to contemplate this
|
|
immense Columbiad; but to descend into its depths, this seemed
|
|
to the Americans the _ne plus ultra_ of earthly felicity.
|
|
Consequently, there was not one curious spectator who was not
|
|
willing to give himself the treat of visiting the interior of
|
|
this great metallic abyss. Baskets suspended from steam-cranes
|
|
permitted them to satisfy their curiosity. There was a
|
|
perfect mania. Women, children, old men, all made it a point
|
|
of duty to penetrate the mysteries of the colossal gun.
|
|
The fare for the descent was fixed at five dollars per head;
|
|
and despite this high charge, during the two months which
|
|
preceded the experiment, the influx of visitors enabled the
|
|
Gun Club to pocket nearly five hundred thousand dollars!
|
|
|
|
It is needless to say that the first visitors of the Columbiad
|
|
were the members of the Gun Club. This privilege was justly
|
|
reserved for that illustrious body. The ceremony took place on
|
|
the 25th of September. A basket of honor took down the
|
|
president, J. T. Maston, Major Elphinstone, General Morgan,
|
|
Colonel Blomsberry, and other members of the club, to the number
|
|
of ten in all. How hot it was at the bottom of that long tube
|
|
of metal! They were half suffocated. But what delight!
|
|
What ecstasy! A table had been laid with six covers on the
|
|
massive stone which formed the bottom of the Columbiad, and
|
|
lighted by a jet of electric light resembling that of day itself.
|
|
Numerous exquisite dishes, which seemed to descend from heaven,
|
|
were placed successively before the guests, and the richest wines
|
|
of France flowed in profusion during this splendid repast, served
|
|
nine hundred feet beneath the surface of the earth!
|
|
|
|
The festival was animated, not to say somewhat noisy. Toasts flew
|
|
backward and forward. They drank to the earth and to her satellite,
|
|
to the Gun Club, the Union, the Moon, Diana, Phoebe, Selene, the
|
|
"peaceful courier of the night!" All the hurrahs, carried upward
|
|
upon the sonorous waves of the immense acoustic tube, arrived with
|
|
the sound of thunder at its mouth; and the multitude ranged round
|
|
Stones Hill heartily united their shouts with those of the ten
|
|
revelers hidden from view at the bottom of the gigantic Columbiad.
|
|
|
|
J. T. Maston was no longer master of himself. Whether he
|
|
shouted or gesticulated, ate or drank most, would be a difficult
|
|
matter to determine. At all events, he would not have given his
|
|
place up for an empire, "not even if the cannon-- loaded,
|
|
primed, and fired at that very moment--were to blow him in
|
|
pieces into the planetary world."
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XVII
|
|
|
|
|
|
A TELEGRAPHIC DISPATCH
|
|
|
|
|
|
The great works undertaken by the Gun Club had now virtually
|
|
come to an end; and two months still remained before the day for
|
|
the discharge of the shot to the moon. To the general impatience
|
|
these two months appeared as long as years! Hitherto the smallest
|
|
details of the operation had been daily chronicled by the journals,
|
|
which the public devoured with eager eyes.
|
|
|
|
Just at this moment a circumstance, the most unexpected, the
|
|
most extraordinary and incredible, occurred to rouse afresh
|
|
their panting spirits, and to throw every mind into a state of
|
|
the most violent excitement.
|
|
|
|
One day, the 30th of September, at 3:47 P.M., a telegram,
|
|
transmitted by cable from Valentia (Ireland) to Newfoundland and
|
|
the American Mainland, arrived at the address of President Barbicane.
|
|
|
|
The president tore open the envelope, read the dispatch, and,
|
|
despite his remarkable powers of self-control, his lips turned
|
|
pale and his eyes grew dim, on reading the twenty words of
|
|
this telegram.
|
|
|
|
Here is the text of the dispatch, which figures now in the
|
|
archives of the Gun Club:
|
|
|
|
FRANCE, PARIS,
|
|
30 September, 4 A.M.
|
|
Barbicane, Tampa Town, Florida, United States.
|
|
|
|
Substitute for your spherical shell a cylindro-conical projectile.
|
|
I shall go inside. Shall arrive by steamer Atlanta.
|
|
MICHEL ARDAN.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XVIII
|
|
|
|
|
|
THE PASSENGER OF THE ATLANTA
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
If this astounding news, instead of flying through the electric
|
|
wires, had simply arrived by post in the ordinary sealed envelope,
|
|
Barbicane would not have hesitated a moment. He would have held
|
|
his tongue about it, both as a measure of prudence, and in order
|
|
not to have to reconsider his plans. This telegram might be a
|
|
cover for some jest, especially as it came from a Frenchman.
|
|
What human being would ever have conceived the idea of such
|
|
a journey? and, if such a person really existed, he must be an
|
|
idiot, whom one would shut up in a lunatic ward, rather than
|
|
within the walls of the projectile.
|
|
|
|
The contents of the dispatch, however, speedily became known;
|
|
for the telegraphic officials possessed but little discretion,
|
|
and Michel Ardan's proposition ran at once throughout the
|
|
several States of the Union. Barbicane, had, therefore, no
|
|
further motives for keeping silence. Consequently, he called
|
|
together such of his colleagues as were at the moment in Tampa
|
|
Town, and without any expression of his own opinions simply read
|
|
to them the laconic text itself. It was received with every
|
|
possible variety of expressions of doubt, incredulity, and
|
|
derision from every one, with the exception of J. T. Maston, who
|
|
exclaimed, "It is a grand idea, however!"
|
|
|
|
When Barbicane originally proposed to send a shot to the moon
|
|
every one looked upon the enterprise as simple and practicable
|
|
enough-- a mere question of gunnery; but when a person,
|
|
professing to be a reasonable being, offered to take passage
|
|
within the projectile, the whole thing became a farce, or, in
|
|
plainer language a humbug.
|
|
|
|
One question, however, remained. Did such a being exist?
|
|
This telegram flashed across the depths of the Atlantic, the
|
|
designation of the vessel on board which he was to take his
|
|
passage, the date assigned for his speedy arrival, all combined
|
|
to impart a certain character of reality to the proposal.
|
|
They must get some clearer notion of the matter. Scattered groups
|
|
of inquirers at length condensed themselves into a compact crowd,
|
|
which made straight for the residence of President Barbicane.
|
|
That worthy individual was keeping quiet with the intention of
|
|
watching events as they arose. But he had forgotten to take
|
|
into account the public impatience; and it was with no pleasant
|
|
countenance that he watched the population of Tampa Town
|
|
gathering under his windows. The murmurs and vociferations
|
|
below presently obliged him to appear. He came forward,
|
|
therefore, and on silence being procured, a citizen put
|
|
point-blank to him the following question: "Is the person
|
|
mentioned in the telegram, under the name of Michel Ardan, on
|
|
his way here? Yes or no."
|
|
|
|
"Gentlemen," replied Barbicane, "I know no more than you do."
|
|
|
|
"We must know," roared the impatient voices.
|
|
|
|
"Time will show," calmly replied the president.
|
|
|
|
"Time has no business to keep a whole country in suspense,"
|
|
replied the orator. "Have you altered the plans of the
|
|
projectile according to the request of the telegram?"
|
|
|
|
"Not yet, gentlemen; but you are right! we must have better
|
|
information to go by. The telegraph must complete its information."
|
|
|
|
"To the telegraph!" roared the crowd.
|
|
|
|
Barbicane descended; and heading the immense assemblage, led the
|
|
way to the telegraph office. A few minutes later a telegram was
|
|
dispatched to the secretary of the underwriters at Liverpool,
|
|
requesting answers to the following queries:
|
|
|
|
"About the ship Atlanta-- when did she leave Europe? Had she on
|
|
board a Frenchman named Michel Ardan?"
|
|
|
|
Two hours afterward Barbicane received information too exact to
|
|
leave room for the smallest remaining doubt.
|
|
|
|
"The steamer Atlanta from Liverpool put to sea on the 2nd of
|
|
October, bound for Tampa Town, having on board a Frenchman borne
|
|
on the list of passengers by the name of Michel Ardan."
|
|
|
|
That very evening he wrote to the house of Breadwill and Co.,
|
|
requesting them to suspend the casting of the projectile until
|
|
the receipt of further orders. On the 10th of October, at nine
|
|
A.M., the semaphores of the Bahama Canal signaled a thick smoke
|
|
on the horizon. Two hours later a large steamer exchanged
|
|
signals with them. the name of the Atlanta flew at once over
|
|
Tampa Town. At four o'clock the English vessel entered the Bay
|
|
of Espiritu Santo. At five it crossed the passage of
|
|
Hillisborough Bay at full steam. At six she cast anchor at
|
|
Port Tampa. The anchor had scarcely caught the sandy bottom when
|
|
five hundred boats surrounded the Atlanta, and the steamer was
|
|
taken by assault. Barbicane was the first to set foot on deck,
|
|
and in a voice of which he vainly tried to conceal the emotion,
|
|
called "Michel Ardan."
|
|
|
|
"Here!" replied an individual perched on the poop.
|
|
|
|
Barbicane, with arms crossed, looked fixedly at the passenger of
|
|
the Atlanta.
|
|
|
|
He was a man of about forty-two years of age, of large build,
|
|
but slightly round-shouldered. His massive head momentarily
|
|
shook a shock of reddish hair, which resembled a lion's mane.
|
|
His face was short with a broad forehead, and furnished with a
|
|
moustache as bristly as a cat's, and little patches of yellowish
|
|
whiskers upon full cheeks. Round, wildish eyes, slightly
|
|
near-sighted, completed a physiognomy essentially feline.
|
|
His nose was firmly shaped, his mouth particularly sweet in
|
|
expression, high forehead, intelligent and furrowed with
|
|
wrinkles like a newly-plowed field. The body was powerfully
|
|
developed and firmly fixed upon long legs. Muscular arms,
|
|
and a general air of decision gave him the appearance of a hardy,
|
|
jolly, companion. He was dressed in a suit of ample dimensions,
|
|
loose neckerchief, open shirtcollar, disclosing a robust neck;
|
|
his cuffs were invariably unbuttoned, through which appeared
|
|
a pair of red hands.
|
|
|
|
On the bridge of the steamer, in the midst of the crowd, he
|
|
bustled to and fro, never still for a moment, "dragging his
|
|
anchors," as the sailors say, gesticulating, making free with
|
|
everybody, biting his nails with nervous avidity. He was one of
|
|
those originals which nature sometimes invents in the freak of
|
|
a moment, and of which she then breaks the mould.
|
|
|
|
Among other peculiarities, this curiosity gave himself out for
|
|
a sublime ignoramus, "like Shakespeare," and professed supreme
|
|
contempt for all scientific men. Those "fellows," as he called
|
|
them, "are only fit to mark the points, while we play the game."
|
|
He was, in fact, a thorough Bohemian, adventurous, but not an
|
|
adventurer; a hare-brained fellow, a kind of Icarus, only
|
|
possessing relays of wings. For the rest, he was ever in
|
|
scrapes, ending invariably by falling on his feet, like those
|
|
little figures which they sell for children's toys. In a few
|
|
words, his motto was "I have my opinions," and the love of the
|
|
impossible constituted his ruling passion.
|
|
|
|
Such was the passenger of the Atlanta, always excitable, as if
|
|
boiling under the action of some internal fire by the character
|
|
of his physical organization. If ever two individuals offered
|
|
a striking contrast to each other, these were certainly Michel
|
|
Ardan and the Yankee Barbicane; both, moreover, being equally
|
|
enterprising and daring, each in his own way.
|
|
|
|
The scrutiny which the president of the Gun Club had instituted
|
|
regarding this new rival was quickly interrupted by the shouts
|
|
and hurrahs of the crowd. The cries became at last so
|
|
uproarious, and the popular enthusiasm assumed so personal a
|
|
form, that Michel Ardan, after having shaken hands some
|
|
thousands of times, at the imminent risk of leaving his fingers
|
|
behind him, was fain at last to make a bolt for his cabin.
|
|
|
|
Barbicane followed him without uttering a word.
|
|
|
|
"You are Barbicane, I suppose?" said Michel Ardan, in a tone
|
|
of voice in which he would have addressed a friend of twenty
|
|
years' standing.
|
|
|
|
"Yes," replied the president of the Gun Club.
|
|
|
|
"All right! how d'ye do, Barbicane? how are you getting on--
|
|
pretty well? that's right."
|
|
|
|
"So," said Barbicane without further preliminary, "you are quite
|
|
determined to go."
|
|
|
|
"Quite decided."
|
|
|
|
"Nothing will stop you?"
|
|
|
|
"Nothing. Have you modified your projectile according to my telegram."
|
|
|
|
"I waited for your arrival. But," asked Barbicane again, "have
|
|
you carefully reflected?"
|
|
|
|
"Reflected? have I any time to spare? I find an opportunity of
|
|
making a tour in the moon, and I mean to profit by it. There is
|
|
the whole gist of the matter."
|
|
|
|
Barbicane looked hard at this man who spoke so lightly of his
|
|
project with such complete absence of anxiety. "But, at least,"
|
|
said he, "you have some plans, some means of carrying your
|
|
project into execution?"
|
|
|
|
"Excellent, my dear Barbicane; only permit me to offer one remark:
|
|
My wish is to tell my story once for all, to everybody, and then
|
|
have done with it; then there will be no need for recapitulation.
|
|
So, if you have no objection, assemble your friends, colleagues,
|
|
the whole town, all Florida, all America if you like, and
|
|
to-morrow I shall be ready to explain my plans and answer any
|
|
objections whatever that may be advanced. You may rest assured
|
|
I shall wait without stirring. Will that suit you?"
|
|
|
|
"All right," replied Barbicane.
|
|
|
|
So saying, the president left the cabin and informed the crowd of
|
|
the proposal of Michel Ardan. His words were received with clappings
|
|
of hands and shouts of joy. They had removed all difficulties.
|
|
To-morrow every one would contemplate at his ease this European hero.
|
|
However, some of the spectators, more infatuated than the rest,
|
|
would not leave the deck of the Atlanta. They passed the night
|
|
on board. Among others J. T. Maston got his hook fixed in the
|
|
combing of the poop, and it pretty nearly required the capstan to
|
|
get it out again.
|
|
|
|
"He is a hero! a hero!" he cried, a theme of which he was never
|
|
tired of ringing the changes; "and we are only like weak, silly
|
|
women, compared with this European!"
|
|
|
|
As to the president, after having suggested to the visitors it
|
|
was time to retire, he re-entered the passenger's cabin, and
|
|
remained there till the bell of the steamer made it midnight.
|
|
|
|
But then the two rivals in popularity shook hands heartily and
|
|
parted on terms of intimate friendship.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XIX
|
|
|
|
|
|
A MONSTER MEETING
|
|
|
|
|
|
On the following day Barbicane, fearing that indiscreet
|
|
questions might be put to Michel Ardan, was desirous of reducing
|
|
the number of the audience to a few of the initiated, his own
|
|
colleagues for instance. He might as well have tried to
|
|
check the Falls of Niagara! he was compelled, therefore, to
|
|
give up the idea, and let his new friend run the chances of a
|
|
public conference. The place chosen for this monster meeting
|
|
was a vast plain situated in the rear of the town. In a few
|
|
hours, thanks to the help of the shipping in port, an immense
|
|
roofing of canvas was stretched over the parched prairie, and
|
|
protected it from the burning rays of the sun. There three
|
|
hundred thousand people braved for many hours the stifling heat
|
|
while awaiting the arrival of the Frenchman. Of this crowd of
|
|
spectators a first set could both see and hear; a second set saw
|
|
badly and heard nothing at all; and as for the third, it could
|
|
neither see nor hear anything at all. At three o'clock Michel
|
|
Ardan made his appearance, accompanied by the principal members
|
|
of the Gun Club. He was supported on his right by President
|
|
Barbicane, and on his left by J. T. Maston, more radiant than
|
|
the midday sun, and nearly as ruddy. Ardan mounted a platform,
|
|
from the top of which his view extended over a sea of black hats.
|
|
|
|
He exhibited not the slightest embarrassment; he was just as
|
|
gay, familiar, and pleasant as if he were at home. To the
|
|
hurrahs which greeted him he replied by a graceful bow; then,
|
|
waving his hands to request silence, he spoke in perfectly
|
|
correct English as follows:
|
|
|
|
"Gentlemen, despite the very hot weather I request your patience
|
|
for a short time while I offer some explanations regarding the
|
|
projects which seem to have so interested you. I am neither an
|
|
orator nor a man of science, and I had no idea of addressing you
|
|
in public; but my friend Barbicane has told me that you would
|
|
like to hear me, and I am quite at your service. Listen to me,
|
|
therefore, with your six hundred thousand ears, and please
|
|
excuse the faults of the speaker. Now pray do not forget that
|
|
you see before you a perfect ignoramus whose ignorance goes so
|
|
far that he cannot even understand the difficulties! It seemed
|
|
to him that it was a matter quite simple, natural, and easy
|
|
to take one's place in a projectile and start for the moon!
|
|
That journey must be undertaken sooner or later; and, as for the
|
|
mode of locomotion adopted, it follows simply the law of progress.
|
|
Man began by walking on all-fours; then, one fine day, on two
|
|
feet; then in a carriage; then in a stage-coach; and lastly
|
|
by railway. Well, the projectile is the vehicle of the future,
|
|
and the planets themselves are nothing else! Now some of you,
|
|
gentlemen, may imagine that the velocity we propose to impart to
|
|
it is extravagant. It is nothing of the kind. All the stars
|
|
exceed it in rapidity, and the earth herself is at this moment
|
|
carrying us round the sun at three times as rapid a rate, and
|
|
yet she is a mere lounger on the way compared with many others
|
|
of the planets! And her velocity is constantly decreasing.
|
|
Is it not evident, then, I ask you, that there will some day appear
|
|
velocities far greater than these, of which light or electricity
|
|
will probably be the mechanical agent?
|
|
|
|
"Yes, gentlemen," continued the orator, "in spite of the
|
|
opinions of certain narrow-minded people, who would shut up the
|
|
human race upon this globe, as within some magic circle which it
|
|
must never outstep, we shall one day travel to the moon, the
|
|
planets, and the stars, with the same facility, rapidity, and
|
|
certainty as we now make the voyage from Liverpool to New York!
|
|
Distance is but a relative expression, and must end by being
|
|
reduced to zero."
|
|
|
|
The assembly, strongly predisposed as they were in favor of the
|
|
French hero, were slightly staggered at this bold theory.
|
|
Michel Ardan perceived the fact.
|
|
|
|
"Gentlemen," he continued with a pleasant smile, "you do not
|
|
seem quite convinced. Very good! Let us reason the matter out.
|
|
Do you know how long it would take for an express train to reach
|
|
the moon? Three hundred days; no more! And what is that?
|
|
The distance is no more than nine times the circumference of
|
|
the earth; and there are no sailors or travelers, of even
|
|
moderate activity, who have not made longer journeys than that
|
|
in their lifetime. And now consider that I shall be only ninety-
|
|
seven hours on my journey. Ah! I see you are reckoning that the
|
|
moon is a long way off from the earth, and that one must think
|
|
twice before making the experiment. What would you say, then,
|
|
if we were talking of going to Neptune, which revolves at a
|
|
distance of more than two thousand seven hundred and twenty
|
|
millions of miles from the sun! And yet what is that compared
|
|
with the distance of the fixed stars, some of which, such as Arcturus,
|
|
are billions of miles distant from us? And then you talk of the
|
|
distance which separates the planets from the sun! And there
|
|
are people who affirm that such a thing as distance exists.
|
|
Absurdity, folly, idiotic nonsense! Would you know what I think
|
|
of our own solar universe? Shall I tell you my theory? It is
|
|
very simple! In my opinion the solar system is a solid
|
|
homogeneous body; the planets which compose it are in actual
|
|
contact with each other; and whatever space exists between them
|
|
is nothing more than the space which separates the molecules of
|
|
the densest metal, such as silver, iron, or platinum! I have
|
|
the right, therefore, to affirm, and I repeat, with the
|
|
conviction which must penetrate all your minds, `Distance is
|
|
but an empty name; distance does not really exist!'"
|
|
|
|
"Hurrah!" cried one voice (need it be said it was that of
|
|
J. T. Maston). "Distance does not exist!" And overcome by the
|
|
energy of his movements, he nearly fell from the platform to
|
|
the ground. He just escaped a severe fall, which would have
|
|
proved to him that distance was by no means an empty name.
|
|
|
|
"Gentlemen," resumed the orator, "I repeat that the distance
|
|
between the earth and her satellite is a mere trifle, and
|
|
undeserving of serious consideration. I am convinced that
|
|
before twenty years are over one-half of our earth will have
|
|
paid a visit to the moon. Now, my worthy friends, if you have
|
|
any question to put to me, you will, I fear, sadly embarrass a
|
|
poor man like myself; still I will do my best to answer you."
|
|
|
|
Up to this point the president of the Gun Club had been
|
|
satisfied with the turn which the discussion had assumed.
|
|
It became now, however, desirable to divert Ardan from
|
|
questions of a practical nature, with which he was doubtless
|
|
far less conversant. Barbicane, therefore, hastened to get in
|
|
a word, and began by asking his new friend whether he thought
|
|
that the moon and the planets were inhabited.
|
|
|
|
"You put before me a great problem, my worthy president,"
|
|
replied the orator, smiling. "Still, men of great intelligence,
|
|
such as Plutarch, Swedenborg, Bernardin de St. Pierre, and
|
|
others have, if I mistake not, pronounced in the affirmative.
|
|
Looking at the question from the natural philosopher's point of
|
|
view, I should say that nothing useless existed in the world;
|
|
and, replying to your question by another, I should venture to
|
|
assert, that if these worlds are habitable, they either are,
|
|
have been, or will be inhabited."
|
|
|
|
"No one could answer more logically or fairly," replied the
|
|
president. "The question then reverts to this: Are these
|
|
worlds habitable? For my own part I believe they are."
|
|
|
|
"For myself, I feel certain of it," said Michel Ardan.
|
|
|
|
"Nevertheless," retorted one of the audience, "there are many
|
|
arguments against the habitability of the worlds. The conditions
|
|
of life must evidently be greatly modified upon the majority
|
|
of them. To mention only the planets, we should be either
|
|
broiled alive in some, or frozen to death in others, according
|
|
as they are more or less removed from the sun."
|
|
|
|
"I regret," replied Michel Ardan, "that I have not the honor of
|
|
personally knowing my contradictor, for I would have attempted
|
|
to answer him. His objection has its merits, I admit; but I
|
|
think we may successfully combat it, as well as all others which
|
|
affect the habitability of other worlds. If I were a natural
|
|
philosopher, I would tell him that if less of caloric were set
|
|
in motion upon the planets which are nearest to the sun, and
|
|
more, on the contrary, upon those which are farthest removed
|
|
from it, this simple fact would alone suffice to equalize the
|
|
heat, and to render the temperature of those worlds supportable
|
|
by beings organized like ourselves. If I were a naturalist,
|
|
I would tell him that, according to some illustrious men of
|
|
science, nature has furnished us with instances upon the earth
|
|
of animals existing under very varying conditions of life;
|
|
that fish respire in a medium fatal to other animals; that
|
|
amphibious creatures possess a double existence very difficult
|
|
of explanation; that certain denizens of the seas maintain life
|
|
at enormous depths, and there support a pressure equal to that
|
|
of fifty or sixty atmospheres without being crushed; that
|
|
several aquatic insects, insensible to temperature, are met with
|
|
equally among boiling springs and in the frozen plains of the
|
|
Polar Sea; in fine, that we cannot help recognizing in nature a
|
|
diversity of means of operation oftentimes incomprehensible, but
|
|
not the less real. If I were a chemist, I would tell him that
|
|
the aerolites, bodies evidently formed exteriorly of our
|
|
terrestrial globe, have, upon analysis, revealed indisputable
|
|
traces of carbon, a substance which owes its origin solely to
|
|
organized beings, and which, according to the experiments of
|
|
Reichenbach, must necessarily itself have been endued with
|
|
animation. And lastly, were I a theologian, I would tell him
|
|
that the scheme of the Divine Redemption, according to St. Paul,
|
|
seems to be applicable, not merely to the earth, but to all the
|
|
celestial worlds. But, unfortunately, I am neither theologian,
|
|
nor chemist, nor naturalist, nor philosopher; therefore, in my
|
|
absolute ignorance of the great laws which govern the universe,
|
|
I confine myself to saying in reply, `I do not know whether the
|
|
worlds are inhabited or not: and since I do not know, I am going
|
|
to see!'"
|
|
|
|
Whether Michel Ardan's antagonist hazarded any further arguments
|
|
or not it is impossible to say, for the uproarious shouts of the
|
|
crowd would not allow any expression of opinion to gain a hearing.
|
|
On silence being restored, the triumphant orator contented himself
|
|
with adding the following remarks:
|
|
|
|
"Gentlemen, you will observe that I have but slightly touched
|
|
upon this great question. There is another altogether different
|
|
line of argument in favor of the habitability of the stars,
|
|
which I omit for the present. I only desire to call attention
|
|
to one point. To those who maintain that the planets are _not_
|
|
inhabited one may reply: You might be perfectly in the right,
|
|
if you could only show that the earth is the best possible
|
|
world, in spite of what Voltaire has said. She has but _one_
|
|
satellite, while Jupiter, Uranus, Saturn, Neptune have each
|
|
several, an advantage by no means to be despised. But that
|
|
which renders our own globe so uncomfortable is the inclination
|
|
of its axis to the plane of its orbit. Hence the inequality of
|
|
days and nights; hence the disagreeable diversity of the seasons.
|
|
On the surface of our unhappy spheroid we are always either too
|
|
hot or too cold; we are frozen in winter, broiled in summer;
|
|
it is the planet of rheumatism, coughs, bronchitis; while on the
|
|
surface of Jupiter, for example, where the axis is but slightly
|
|
inclined, the inhabitants may enjoy uniform temperatures.
|
|
It possesses zones of perpetual springs, summers, autumns, and
|
|
winters; every Jovian may choose for himself what climate he
|
|
likes, and there spend the whole of his life in security from
|
|
all variations of temperature. You will, I am sure, readily
|
|
admit this superiority of Jupiter over our own planet, to say
|
|
nothing of his years, which each equal twelve of ours!
|
|
Under such auspices and such marvelous conditions of existence,
|
|
it appears to me that the inhabitants of so fortunate a world
|
|
must be in every respect superior to ourselves. All we require,
|
|
in order to attain such perfection, is the mere trifle of having
|
|
an axis of rotation less inclined to the plane of its orbit!"
|
|
|
|
"Hurrah!" roared an energetic voice, "let us unite our efforts,
|
|
invent the necessary machines, and rectify the earth's axis!"
|
|
|
|
A thunder of applause followed this proposal, the author of
|
|
which was, of course, no other than J. T. Maston. And, in all
|
|
probability, if the truth must be told, if the Yankees could
|
|
only have found a point of application for it, they would have
|
|
constructed a lever capable of raising the earth and rectifying
|
|
its axis. It was just this deficiency which baffled these
|
|
daring mechanicians.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XX
|
|
|
|
|
|
ATTACK AND RIPOSTE
|
|
|
|
|
|
As soon as the excitement had subsided, the following words were
|
|
heard uttered in a strong and determined voice:
|
|
|
|
"Now that the speaker has favored us with so much imagination,
|
|
would he be so good as to return to his subject, and give us a
|
|
little practical view of the question?"
|
|
|
|
All eyes were directed toward the person who spoke. He was a
|
|
little dried-up man, of an active figure, with an American
|
|
"goatee" beard. Profiting by the different movements in the crowd,
|
|
he had managed by degrees to gain the front row of spectators.
|
|
There, with arms crossed and stern gaze, he watched the hero of
|
|
the meeting. After having put his question he remained silent,
|
|
and appeared to take no notice of the thousands of looks directed
|
|
toward himself, nor of the murmur of disapprobation excited by
|
|
his words. Meeting at first with no reply, he repeated his
|
|
question with marked emphasis, adding, "We are here to talk about
|
|
the _moon_ and not about the _earth_."
|
|
|
|
"You are right, sir," replied Michel Ardan; "the discussion has
|
|
become irregular. We will return to the moon."
|
|
|
|
"Sir," said the unknown, "you pretend that our satellite is inhabited.
|
|
Very good, but if Selenites do exist, that race of beings assuredly
|
|
must live without breathing, for-- I warn you for your own sake--
|
|
there is not the smallest particle of air on the surface of the moon."
|
|
|
|
At this remark Ardan pushed up his shock of red hair; he saw
|
|
that he was on the point of being involved in a struggle with
|
|
this person upon the very gist of the whole question. He looked
|
|
sternly at him in his turn and said:
|
|
|
|
"Oh! so there is no air in the moon? And pray, if you are so
|
|
good, who ventures to affirm that?
|
|
|
|
"The men of science."
|
|
|
|
"Really?"
|
|
|
|
"Really."
|
|
|
|
"Sir," replied Michel, "pleasantry apart, I have a profound
|
|
respect for men of science who do possess science, but a
|
|
profound contempt for men of science who do not."
|
|
|
|
"Do you know any who belong to the latter category?"
|
|
|
|
"Decidedly. In France there are some who maintain that,
|
|
mathematically, a bird cannot possibly fly; and others who
|
|
demonstrate theoretically that fishes were never made to
|
|
live in water."
|
|
|
|
"I have nothing to do with persons of that description, and I
|
|
can quote, in support of my statement, names which you cannot
|
|
refuse deference to."
|
|
|
|
"Then, sir, you will sadly embarrass a poor ignorant, who,
|
|
besides, asks nothing better than to learn."
|
|
|
|
"Why, then, do you introduce scientific questions if you have
|
|
never studied them?" asked the unknown somewhat coarsely.
|
|
|
|
"For the reason that `he is always brave who never suspects danger.'
|
|
I know nothing, it is true; but it is precisely my very weakness
|
|
which constitutes my strength."
|
|
|
|
"Your weakness amounts to folly," retorted the unknown in a passion.
|
|
|
|
"All the better," replied our Frenchman, "if it carries me up to
|
|
the moon."
|
|
|
|
Barbicane and his colleagues devoured with their eyes the intruder
|
|
who had so boldly placed himself in antagonism to their enterprise.
|
|
Nobody knew him, and the president, uneasy as to the result of so
|
|
free a discussion, watched his new friend with some anxiety.
|
|
The meeting began to be somewhat fidgety also, for the contest
|
|
directed their attention to the dangers, if not the actual
|
|
impossibilities, of the proposed expedition.
|
|
|
|
"Sir," replied Ardan's antagonist, "there are many and
|
|
incontrovertible reasons which prove the absence of an
|
|
atmosphere in the moon. I might say that, _a priori_, if one
|
|
ever did exist, it must have been absorbed by the earth; but I
|
|
prefer to bring forward indisputable facts."
|
|
|
|
"Bring them forward then, sir, as many as you please."
|
|
|
|
"You know," said the stranger, "that when any luminous rays
|
|
cross a medium such as the air, they are deflected out of the
|
|
straight line; in other words, they undergo refraction. Well!
|
|
When stars are occulted by the moon, their rays, on grazing the
|
|
edge of her disc, exhibit not the least deviation, nor offer the
|
|
slightest indication of refraction. It follows, therefore, that
|
|
the moon cannot be surrounded by an atmosphere.
|
|
|
|
"In point of fact," replied Ardan, "this is your chief, if not
|
|
your _only_ argument; and a really scientific man might be
|
|
puzzled to answer it. For myself, I will simply say that it is
|
|
defective, because it assumes that the angular diameter of the
|
|
moon has been completely determined, which is not the case.
|
|
But let us proceed. Tell me, my dear sir, do you admit the
|
|
existence of volcanoes on the moon's surface?"
|
|
|
|
"Extinct, yes! In activity, no!"
|
|
|
|
"These volcanoes, however, were at one time in a state of activity?"
|
|
|
|
"True, but, as they furnish themselves the oxygen necessary for
|
|
combustion, the mere fact of their eruption does not prove the
|
|
presence of an atmosphere."
|
|
|
|
"Proceed again, then; and let us set aside this class of
|
|
arguments in order to come to direct observations. In 1715 the
|
|
astronomers Louville and Halley, watching the eclipse of the
|
|
3rd of May, remarked some very extraordinary scintillations.
|
|
These jets of light, rapid in nature, and of frequent recurrence,
|
|
they attributed to thunderstorms generated in the lunar atmosphere."
|
|
|
|
"In 1715," replied the unknown, "the astronomers Louville and
|
|
Halley mistook for lunar phenomena some which were purely
|
|
terrestrial, such as meteoric or other bodies which are
|
|
generated in our own atmosphere. This was the scientific
|
|
explanation at the time of the facts; and that is my answer now."
|
|
|
|
"On again, then," replied Ardan; "Herschel, in 1787, observed a
|
|
great number of luminous points on the moon's surface, did he not?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes! but without offering any solution of them. Herschel himself
|
|
never inferred from them the necessity of a lunar atmosphere.
|
|
And I may add that Baeer and Maedler, the two great authorities
|
|
upon the moon, are quite agreed as to the entire absence of air
|
|
on its surface."
|
|
|
|
A movement was here manifest among the assemblage, who appeared
|
|
to be growing excited by the arguments of this singular personage.
|
|
|
|
"Let us proceed," replied Ardan, with perfect coolness, "and
|
|
come to one important fact. A skillful French astronomer, M.
|
|
Laussedat, in watching the eclipse of July 18, 1860, probed that
|
|
the horns of the lunar crescent were rounded and truncated.
|
|
Now, this appearance could only have been produced by a
|
|
deviation of the solar rays in traversing the atmosphere of
|
|
the moon. There is no other possible explanation of the facts."
|
|
|
|
"But is this established as a fact?"
|
|
|
|
"Absolutely certain!"
|
|
|
|
A counter-movement here took place in favor of the hero of the
|
|
meeting, whose opponent was now reduced to silence. Ardan resumed
|
|
the conversation; and without exhibiting any exultation at the
|
|
advantage he had gained, simply said:
|
|
|
|
"You see, then, my dear sir, we must not pronounce with absolute
|
|
positiveness against the existence of an atmosphere in the moon.
|
|
That atmosphere is, probably, of extreme rarity; nevertheless at
|
|
the present day science generally admits that it exists."
|
|
|
|
"Not in the mountains, at all events," returned the unknown,
|
|
unwilling to give in.
|
|
|
|
"No! but at the bottom of the valleys, and not exceeding a few
|
|
hundred feet in height."
|
|
|
|
"In any case you will do well to take every precaution, for the
|
|
air will be terribly rarified."
|
|
|
|
"My good sir, there will always be enough for a solitary
|
|
individual; besides, once arrived up there, I shall do my best
|
|
to economize, and not to breathe except on grand occasions!"
|
|
|
|
A tremendous roar of laughter rang in the ears of the mysterious
|
|
interlocutor, who glared fiercely round upon the assembly.
|
|
|
|
"Then," continued Ardan, with a careless air, "since we are in
|
|
accord regarding the presence of a certain atmosphere, we are
|
|
forced to admit the presence of a certain quantity of water.
|
|
This is a happy consequence for me. Moreover, my amiable
|
|
contradictor, permit me to submit to you one further observation.
|
|
We only know _one_ side of the moon's disc; and if there is but
|
|
little air on the face presented to us, it is possible that there
|
|
is plenty on the one turned away from us."
|
|
|
|
"And for what reason?"
|
|
|
|
"Because the moon, under the action of the earth's attraction,
|
|
has assumed the form of an egg, which we look at from the
|
|
smaller end. Hence it follows, by Hausen's calculations, that
|
|
its center of gravity is situated in the other hemisphere.
|
|
Hence it results that the great mass of air and water must have
|
|
been drawn away to the other face of our satellite during the
|
|
first days of its creation."
|
|
|
|
"Pure fancies!" cried the unknown.
|
|
|
|
"No! Pure theories! which are based upon the laws of mechanics,
|
|
and it seems difficult to me to refute them. I appeal then to
|
|
this meeting, and I put it to them whether life, such as exists
|
|
upon the earth, is possible on the surface of the moon?"
|
|
|
|
Three hundred thousand auditors at once applauded the proposition.
|
|
Ardan's opponent tried to get in another word, but he could not
|
|
obtain a hearing. Cries and menaces fell upon him like hail.
|
|
|
|
"Enough! enough!" cried some.
|
|
|
|
"Drive the intruder off!" shouted others.
|
|
|
|
"Turn him out!" roared the exasperated crowd.
|
|
|
|
But he, holding firmly on to the platform, did not budge an
|
|
inch, and let the storm pass on, which would soon have assumed
|
|
formidable proportions, if Michel Ardan had not quieted it by
|
|
a gesture. He was too chivalrous to abandon his opponent in an
|
|
apparent extremity.
|
|
|
|
"You wished to say a few more words?" he asked, in a pleasant voice.
|
|
|
|
"Yes, a thousand; or rather, no, only one! If you persevere in
|
|
your enterprise, you must be a----"
|
|
|
|
"Very rash person! How can you treat me as such? me, who have
|
|
demanded a cylindro-conical projectile, in order to prevent
|
|
turning round and round on my way like a squirrel?"
|
|
|
|
"But, unhappy man, the dreadful recoil will smash you to pieces
|
|
at your starting."
|
|
|
|
"My dear contradictor, you have just put your finger upon the
|
|
true and only difficulty; nevertheless, I have too good an
|
|
opinion of the industrial genius of the Americans not to believe
|
|
that they will succeed in overcoming it."
|
|
|
|
"But the heat developed by the rapidity of the projectile in
|
|
crossing the strata of air?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh! the walls are thick, and I shall soon have crossed
|
|
the atmosphere."
|
|
|
|
"But victuals and water?"
|
|
|
|
"I have calculated for a twelvemonth's supply, and I shall be
|
|
only four days on the journey."
|
|
|
|
"But for air to breathe on the road?"
|
|
|
|
"I shall make it by a chemical process."
|
|
|
|
"But your fall on the moon, supposing you ever reach it?"
|
|
|
|
"It will be six times less dangerous than a sudden fall upon the
|
|
earth, because the weight will be only one-sixth as great on the
|
|
surface of the moon."
|
|
|
|
"Still it will be enough to smash you like glass!"
|
|
|
|
"What is to prevent my retarding the shock by means of rockets
|
|
conveniently placed, and lighted at the right moment?"
|
|
|
|
"But after all, supposing all difficulties surmounted, all
|
|
obstacles removed, supposing everything combined to favor you,
|
|
and granting that you may arrive safe and sound in the moon, how
|
|
will you come back?"
|
|
|
|
"I am not coming back!"
|
|
|
|
At this reply, almost sublime in its very simplicity, the
|
|
assembly became silent. But its silence was more eloquent than
|
|
could have been its cries of enthusiasm. The unknown profited
|
|
by the opportunity and once more protested:
|
|
|
|
"You will inevitably kill yourself!" he cried; "and your death
|
|
will be that of a madman, useless even to science!"
|
|
|
|
"Go on, my dear unknown, for truly your prophecies are most agreeable!"
|
|
|
|
"It really is too much!" cried Michel Ardan's adversary. "I do
|
|
not know why I should continue so frivolous a discussion!
|
|
Please yourself about this insane expedition! We need not
|
|
trouble ourselves about you!"
|
|
|
|
"Pray don't stand upon ceremony!"
|
|
|
|
"No! another person is responsible for your act."
|
|
|
|
"Who, may I ask?" demanded Michel Ardan in an imperious tone.
|
|
|
|
"The ignoramus who organized this equally absurd and
|
|
impossible experiment!"
|
|
|
|
The attack was direct. Barbicane, ever since the interference
|
|
of the unknown, had been making fearful efforts of self-control;
|
|
now, however, seeing himself directly attacked, he could
|
|
restrain himself no longer. He rose suddenly, and was rushing
|
|
upon the enemy who thus braved him to the face, when all at once
|
|
he found himself separated from him.
|
|
|
|
The platform was lifted by a hundred strong arms, and the president
|
|
of the Gun Club shared with Michel Ardan triumphal honors.
|
|
The shield was heavy, but the bearers came in continuous relays,
|
|
disputing, struggling, even fighting among themselves in their
|
|
eagerness to lend their shoulders to this demonstration.
|
|
|
|
However, the unknown had not profited by the tumult to quit
|
|
his post. Besides he could not have done it in the midst of that
|
|
compact crowd. There he held on in the front row with crossed
|
|
arms, glaring at President Barbicane.
|
|
|
|
The shouts of the immense crowd continued at their highest pitch
|
|
throughout this triumphant march. Michel Ardan took it all with
|
|
evident pleasure. His face gleamed with delight. Several times
|
|
the platform seemed seized with pitching and rolling like a
|
|
weatherbeaten ship. But the two heros of the meeting had good
|
|
sea-legs. They never stumbled; and their vessel arrived without
|
|
dues at the port of Tampa Town.
|
|
|
|
Michel Ardan managed fortunately to escape from the last
|
|
embraces of his vigorous admirers. He made for the Hotel
|
|
Franklin, quickly gained his chamber, and slid under the
|
|
bedclothes, while an army of a hundred thousand men kept watch
|
|
under his windows.
|
|
|
|
During this time a scene, short, grave, and decisive, took place
|
|
between the mysterious personage and the president of the Gun Club.
|
|
|
|
Barbicane, free at last, had gone straight at his adversary.
|
|
|
|
"Come!" he said shortly.
|
|
|
|
The other followed him on the quay; and the two presently found
|
|
themselves alone at the entrance of an open wharf on Jones' Fall.
|
|
|
|
The two enemies, still mutually unknown, gazed at each other.
|
|
|
|
"Who are you?" asked Barbicane.
|
|
|
|
"Captain Nicholl!"
|
|
|
|
"So I suspected. Hitherto chance has never thrown you in my way."
|
|
|
|
"I am come for that purpose."
|
|
|
|
"You have insulted me."
|
|
|
|
"Publicly!"
|
|
|
|
"And you will answer to me for this insult?"
|
|
|
|
"At this very moment."
|
|
|
|
"No! I desire that all that passes between us shall be secret.
|
|
Their is a wood situated three miles from Tampa, the wood
|
|
of Skersnaw. Do you know it?"
|
|
|
|
"I know it."
|
|
|
|
"Will you be so good as to enter it to-morrow morning at five
|
|
o'clock, on one side?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes! if you will enter at the other side at the same hour."
|
|
|
|
"And you will not forget your rifle?" said Barbicane.
|
|
|
|
"No more than you will forget yours?" replied Nicholl.
|
|
|
|
These words having been coldly spoken, the president of the Gun
|
|
Club and the captain parted. Barbicane returned to his lodging;
|
|
but instead of snatching a few hours of repose, he passed the
|
|
night in endeavoring to discover a means of evading the recoil
|
|
of the projectile, and resolving the difficult problem proposed
|
|
by Michel Ardan during the discussion at the meeting.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XXI
|
|
|
|
|
|
HOW A FRENCHMAN MANAGES AN AFFAIR
|
|
|
|
|
|
While the contract of this duel was being discussed by the
|
|
president and the captain-- this dreadful, savage duel, in which
|
|
each adversary became a man-hunter-- Michel Ardan was resting
|
|
from the fatigues of his triumph. Resting is hardly an
|
|
appropriate expression, for American beds rival marble or
|
|
granite tables for hardness.
|
|
|
|
Ardan was sleeping, then, badly enough, tossing about between
|
|
the cloths which served him for sheets, and he was dreaming of
|
|
making a more comfortable couch in his projectile when a
|
|
frightful noise disturbed his dreams. Thundering blows shook
|
|
his door. They seemed to be caused by some iron instrument.
|
|
A great deal of loud talking was distinguishable in this racket,
|
|
which was rather too early in the morning. "Open the door,"
|
|
some one shrieked, "for heaven's sake!" Ardan saw no reason
|
|
for complying with a demand so roughly expressed. However, he
|
|
got up and opened the door just as it was giving way before the
|
|
blows of this determined visitor. The secretary of the Gun Club
|
|
burst into the room. A bomb could not have made more noise or
|
|
have entered the room with less ceremony.
|
|
|
|
"Last night," cried J. T. Maston, _ex abrupto_, "our president
|
|
was publicly insulted during the meeting. He provoked his
|
|
adversary, who is none other than Captain Nicholl! They are
|
|
fighting this morning in the wood of Skersnaw. I heard all the
|
|
particulars from the mouth of Barbicane himself. If he is
|
|
killed, then our scheme is at an end. We must prevent his duel;
|
|
and one man alone has enough influence over Barbicane to stop
|
|
him, and that man is Michel Ardan."
|
|
|
|
While J. T. Maston was speaking, Michel Ardan, without
|
|
interrupting him, had hastily put on his clothes; and, in less
|
|
than two minutes, the two friends were making for the suburbs of
|
|
Tampa Town with rapid strides.
|
|
|
|
It was during this walk that Maston told Ardan the state of the
|
|
case. He told him the real causes of the hostility between
|
|
Barbicane and Nicholl; how it was of old date, and why, thanks
|
|
to unknown friends, the president and the captain had, as yet,
|
|
never met face to face. He added that it arose simply from
|
|
a rivalry between iron plates and shot, and, finally, that the
|
|
scene at the meeting was only the long-wished-for opportunity
|
|
for Nicholl to pay off an old grudge.
|
|
|
|
Nothing is more dreadful than private duels in America. The two
|
|
adversaries attack each other like wild beasts. Then it is that
|
|
they might well covet those wonderful properties of the Indians
|
|
of the prairies-- their quick intelligence, their ingenious
|
|
cunning, their scent of the enemy. A single mistake, a moment's
|
|
hesitation, a single false step may cause death. On these
|
|
occasions Yankees are often accompanied by their dogs, and keep
|
|
up the struggle for hours.
|
|
|
|
"What demons you are!" cried Michel Ardan, when his companion
|
|
had depicted this scene to him with much energy.
|
|
|
|
"Yes, we are," replied J. T. modestly; "but we had better make haste."
|
|
|
|
Though Michel Ardan and he had crossed the plains still wet with
|
|
dew, and had taken the shortest route over creeks and ricefields,
|
|
they could not reach Skersnaw in under five hours and a half.
|
|
|
|
Barbicane must have passed the border half an hour ago.
|
|
|
|
There was an old bushman working there, occupied in selling
|
|
fagots from trees that had been leveled by his axe.
|
|
|
|
Maston ran toward him, saying, "Have you seen a man go into the
|
|
wood, armed with a rifle? Barbicane, the president, my best friend?"
|
|
|
|
The worthy secretary of the Gun Club thought that his president
|
|
must be known by all the world. But the bushman did not seem to
|
|
understand him.
|
|
|
|
"A hunter?" said Ardan.
|
|
|
|
"A hunter? Yes," replied the bushman.
|
|
|
|
"Long ago?"
|
|
|
|
"About an hour."
|
|
|
|
"Too late!" cried Maston.
|
|
|
|
"Have you heard any gunshots?" asked Ardan.
|
|
|
|
"No!"
|
|
|
|
"Not one?"
|
|
|
|
"Not one! that hunter did not look as if he knew how to hunt!"
|
|
|
|
"What is to be done?" said Maston.
|
|
|
|
"We must go into the wood, at the risk of getting a ball which
|
|
is not intended for us."
|
|
|
|
"Ah!" cried Maston, in a tone which could not be mistaken, "I would
|
|
rather have twenty balls in my own head than one in Barbicane's."
|
|
|
|
"Forward, then," said Ardan, pressing his companion's hand.
|
|
|
|
A few moments later the two friends had disappeared in the copse.
|
|
It was a dense thicket, in which rose huge cypresses, sycamores,
|
|
tulip-trees, olives, tamarinds, oaks, and magnolias.
|
|
These different trees had interwoven their branches into an
|
|
inextricable maze, through which the eye could not penetrate.
|
|
Michel Ardan and Maston walked side by side in silence through
|
|
the tall grass, cutting themselves a path through the strong
|
|
creepers, casting curious glances on the bushes, and momentarily
|
|
expecting to hear the sound of rifles. As for the traces which
|
|
Barbicane ought to have left of his passage through the wood,
|
|
there was not a vestige of them visible: so they followed the
|
|
barely perceptible paths along which Indians had tracked some
|
|
enemy, and which the dense foliage darkly overshadowed.
|
|
|
|
After an hour spent in vain pursuit the two stopped in
|
|
intensified anxiety.
|
|
|
|
"It must be all over," said Maston, discouraged. "A man like
|
|
Barbicane would not dodge with his enemy, or ensnare him, would
|
|
not even maneuver! He is too open, too brave. He has gone
|
|
straight ahead, right into the danger, and doubtless far enough
|
|
from the bushman for the wind to prevent his hearing the report
|
|
of the rifles."
|
|
|
|
"But surely," replied Michel Ardan, "since we entered the wood
|
|
we should have heard!"
|
|
|
|
"And what if we came too late?" cried Maston in tones of despair.
|
|
|
|
For once Ardan had no reply to make, he and Maston resuming
|
|
their walk in silence. From time to time, indeed, they raised
|
|
great shouts, calling alternately Barbicane and Nicholl, neither
|
|
of whom, however, answered their cries. Only the birds,
|
|
awakened by the sound, flew past them and disappeared among the
|
|
branches, while some frightened deer fled precipitately before them.
|
|
|
|
For another hour their search was continued. The greater part
|
|
of the wood had been explored. There was nothing to reveal the
|
|
presence of the combatants. The information of the bushman was
|
|
after all doubtful, and Ardan was about to propose their
|
|
abandoning this useless pursuit, when all at once Maston stopped.
|
|
|
|
"Hush!" said he, "there is some one down there!"
|
|
|
|
"Some one?" repeated Michel Ardan.
|
|
|
|
"Yes; a man! He seems motionless. His rifle is not in his hands.
|
|
What can he be doing?"
|
|
|
|
"But can you recognize him?" asked Ardan, whose short sight was
|
|
of little use to him in such circumstances.
|
|
|
|
"Yes! yes! He is turning toward us," answered Maston.
|
|
|
|
"And it is?"
|
|
|
|
"Captain Nicholl!"
|
|
|
|
"Nicholl?" cried Michel Ardan, feeling a terrible pang of grief.
|
|
|
|
"Nicholl unarmed! He has, then, no longer any fear of his adversary!"
|
|
|
|
"Let us go to him," said Michel Ardan, "and find out the truth."
|
|
|
|
But he and his companion had barely taken fifty steps, when they
|
|
paused to examine the captain more attentively. They expected
|
|
to find a bloodthirsty man, happy in his revenge.
|
|
|
|
On seeing him, they remained stupefied.
|
|
|
|
A net, composed of very fine meshes, hung between two enormous
|
|
tulip-trees, and in the midst of this snare, with its wings
|
|
entangled, was a poor little bird, uttering pitiful cries, while
|
|
it vainly struggled to escape. The bird-catcher who had laid
|
|
this snare was no human being, but a venomous spider, peculiar
|
|
to that country, as large as a pigeon's egg, and armed with
|
|
enormous claws. The hideous creature, instead of rushing on its
|
|
prey, had beaten a sudden retreat and taken refuge in the upper
|
|
branches of the tulip-tree, for a formidable enemy menaced
|
|
its stronghold.
|
|
|
|
Here, then, was Nicholl, his gun on the ground, forgetful
|
|
of danger, trying if possible to save the victim from its
|
|
cobweb prison. At last it was accomplished, and the little
|
|
bird flew joyfully away and disappeared.
|
|
|
|
Nicholl lovingly watched its flight, when he heard these words
|
|
pronounced by a voice full of emotion:
|
|
|
|
"You are indeed a brave man."
|
|
|
|
He turned. Michel Ardan was before him, repeating in a
|
|
different tone:
|
|
|
|
"And a kindhearted one!"
|
|
|
|
"Michel Ardan!" cried the captain. "Why are you here?"
|
|
|
|
"To press your hand, Nicholl, and to prevent you from either
|
|
killing Barbicane or being killed by him."
|
|
|
|
"Barbicane!" returned the captain. "I have been looking for him
|
|
for the last two hours in vain. Where is he hiding?"
|
|
|
|
"Nicholl!" said Michel Ardan, "this is not courteous! we ought
|
|
always to treat an adversary with respect; rest assureed if
|
|
Barbicane is still alive we shall find him all the more easily;
|
|
because if he has not, like you, been amusing himself with
|
|
freeing oppressed birds, he must be looking for _you_. When we
|
|
have found him, Michel Ardan tells you this, there will be no
|
|
duel between you."
|
|
|
|
"Between President Barbicane and myself," gravely replied
|
|
Nicholl, "there is a rivalry which the death of one of us----"
|
|
|
|
"Pooh, pooh!" said Ardan. "Brave fellows like you indeed! you
|
|
shall not fight!"
|
|
|
|
"I will fight, sir!"
|
|
|
|
"No!"
|
|
|
|
"Captain," said J. T. Maston, with much feeling, "I am a friend
|
|
of the president's, his _alter ego_, his second self; if you
|
|
really must kill some one, _shoot me!_ it will do just as well!"
|
|
|
|
"Sir," Nicholl replied, seizing his rifle convulsively, "these
|
|
jokes----"
|
|
|
|
"Our friend Maston is not joking," replied Ardan. "I fully
|
|
understand his idea of being killed himself in order to save
|
|
his friend. But neither he nor Barbicane will fall before the balls
|
|
of Captain Nicholl. Indeed I have so attractive a proposal to
|
|
make to the two rivals, that both will be eager to accept it."
|
|
|
|
"What is it?" asked Nicholl with manifest incredulity.
|
|
|
|
"Patience!" exclaimed Ardan. "I can only reveal it in the
|
|
presence of Barbicane."
|
|
|
|
"Let us go in search of him then!" cried the captain.
|
|
|
|
The three men started off at once; the captain having discharged
|
|
his rifle threw it over his shoulder, and advanced in silence.
|
|
Another half hour passed, and the pursuit was still fruitless.
|
|
Maston was oppressed by sinister forebodings. He looked fiercely
|
|
at Nicholl, asking himself whether the captain's vengeance had
|
|
already been satisfied, and the unfortunate Barbicane, shot, was
|
|
perhaps lying dead on some bloody track. The same thought seemed
|
|
to occur to Ardan; and both were casting inquiring glances on
|
|
Nicholl, when suddenly Maston paused.
|
|
|
|
The motionless figure of a man leaning against a gigantic
|
|
catalpa twenty feet off appeared, half-veiled by the foliage.
|
|
|
|
"It is he!" said Maston.
|
|
|
|
Barbicane never moved. Ardan looked at the captain, but he did
|
|
not wince. Ardan went forward crying:
|
|
|
|
"Barbicane! Barbicane!"
|
|
|
|
No answer! Ardan rushed toward his friend; but in the act of
|
|
seizing his arms, he stopped short and uttered a cry of surprise.
|
|
|
|
Barbicane, pencil in hand, was tracing geometrical figures in a
|
|
memorandum book, while his unloaded rifle lay beside him on the ground.
|
|
|
|
Absorbed in his studies, Barbicane, in his turn forgetful of the
|
|
duel, had seen and heard nothing.
|
|
|
|
When Ardan took his hand, he looked up and stared at his visitor
|
|
in astonishment.
|
|
|
|
"Ah, it is you!" he cried at last. "I have found it, my friend,
|
|
I have found it!"
|
|
|
|
"What?"
|
|
|
|
"My plan!"
|
|
|
|
"What plan?"
|
|
|
|
"The plan for countering the effect of the shock at the
|
|
departure of the projectile!"
|
|
|
|
"Indeed?" said Michel Ardan, looking at the captain out of the
|
|
corner of his eye.
|
|
|
|
"Yes! water! simply water, which will act as a spring-- ah!
|
|
Maston," cried Barbicane, "you here also?"
|
|
|
|
"Himself," replied Ardan; "and permit me to introduce to you at
|
|
the same time the worthy Captain Nicholl!"
|
|
|
|
"Nicholl!" cried Barbicane, who jumped up at once. "Pardon me,
|
|
captain, I had quite forgotten-- I am ready!"
|
|
|
|
Michel Ardan interfered, without giving the two enemies time to
|
|
say anything more.
|
|
|
|
"Thank heaven!" said he. "It is a happy thing that brave men
|
|
like you two did not meet sooner! we should now have been
|
|
mourning for one or other of you. But, thanks to Providence,
|
|
which has interfered, there is now no further cause for alarm.
|
|
When one forgets one's anger in mechanics or in cobwebs, it is
|
|
a sign that the anger is not dangerous."
|
|
|
|
Michel Ardan then told the president how the captain had been
|
|
found occupied.
|
|
|
|
"I put it to you now," said he in conclusion, "are two such good
|
|
fellows as you are made on purpose to smash each other's skulls
|
|
with shot?"
|
|
|
|
There was in "the situation" somewhat of the ridiculous,
|
|
something quite unexpected; Michel Ardan saw this, and
|
|
determined to effect a reconciliation.
|
|
|
|
"My good friends," said he, with his most bewitching smile,
|
|
"this is nothing but a misunderstanding. Nothing more! well! to
|
|
prove that it is all over between you, accept frankly the
|
|
proposal I am going to make to you."
|
|
|
|
"Make it," said Nicholl.
|
|
|
|
"Our friend Barbicane believes that his projectile will go
|
|
straight to the moon?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, certainly," replied the president.
|
|
|
|
"And our friend Nicholl is persuaded it will fall back upon the earth?"
|
|
|
|
"I am certain of it," cried the captain.
|
|
|
|
"Good!" said Ardan. "I cannot pretend to make you agree; but I
|
|
suggest this: Go with me, and so see whether we are stopped on
|
|
our journey."
|
|
|
|
"What?" exclaimed J. T. Maston, stupefied.
|
|
|
|
The two rivals, on this sudden proposal, looked steadily at
|
|
each other. Barbicane waited for the captain's answer.
|
|
Nicholl watched for the decision of the president.
|
|
|
|
"Well?" said Michel. "There is now no fear of the shock!"
|
|
|
|
"Done!" cried Barbicane.
|
|
|
|
But quickly as he pronounced the word, he was not before Nicholl.
|
|
|
|
"Hurrah! bravo! hip! hip! hurrah!" cried Michel, giving a hand
|
|
to each of the late adversaries. "Now that it is all settled,
|
|
my friends, allow me to treat you after French fashion. Let us
|
|
be off to breakfast!"
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XXII
|
|
|
|
|
|
THE NEW CITIZEN OF THE UNITED STATES
|
|
|
|
|
|
That same day all America heard of the affair of Captain Nicholl
|
|
and President Barbicane, as well as its singular _denouement_.
|
|
From that day forth, Michel Ardan had not one moment's rest.
|
|
Deputations from all corners of the Union harassed him without
|
|
cessation or intermission. He was compelled to receive them
|
|
all, whether he would or no. How many hands he shook, how many
|
|
people he was "hail-fellow-well-met" with, it is impossible
|
|
to guess! Such a triumphal result would have intoxicated any
|
|
other man; but he managed to keep himself in a state of delightful
|
|
_semi_-tipsiness.
|
|
|
|
Among the deputations of all kinds which assailed him, that of
|
|
"The Lunatics" were careful not to forget what they owed to the
|
|
future conqueror of the moon. One day, certain of these poor
|
|
people, so numerous in America, came to call upon him, and
|
|
requested permission to return with him to their native country.
|
|
|
|
"Singular hallucination!" said he to Barbicane, after having
|
|
dismissed the deputation with promises to convey numbers of
|
|
messages to friends in the moon. "Do you believe in the
|
|
influence of the moon upon distempers?"
|
|
|
|
"Scarcely!"
|
|
|
|
"No more do I, despite some remarkable recorded facts of history.
|
|
For instance, during an epidemic in 1693, a large number of
|
|
persons died at the very moment of an eclipse. The celebrated
|
|
Bacon always fainted during an eclipse. Charles VI relapsed
|
|
six times into madness during the year 1399, sometimes during
|
|
the new, sometimes during the full moon. Gall observed that
|
|
insane persons underwent an accession of their disorder twice
|
|
in every month, at the epochs of new and full moon. In fact,
|
|
numerous observations made upon fevers, somnambulisms, and other
|
|
human maladies, seem to prove that the moon does exercise some
|
|
mysterious influence upon man."
|
|
|
|
"But the how and the wherefore?" asked Barbicane.
|
|
|
|
"Well, I can only give you the answer which Arago borrowed from
|
|
Plutarch, which is nineteen centuries old. `Perhaps the stories
|
|
are not true!'"
|
|
|
|
In the height of his triumph, Michel Ardan had to encounter all
|
|
the annoyances incidental to a man of celebrity. Managers of
|
|
entertainments wanted to exhibit him. Barnum offered him a
|
|
million dollars to make a tour of the United States in his show.
|
|
As for his photographs, they were sold of all size, and his
|
|
portrait taken in every imaginable posture. More than half a
|
|
million copies were disposed of in an incredibly short space of time.
|
|
|
|
But it was not only the men who paid him homage, but the women
|
|
as well. He might have married well a hundred times over, if he
|
|
had been willing to settle in life. The old maids, in
|
|
particular, of forty years and upward, and dry in proportion,
|
|
devoured his photographs day and night. They would have married
|
|
him by hundreds, even if he had imposed upon them the condition
|
|
of accompanying him into space. He had, however, no intention
|
|
of transplanting a race of Franco-Americans upon the surface of
|
|
the moon.
|
|
|
|
He therefore declined all offers.
|
|
|
|
As soon as he could withdraw from these somewhat embarrassing
|
|
demonstrations, he went, accompanied by his friends, to pay a
|
|
visit to the Columbiad. He was highly gratified by his
|
|
inspection, and made the descent to the bottom of the tube of
|
|
this gigantic machine which was presently to launch him to the
|
|
regions of the moon. It is necessary here to mention a proposal
|
|
of J. T. Maston's. When the secretary of the Gun Club found
|
|
that Barbicane and Nicholl accepted the proposal of Michel
|
|
Ardan, he determined to join them, and make one of a smug party
|
|
of four. So one day he determined to be admitted as one of the
|
|
travelers. Barbicane, pained at having to refuse him, gave him
|
|
clearly to understand that the projectile could not possibly
|
|
contain so many passengers. Maston, in despair, went in search
|
|
of Michel Ardan, who counseled him to resign himself to the
|
|
situation, adding one or two arguments _ad hominem_.
|
|
|
|
"You see, old fellow," he said, "you must not take what I say in
|
|
bad part; but really, between ourselves, you are in too
|
|
incomplete a condition to appear in the moon!"
|
|
|
|
"Incomplete?" shrieked the valiant invalid.
|
|
|
|
"Yes, my dear fellow! imagine our meeting some of the
|
|
inhabitants up there! Would you like to give them such a
|
|
melancholy notion of what goes on down here? to teach them what
|
|
war is, to inform them that we employ our time chiefly in
|
|
devouring each other, in smashing arms and legs, and that too
|
|
on a globe which is capable of supporting a hundred billions
|
|
of inhabitants, and which actually does contain nearly two
|
|
hundred millions? Why, my worthy friend, we should have to
|
|
turn you out of doors!"
|
|
|
|
"But still, if you arrive there in pieces, you will be as
|
|
incomplete as I am."
|
|
|
|
"Unquestionably," replied Michel Ardan; "but we shall not."
|
|
|
|
In fact, a preparatory experiment, tried on the 18th of October,
|
|
had yielded the best results and caused the most well-grounded
|
|
hopes of success. Barbicane, desirous of obtaining some notion
|
|
of the effect of the shock at the moment of the projectile's
|
|
departure, had procured a 38-inch mortar from the arsenal
|
|
of Pensacola. He had this placed on the bank of Hillisborough
|
|
Roads, in order that the shell might fall back into the sea, and
|
|
the shock be thereby destroyed. His object was to ascertain the
|
|
extent of the shock of departure, and not that of the return.
|
|
|
|
A hollow projectile had been prepared for this curious experiment.
|
|
A thick padding fastened upon a kind of elastic network, made of
|
|
the best steel, lined the inside of the walls. It was a veritable
|
|
_nest_ most carefully wadded.
|
|
|
|
"What a pity I can't find room in there," said J. T. Maston,
|
|
regretting that his height did not allow of his trying the adventure.
|
|
|
|
Within this shell were shut up a large cat, and a squirrel
|
|
belonging to J. T. Maston, and of which he was particularly fond.
|
|
They were desirous, however, of ascertaining how this little
|
|
animal, least of all others subject to giddiness, would endure
|
|
this experimental voyage.
|
|
|
|
The mortar was charged with 160 pounds of powder, and the shell
|
|
placed in the chamber. On being fired, the projectile rose with
|
|
great velocity, described a majestic parabola, attained a height
|
|
of about a thousand feet, and with a graceful curve descended in
|
|
the midst of the vessels that lay there at anchor.
|
|
|
|
Without a moment's loss of time a small boat put off in the
|
|
direction of its fall; some divers plunged into the water
|
|
and attached ropes to the handles of the shell, which was
|
|
quickly dragged on board. Five minutes did not elapse between
|
|
the moment of enclosing the animals and that of unscrewing the
|
|
coverlid of their prison.
|
|
|
|
Ardan, Barbicane, Maston, and Nicholl were present on board the
|
|
boat, and assisted at the operation with an interest which may
|
|
readily be comprehended. Hardly had the shell been opened when
|
|
the cat leaped out, slightly bruised, but full of life, and
|
|
exhibiting no signs whatever of having made an aerial expedition.
|
|
No trace, however, of the squirrel could be discovered. The truth
|
|
at last became apparent-- the cat had eaten its fellow-traveler!
|
|
|
|
J. T. Maston grieved much for the loss of his poor squirrel, and
|
|
proposed to add its case to that of other martyrs to science.
|
|
|
|
After this experiment all hesitation, all fear disappeared.
|
|
Besides, Barbicane's plans would ensure greater perfection for
|
|
his projectile, and go far to annihilate altogether the effects
|
|
of the shock. Nothing now remained but to go!
|
|
|
|
Two days later Michel Ardan received a message from the
|
|
President of the United States, an honor of which he showed
|
|
himself especially sensible.
|
|
|
|
After the example of his illustrious fellow-countryman, the
|
|
Marquis de la Fayette, the government had decreed to him the
|
|
title of "Citizen of the United States of America."
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XXIII
|
|
|
|
|
|
THE PROJECTILE-VEHICLE
|
|
|
|
|
|
On the completion of the Columbiad the public interest centered
|
|
in the projectile itself, the vehicle which was destined to
|
|
carry the three hardy adventurers into space.
|
|
|
|
The new plans had been sent to Breadwill and Co., of Albany,
|
|
with the request for their speedy execution. The projectile was
|
|
consequently cast on the 2nd of November, and immediately
|
|
forwarded by the Eastern Railway to Stones Hill, which it
|
|
reached without accident on the 10th of that month, where Michel
|
|
Ardan, Barbicane, and Nicholl were waiting impatiently for it.
|
|
|
|
The projectile had now to be filled to the depth of three feet
|
|
with a bed of water, intended to support a water-tight wooden
|
|
disc, which worked easily within the walls of the projectile.
|
|
It was upon this kind of raft that the travelers were to take
|
|
their place. This body of water was divided by horizontal
|
|
partitions, which the shock of the departure would have to break
|
|
in succession. Then each sheet of the water, from the lowest
|
|
to the highest, running off into escape tubes toward the top of
|
|
the projectile, constituted a kind of spring; and the wooden
|
|
disc, supplied with extremely powerful plugs, could not strike
|
|
the lowest plate except after breaking successively the
|
|
different partitions. Undoubtedly the travelers would still
|
|
have to encounter a violent recoil after the complete escapement
|
|
of the water; but the first shock would be almost entirely
|
|
destroyed by this powerful spring. The upper parts of the walls
|
|
were lined with a thick padding of leather, fastened upon springs
|
|
of the best steel, behind which the escape tubes were completely
|
|
concealed; thus all imaginable precautions had been taken for
|
|
averting the first shock; and if they did get crushed, they
|
|
must, as Michel Ardan said, be made of very bad materials.
|
|
|
|
The entrance into this metallic tower was by a narrow aperture
|
|
contrived in the wall of the cone. This was hermetically closed
|
|
by a plate of aluminum, fastened internally by powerful
|
|
screw-pressure. The travelers could therefore quit their prison
|
|
at pleasure, as soon as they should reach the moon.
|
|
|
|
Light and view were given by means of four thick lenticular
|
|
glass scuttles, two pierced in the circular wall itself, the
|
|
third in the bottom, the fourth in the top. These scuttles then
|
|
were protected against the shock of departure by plates let into
|
|
solid grooves, which could easily be opened outward by
|
|
unscrewing them from the inside. Reservoirs firmly fixed
|
|
contained water and the necessary provisions; and fire
|
|
and light were procurable by means of gas, contained in a
|
|
special reservoir under a pressure of several atmospheres.
|
|
They had only to turn a tap, and for six hours the gas would
|
|
light and warm this comfortable vehicle.
|
|
|
|
There now remained only the question of air; for allowing for
|
|
the consumption of air by Barbicane, his two companions, and two
|
|
dogs which he proposed taking with him, it was necessary to
|
|
renew the air of the projectile. Now air consists principally
|
|
of twenty-one parts of oxygen and seventy-nine of nitrogen.
|
|
The lungs absorb the oxygen, which is indispensable for the support
|
|
of life, and reject the nitrogen. The air expired loses nearly
|
|
five per cent. of the former and contains nearly an equal volume
|
|
of carbonic acid, produced by the combustion of the elements of
|
|
the blood. In an air-tight enclosure, then, after a certain
|
|
time, all the oxygen of the air will be replaced by the carbonic
|
|
acid-- a gas fatal to life. There were two things to be done
|
|
then-- first, to replace the absorbed oxygen; secondly, to
|
|
destroy the expired carbonic acid; both easy enough to do, by
|
|
means of chlorate of potassium and caustic potash. The former
|
|
is a salt which appears under the form of white crystals; when
|
|
raised to a temperature of 400 degrees it is transformed into
|
|
chlorure of potassium, and the oxygen which it contains is
|
|
entirely liberated. Now twenty-eight pounds of chlorate of
|
|
potassium produces seven pounds of oxygen, or 2,400 litres-- the
|
|
quantity necessary for the travelers during twenty-four hours.
|
|
|
|
Caustic potash has a great affinity for carbonic acid; and it is
|
|
sufficient to shake it in order for it to seize upon the acid
|
|
and form bicarbonate of potassium. By these two means they
|
|
would be enabled to restore to the vitiated air its life-
|
|
supporting properties.
|
|
|
|
It is necessary, however, to add that the experiments had
|
|
hitherto been made _in anima vili_. Whatever its scientific
|
|
accuracy was, they were at present ignorant how it would answer
|
|
with human beings. The honor of putting it to the proof was
|
|
energetically claimed by J. T. Maston.
|
|
|
|
"Since I am not to go," said the brave artillerist, "I may at
|
|
least live for a week in the projectile."
|
|
|
|
It would have been hard to refuse him; so they consented to
|
|
his wish. A sufficient quantity of chlorate of potassium and
|
|
of caustic potash was placed at his disposal, together with
|
|
provisions for eight days. And having shaken hands with his
|
|
friends, on the 12th of November, at six o'clock A.M., after
|
|
strictly informing them not to open his prison before the 20th,
|
|
at six o'clock P.M., he slid down the projectile, the plate of
|
|
which was at once hermetically sealed. What did he do with
|
|
himself during that week? They could get no information.
|
|
The thickness of the walls of the projectile prevented any
|
|
sound reaching from the inside to the outside. On the 20th
|
|
of November, at six P.M. exactly, the plate was opened.
|
|
The friends of J. T. Maston had been all along in a state of
|
|
much anxiety; but they were promptly reassured on hearing a
|
|
jolly voice shouting a boisterous hurrah.
|
|
|
|
Presently afterward the secretary of the Gun Club appeared at
|
|
the top of the cone in a triumphant attitude. He had grown fat!
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XXIV
|
|
|
|
|
|
THE TELESCOPE OF THE ROCKY MOUNTAINS
|
|
|
|
|
|
On the 20th of October in the preceding year, after the close of
|
|
the subscription, the president of the Gun Club had credited the
|
|
Observatory of Cambridge with the necessary sums for the
|
|
construction of a gigantic optical instrument. This instrument
|
|
was designed for the purpose of rendering visible on the surface
|
|
of the moon any object exceeding nine feet in diameter.
|
|
|
|
At the period when the Gun Club essayed their great experiment,
|
|
such instruments had reached a high degree of perfection,
|
|
and produced some magnificent results. Two telescopes in
|
|
particular, at this time, were possessed of remarkable power
|
|
and of gigantic dimensions. The first, constructed by Herschel,
|
|
was thirty-six feet in length, and had an object-glass of four
|
|
feet six inches; it possessed a magnifying power of 6,000.
|
|
The second was raised in Ireland, in Parsonstown Park, and belongs
|
|
to Lord Rosse. The length of this tube is forty-eight feet, and
|
|
the diameter of its object-glass six feet; it magnifies 6,400
|
|
times, and required an immense erection of brick work and
|
|
masonry for the purpose of working it, its weight being twelve
|
|
and a half tons.
|
|
|
|
Still, despite these colossal dimensions, the actual
|
|
enlargements scarcely exceeded 6,000 times in round numbers;
|
|
consequently, the moon was brought within no nearer an apparent
|
|
distance than thirty-nine miles; and objects of less than sixty
|
|
feet in diameter, unless they were of very considerable length,
|
|
were still imperceptible.
|
|
|
|
In the present case, dealing with a projectile nine feet in
|
|
diameter and fifteen feet long, it became necessary to bring the
|
|
moon within an apparent distance of five miles at most; and for
|
|
that purpose to establish a magnifying power of 48,000 times.
|
|
|
|
Such was the question proposed to the Observatory of Cambridge,
|
|
There was no lack of funds; the difficulty was purely one
|
|
of construction.
|
|
|
|
After considerable discussion as to the best form and principle
|
|
of the proposed instrument the work was finally commenced.
|
|
According to the calculations of the Observatory of Cambridge,
|
|
the tube of the new reflector would require to be 280 feet in
|
|
length, and the object-glass sixteen feet in diameter.
|
|
Colossal as these dimensions may appear, they were diminutive
|
|
in comparison with the 10,000 foot telescope proposed by the
|
|
astronomer Hooke only a few years ago!
|
|
|
|
Regarding the choice of locality, that matter was
|
|
promptly determined. The object was to select some lofty
|
|
mountain, and there are not many of these in the United States.
|
|
In fact there are but two chains of moderate elevation, between
|
|
which runs the magnificent Mississippi, the "king of rivers"
|
|
as these Republican Yankees delight to call it.
|
|
|
|
Eastwards rise the Appalachians, the very highest point of
|
|
which, in New Hampshire, does not exceed the very moderate
|
|
altitude of 5,600 feet.
|
|
|
|
On the west, however, rise the Rocky Mountains, that immense
|
|
range which, commencing at the Straights of Magellan, follows
|
|
the western coast of Southern America under the name of the
|
|
Andes or the Cordilleras, until it crosses the Isthmus of
|
|
Panama, and runs up the whole of North America to the very
|
|
borders of the Polar Sea. The highest elevation of this range
|
|
still does not exceed 10,700 feet. With this elevation,
|
|
nevertheless, the Gun Club were compelled to be content,
|
|
inasmuch as they had determined that both telescope and
|
|
Columbiad should be erected within the limits of the Union.
|
|
All the necessary apparatus was consequently sent on to the
|
|
summit of Long's Peak, in the territory of Missouri.
|
|
|
|
Neither pen nor language can describe the difficulties of all
|
|
kinds which the American engineers had to surmount, of the
|
|
prodigies of daring and skill which they accomplished. They had
|
|
to raise enormous stones, massive pieces of wrought iron, heavy
|
|
corner-clamps and huge portions of cylinder, with an
|
|
object-glass weighing nearly 30,000 pounds, above the line of
|
|
perpetual snow for more than 10,000 feet in height, after
|
|
crossing desert prairies, impenetrable forests, fearful rapids,
|
|
far from all centers of population, and in the midst of savage
|
|
regions, in which every detail of life becomes an almost
|
|
insoluble problem. And yet, notwithstanding these innumerable
|
|
obstacles, American genius triumphed. In less than a year after
|
|
the commencement of the works, toward the close of September,
|
|
the gigantic reflector rose into the air to a height of 280 feet.
|
|
It was raised by means of an enormous iron crane; an ingenious
|
|
mechanism allowed it to be easily worked toward all the points
|
|
of the heavens, and to follow the stars from the one horizon to
|
|
the other during their journey through the heavens.
|
|
|
|
It had cost $400,000. The first time it was directed toward the
|
|
moon the observers evinced both curiosity and anxiety. What were
|
|
they about to discover in the field of this telescope which
|
|
magnified objects 48,000 times? Would they perceive peoples,
|
|
herds of lunar animals, towns, lakes, seas? No! there was
|
|
nothing which science had not already discovered! and on all the
|
|
points of its disc the volcanic nature of the moon became
|
|
determinable with the utmost precision.
|
|
|
|
But the telescope of the Rocky Mountains, before doing its duty
|
|
to the Gun Club, rendered immense services to astronomy. Thanks to
|
|
its penetrative power, the depths of the heavens were sounded to
|
|
the utmost extent; the apparent diameter of a great number of stars
|
|
was accurately measured; and Mr. Clark, of the Cambridge staff,
|
|
resolved the Crab nebula in Taurus, which the reflector of Lord
|
|
Rosse had never been able to decompose.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XXV
|
|
|
|
|
|
FINAL DETAILS
|
|
|
|
|
|
It was the 22nd of November; the departure was to take place in
|
|
ten days. One operation alone remained to be accomplished to
|
|
bring all to a happy termination; an operation delicate and
|
|
perilous, requiring infinite precautions, and against the
|
|
success of which Captain Nicholl had laid his third bet. It was,
|
|
in fact, nothing less than the loading of the Columbiad, and the
|
|
introduction into it of 400,000 pounds of gun-cotton. Nicholl had
|
|
thought, not perhaps without reason, that the handling of such
|
|
formidable quantities of pyroxyle would, in all probability,
|
|
involve a grave catastrophe; and at any rate, that this immense
|
|
mass of eminently inflammable matter would inevitably ignite when
|
|
submitted to the pressure of the projectile.
|
|
|
|
There were indeed dangers accruing as before from the
|
|
carelessness of the Americans, but Barbicane had set his heart
|
|
on success, and took all possible precautions. In the first
|
|
place, he was very careful as to the transportation of the
|
|
gun-cotton to Stones Hill. He had it conveyed in small
|
|
quantities, carefully packed in sealed cases. These were
|
|
brought by rail from Tampa Town to the camp, and from thence
|
|
were taken to the Columbiad by barefooted workmen, who deposited
|
|
them in their places by means of cranes placed at the orifice of
|
|
the cannon. No steam-engine was permitted to work, and every
|
|
fire was extinguished within two miles of the works.
|
|
|
|
Even in November they feared to work by day, lest the sun's rays
|
|
acting on the gun-cotton might lead to unhappy results. This led
|
|
to their working at night, by light produced in a vacuum by means
|
|
of Ruhmkorff's apparatus, which threw an artificial brightness
|
|
into the depths of the Columbiad. There the cartridges were
|
|
arranged with the utmost regularity, connected by a metallic thread,
|
|
destined to communicate to them all simultaneously the electric
|
|
spark, by which means this mass of gun-cotton was eventually
|
|
to be ignited.
|
|
|
|
By the 28th of November eight hundred cartridges had been
|
|
placed in the bottom of the Columbiad. So far the operation had
|
|
been successful! But what confusion, what anxieties, what struggles
|
|
were undergone by President Barbicane! In vain had he refused
|
|
admission to Stones Hill; every day the inquisitive neighbors
|
|
scaled the palisades, some even carrying their imprudence to the
|
|
point of smoking while surrounded by bales of gun-cotton.
|
|
Barbicane was in a perpetual state of alarm. J. T. Maston
|
|
seconded him to the best of his ability, by giving vigorous
|
|
chase to the intruders, and carefully picking up the still
|
|
lighted cigar ends which the Yankees threw about. A somewhat
|
|
difficult task! seeing that more than 300,000 persons were
|
|
gathered round the enclosure. Michel Ardan had volunteered to
|
|
superintend the transport of the cartridges to the mouth of the
|
|
Columbiad; but the president, having surprised him with an
|
|
enormous cigar in his mouth, while he was hunting out the rash
|
|
spectators to whom he himself offered so dangerous an example,
|
|
saw that he could not trust this fearless smoker, and was
|
|
therefore obliged to mount a special guard over him.
|
|
|
|
At last, Providence being propitious, this wonderful loading
|
|
came to a happy termination, Captain Nicholl's third bet being
|
|
thus lost. It remained now to introduce the projectile into the
|
|
Columbiad, and to place it on its soft bed of gun-cotton.
|
|
|
|
But before doing this, all those things necessary for the
|
|
journey had to be carefully arranged in the projectile vehicle.
|
|
These necessaries were numerous; and had Ardan been allowed to
|
|
follow his own wishes, there would have been no space remaining
|
|
for the travelers. It is impossible to conceive of half the
|
|
things this charming Frenchman wished to convey to the moon.
|
|
A veritable stock of useless trifles! But Barbicane interfered
|
|
and refused admission to anything not absolutely needed.
|
|
Several thermometers, barometers, and telescopes were packed in
|
|
the instrument case.
|
|
|
|
The travelers being desirous of examing the moon carefully
|
|
during their voyage, in order to facilitate their studies,
|
|
they took with them Boeer and Moeller's excellent _Mappa
|
|
Selenographica_, a masterpiece of patience and observation,
|
|
which they hoped would enable them to identify those physical
|
|
features in the moon, with which they were acquainted.
|
|
This map reproduced with scrupulous fidelity the smallest
|
|
details of the lunar surface which faces the earth; the
|
|
mountains, valleys, craters, peaks, and ridges were all
|
|
represented, with their exact dimensions, relative positions,
|
|
and names; from the mountains Doerfel and Leibnitz on the
|
|
eastern side of the disc, to the _Mare frigoris_ of the North Pole.
|
|
|
|
They took also three rifles and three fowling-pieces, and a
|
|
large quantity of balls, shot, and powder.
|
|
|
|
"We cannot tell whom we shall have to deal with," said Michel Ardan.
|
|
"Men or beasts may possibly object to our visit. It is only wise
|
|
to take all precautions."
|
|
|
|
These defensive weapons were accompanied by pickaxes, crowbars,
|
|
saws, and other useful implements, not to mention clothing
|
|
adapted to every temperature, from that of polar regions to that
|
|
of the torrid zone.
|
|
|
|
Ardan wished to convey a number of animals of different sorts,
|
|
not indeed a pair of every known species, as he could not see
|
|
the necessity of acclimatizing serpents, tigers, alligators, or
|
|
any other noxious beasts in the moon. "Nevertheless," he said
|
|
to Barbicane, "some valuable and useful beasts, bullocks, cows,
|
|
horses, and donkeys, would bear the journey very well, and would
|
|
also be very useful to us."
|
|
|
|
"I dare say, my dear Ardan," replied the president, "but our
|
|
projectile-vehicle is no Noah's ark, from which it differs both in
|
|
dimensions and object. Let us confine ourselves to possibilities."
|
|
|
|
After a prolonged discussion, it was agreed that the travelers
|
|
should restrict themselves to a sporting-dog belonging to
|
|
Nicholl, and to a large Newfoundland. Several packets of seeds
|
|
were also included among the necessaries. Michel Ardan, indeed,
|
|
was anxious to add some sacks full of earth to sow them in; as
|
|
it was, he took a dozen shrubs carefully wrapped up in straw to
|
|
plant in the moon.
|
|
|
|
The important question of provisions still remained; it being
|
|
necessary to provide against the possibility of their finding
|
|
the moon absolutely barren. Barbicane managed so successfully,
|
|
that he supplied them with sufficient rations for a year.
|
|
These consisted of preserved meats and vegetables, reduced by
|
|
strong hydraulic pressure to the smallest possible dimensions.
|
|
They were also supplied with brandy, and took water enough for
|
|
two months, being confident, from astronomical observations,
|
|
that there was no lack of water on the moon's surface. As to
|
|
provisions, doubtless the inhabitants of the _earth_ would find
|
|
nourishment somewhere in the _moon_. Ardan never questioned
|
|
this; indeed, had he done so, he would never have undertaken
|
|
the journey.
|
|
|
|
"Besides," he said one day to his friends, "we shall not be
|
|
completely abandoned by our terrestrial friends; they will take
|
|
care not to forget us."
|
|
|
|
"No, indeed!" replied J. T. Maston.
|
|
|
|
"Nothing would be simpler," replied Ardan; "the Columbiad will
|
|
be always there. Well! whenever the moon is in a favorable
|
|
condition as to the zenith, if not to the perigee, that is to
|
|
say about once a year, could you not send us a shell packed
|
|
with provisions, which we might expect on some appointed day?"
|
|
|
|
"Hurrah! hurrah!" cried J. T. Matson; "what an ingenious fellow!
|
|
what a splendid idea! Indeed, my good friends, we shall not
|
|
forget you!"
|
|
|
|
"I shall reckon upon you! Then, you see, we shall receive news
|
|
regularly from the earth, and we shall indeed be stupid if we
|
|
hit upon no plan for communicating with our good friends here!"
|
|
|
|
These words inspired such confidence, that Michel Ardan carried
|
|
all the Gun Club with him in his enthusiasm. What he said
|
|
seemed so simple and so easy, so sure of success, that none
|
|
could be so sordidly attached to this earth as to hesitate to
|
|
follow the three travelers on their lunar expedition.
|
|
|
|
All being ready at last, it remained to place the projectile in
|
|
the Columbiad, an operation abundantly accompanied by dangers
|
|
and difficulties.
|
|
|
|
The enormous shell was conveyed to the summit of Stones Hill.
|
|
There, powerful cranes raised it, and held it suspended over the
|
|
mouth of the cylinder.
|
|
|
|
It was a fearful moment! What if the chains should break under
|
|
its enormous weight? The sudden fall of such a body would
|
|
inevitably cause the gun-cotton to explode!
|
|
|
|
Fortunately this did not happen; and some hours later the
|
|
projectile-vehicle descended gently into the heart of the cannon
|
|
and rested on its couch of pyroxyle, a veritable bed of
|
|
explosive eider-down. Its pressure had no result, other than
|
|
the more effectual ramming down of the charge in the Columbiad.
|
|
|
|
"I have lost," said the captain, who forthwith paid President
|
|
Barbicane the sum of three thousand dollars.
|
|
|
|
Barbicane did not wish to accept the money from one of his
|
|
fellow-travelers, but gave way at last before the determination
|
|
of Nicholl, who wished before leaving the earth to fulfill all
|
|
his engagements.
|
|
|
|
"Now," said Michel Ardan, "I have only one thing more to wish
|
|
for you, my brave captain."
|
|
|
|
"What is that?" asked Nicholl.
|
|
|
|
"It is that you may lose your two other bets! Then we shall be
|
|
sure not to be stopped on our journey!"
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XXVI
|
|
|
|
|
|
FIRE!
|
|
|
|
|
|
The first of December had arrived! the fatal day! for, if the
|
|
projectile were not discharged that very night at 10h. 48m. 40s.
|
|
P.M., more than eighteen years must roll by before the moon
|
|
would again present herself under the same conditions of zenith
|
|
and perigee.
|
|
|
|
The weather was magnificent. Despite the approach of winter,
|
|
the sun shone brightly, and bathed in its radiant light that
|
|
earth which three of its denizens were about to abandon for a
|
|
new world.
|
|
|
|
How many persons lost their rest on the night which preceded
|
|
this long-expected day! All hearts beat with disquietude, save
|
|
only the heart of Michel Ardan. That imperturbable personage
|
|
came and went with his habitual business-like air, while nothing
|
|
whatever denoted that any unusual matter preoccupied his mind.
|
|
|
|
After dawn, an innumerable multitude covered the prairie which
|
|
extends, as far as the eye can reach, round Stones Hill. Every
|
|
quarter of an hour the railway brought fresh accessions of
|
|
sightseers; and, according to the statement of the Tampa Town
|
|
_Observer_, not less than five millions of spectators thronged
|
|
the soil of Florida.
|
|
|
|
For a whole month previously, the mass of these persons had
|
|
bivouacked round the enclosure, and laid the foundations for a
|
|
town which was afterward called "Ardan's Town." The whole plain
|
|
was covered with huts, cottages, and tents. Every nation under
|
|
the sun was represented there; and every language might be heard
|
|
spoken at the same time. It was a perfect Babel re-enacted.
|
|
All the various classes of American society were mingled
|
|
together in terms of absolute equality. Bankers, farmers,
|
|
sailors, cotton-planters, brokers, merchants, watermen,
|
|
magistrates, elbowed each other in the most free-and-easy way.
|
|
Louisiana Creoles fraternized with farmers from Indiana;
|
|
Kentucky and Tennessee gentlemen and haughty Virginians
|
|
conversed with trappers and the half-savages of the lakes and
|
|
butchers from Cincinnati. Broad-brimmed white hats and Panamas,
|
|
blue-cotton trousers, light-colored stockings, cambric frills,
|
|
were all here displayed; while upon shirt-fronts, wristbands,
|
|
and neckties, upon every finger, even upon the very ears, they
|
|
wore an assortment of rings, shirt-pins, brooches, and trinkets,
|
|
of which the value only equaled the execrable taste. Women, children,
|
|
and servants, in equally expensive dress, surrounded their husbands,
|
|
fathers, or masters, who resembled the patriarchs of tribes in the
|
|
midst of their immense households.
|
|
|
|
At meal-times all fell to work upon the dishes peculiar to the
|
|
Southern States, and consumed with an appetite that threatened
|
|
speedy exhaustion of the victualing powers of Florida,
|
|
fricasseed frogs, stuffed monkey, fish chowder, underdone
|
|
'possum, and raccoon steaks. And as for the liquors which
|
|
accompanied this indigestible repast! The shouts, the
|
|
vociferations that resounded through the bars and taverns
|
|
decorated with glasses, tankards, and bottles of marvelous
|
|
shape, mortars for pounding sugar, and bundles of straws!
|
|
"Mint-julep" roars one of the barmen; "Claret sangaree!"
|
|
shouts another; "Cocktail!" "Brandy-smash!" "Real mint-julep
|
|
in the new style!" All these cries intermingled produced a
|
|
bewildering and deafening hubbub.
|
|
|
|
But on this day, 1st of December, such sounds were rare. No one
|
|
thought of eating or drinking, and at four P.M. there were vast
|
|
numbers of spectators who had not even taken their customary
|
|
lunch! And, a still more significant fact, even the national
|
|
passion for play seemed quelled for the time under the general
|
|
excitement of the hour.
|
|
|
|
Up till nightfall, a dull, noiseless agitation, such as
|
|
precedes great catastrophes, ran through the anxious multitude.
|
|
An indescribable uneasiness pervaded all minds, an indefinable
|
|
sensation which oppressed the heart. Every one wished it was over.
|
|
|
|
However, about seven o'clock, the heavy silence was dissipated.
|
|
The moon rose above the horizon. Millions of hurrahs hailed
|
|
her appearance. She was punctual to the rendezvous, and shouts
|
|
of welcome greeted her on all sides, as her pale beams shone
|
|
gracefully in the clear heavens. At this moment the three
|
|
intrepid travelers appeared. This was the signal for renewed
|
|
cries of still greater intensity. Instantly the vast
|
|
assemblage, as with one accord, struck up the national hymn of
|
|
the United States, and "Yankee Doodle," sung by five million of
|
|
hearty throats, rose like a roaring tempest to the farthest
|
|
limits of the atmosphere. Then a profound silence reigned
|
|
throughout the crowd.
|
|
|
|
The Frenchman and the two Americans had by this time entered the
|
|
enclosure reserved in the center of the multitude. They were
|
|
accompanied by the members of the Gun Club, and by deputations
|
|
sent from all the European Observatories. Barbicane, cool and
|
|
collected, was giving his final directions. Nicholl, with
|
|
compressed lips, his arms crossed behind his back, walked with
|
|
a firm and measured step. Michel Ardan, always easy, dressed in
|
|
thorough traveler's costume, leathern gaiters on his legs, pouch
|
|
by his side, in loose velvet suit, cigar in mouth, was full of
|
|
inexhaustible gayety, laughing, joking, playing pranks with J.
|
|
T. Maston. In one word, he was the thorough "Frenchman" (and
|
|
worse, a "Parisian") to the last moment.
|
|
|
|
Ten o'clock struck! The moment had arrived for taking their
|
|
places in the projectile! The necessary operations for the
|
|
descent, and the subsequent removal of the cranes and
|
|
scaffolding that inclined over the mouth of the Columbiad,
|
|
required a certain period of time.
|
|
|
|
Barbicane had regulated his chronometer to the tenth part of a
|
|
second by that of Murchison the engineer, who was charged with
|
|
the duty of firing the gun by means of an electric spark.
|
|
Thus the travelers enclosed within the projectile were enabled
|
|
to follow with their eyes the impassive needle which marked the
|
|
precise moment of their departure.
|
|
|
|
The moment had arrived for saying "good-by!" The scene was a
|
|
touching one. Despite his feverish gayety, even Michel Ardan
|
|
was touched. J. T. Maston had found in his own dry eyes one
|
|
ancient tear, which he had doubtless reserved for the occasion.
|
|
He dropped it on the forehead of his dear president.
|
|
|
|
"Can I not go?" he said, "there is still time!"
|
|
|
|
"Impossible, old fellow!" replied Barbicane. A few moments
|
|
later, the three fellow-travelers had ensconced themselves in
|
|
the projectile, and screwed down the plate which covered the
|
|
entrance-aperture. The mouth of the Columbiad, now completely
|
|
disencumbered, was open entirely to the sky.
|
|
|
|
The moon advanced upward in a heaven of the purest clearness,
|
|
outshining in her passage the twinkling light of the stars.
|
|
She passed over the constellation of the Twins, and was now
|
|
nearing the halfway point between the horizon and the zenith.
|
|
A terrible silence weighed upon the entire scene! Not a breath of
|
|
wind upon the earth! not a sound of breathing from the countless
|
|
chests of the spectators! Their hearts seemed afraid to beat!
|
|
All eyes were fixed upon the yawning mouth of the Columbiad.
|
|
|
|
Murchison followed with his eye the hand of his chronometer.
|
|
It wanted scarce forty seconds to the moment of departure, but
|
|
each second seemed to last an age! At the twentieth there was
|
|
a general shudder, as it occurred to the minds of that vast
|
|
assemblage that the bold travelers shut up within the projectile
|
|
were also counting those terrible seconds. Some few cries here
|
|
and there escaped the crowd.
|
|
|
|
"Thirty-five!-- thirty-six!-- thirty-seven!-- thirty-eight!--
|
|
thirty-nine!-- forty! FIRE!!!"
|
|
|
|
Instantly Murchison pressed with his finger the key of the
|
|
electric battery, restored the current of the fluid, and
|
|
discharged the spark into the breech of the Columbiad.
|
|
|
|
An appalling unearthly report followed instantly, such as can be
|
|
compared to nothing whatever known, not even to the roar of
|
|
thunder, or the blast of volcanic explosions! No words can
|
|
convey the slightest idea of the terrific sound! An immense
|
|
spout of fire shot up from the bowels of the earth as from a crater.
|
|
The earth heaved up, and with great difficulty some few spectators
|
|
obtained a momentary glimpse of the projectile victoriously
|
|
cleaving the air in the midst of the fiery vapors!
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XXVII
|
|
|
|
|
|
FOUL WEATHER
|
|
|
|
|
|
At the moment when that pyramid of fire rose to a prodigious
|
|
height into the air, the glare of flame lit up the whole of
|
|
Florida; and for a moment day superseded night over a
|
|
considerable extent of the country. This immense canopy of fire
|
|
was perceived at a distance of one hundred miles out at sea, and
|
|
more than one ship's captain entered in his log the appearance
|
|
of this gigantic meteor.
|
|
|
|
The discharge of the Columbiad was accompanied by a
|
|
perfect earthquake. Florida was shaken to its very depths.
|
|
The gases of the powder, expanded by heat, forced back the
|
|
atmospheric strata with tremendous violence, and this
|
|
artificial hurricane rushed like a water-spout through the air.
|
|
|
|
Not a single spectator remained on his feet! Men, women
|
|
children, all lay prostrate like ears of corn under a tempest.
|
|
There ensued a terrible tumult; a large number of persons were
|
|
seriously injured. J. T. Maston, who, despite all dictates of
|
|
prudence, had kept in advance of the mass, was pitched back 120
|
|
feet, shooting like a projectile over the heads of his
|
|
fellow-citizens. Three hundred thousand persons remained deaf
|
|
for a time, and as though struck stupefied.
|
|
|
|
As soon as the first effects were over, the injured, the deaf,
|
|
and lastly, the crowd in general, woke up with frenzied cries.
|
|
"Hurrah for Ardan! Hurrah for Barbicane! Hurrah for Nicholl!"
|
|
rose to the skies. Thousands of persons, noses in air, armed
|
|
with telescopes and race-glasses, were questioning space,
|
|
forgetting all contusions and emotions in the one idea of
|
|
watching for the projectile. They looked in vain! It was no
|
|
longer to be seen, and they were obliged to wait for telegrams
|
|
from Long's Peak. The director of the Cambridge Observatory was
|
|
at his post on the Rocky Mountains; and to him, as a skillful
|
|
and persevering astronomer, all observations had been confided.
|
|
|
|
But an unforeseen phenomenon came in to subject the public
|
|
impatience to a severe trial.
|
|
|
|
The weather, hitherto so fine, suddenly changed; the sky became
|
|
heavy with clouds. It could not have been otherwise after the
|
|
terrible derangement of the atmospheric strata, and the dispersion
|
|
of the enormous quantity of vapor arising from the combustion of
|
|
200,000 pounds of pyroxyle!
|
|
|
|
On the morrow the horizon was covered with clouds-- a thick and
|
|
impenetrable curtain between earth and sky, which unhappily
|
|
extended as far as the Rocky Mountains. It was a fatality!
|
|
But since man had chosen so to disturb the atmosphere, he was
|
|
bound to accept the consequences of his experiment.
|
|
|
|
Supposing, now, that the experiment had succeeded, the travelers
|
|
having started on the 1st of December, at 10h. 46m. 40s. P.M.,
|
|
were due on the 4th at 0h. P.M. at their destination. So that
|
|
up to that time it would have been very difficult after all to
|
|
have observed, under such conditions, a body so small as the shell.
|
|
Therefore they waited with what patience they might.
|
|
|
|
From the 4th to the 6th of December inclusive, the weather
|
|
remaining much the same in America, the great European
|
|
instruments of Herschel, Rosse, and Foucault, were constantly
|
|
directed toward the moon, for the weather was then magnificent;
|
|
but the comparative weakness of their glasses prevented any
|
|
trustworthy observations being made.
|
|
|
|
On the 7th the sky seemed to lighten. They were in hopes now,
|
|
but their hope was of but short duration, and at night again
|
|
thick clouds hid the starry vault from all eyes.
|
|
|
|
Matters were now becoming serious, when on the 9th the sun
|
|
reappeared for an instant, as if for the purpose of teasing
|
|
the Americans. It was received with hisses; and wounded, no
|
|
doubt, by such a reception, showed itself very sparing of its rays.
|
|
|
|
On the 10th, no change! J. T. Maston went nearly mad, and great
|
|
fears were entertained regarding the brain of this worthy
|
|
individual, which had hitherto been so well preserved within his
|
|
gutta-percha cranium.
|
|
|
|
But on the 11th one of those inexplicable tempests peculiar to
|
|
those intertropical regions was let loose in the atmosphere.
|
|
A terrific east wind swept away the groups of clouds which had
|
|
been so long gathering, and at night the semi-disc of the orb of
|
|
night rode majestically amid the soft constellations of the sky.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XXVIII
|
|
|
|
|
|
A NEW STAR
|
|
|
|
|
|
That very night, the startling news so impatiently awaited,
|
|
burst like a thunderbolt over the United States of the Union,
|
|
and thence, darting across the ocean, ran through all the
|
|
telegraphic wires of the globe. The projectile had been
|
|
detected, thanks to the gigantic reflector of Long's Peak!
|
|
Here is the note received by the director of the Observatory
|
|
of Cambridge. It contains the scientific conclusion regarding
|
|
this great experiment of the Gun Club.
|
|
|
|
|
|
LONG'S PEAK, December 12.
|
|
To the Officers of the Observatory of Cambridge.
|
|
The projectile discharged by the Columbiad at Stones Hill has
|
|
been detected by Messrs. Belfast and J. T. Maston, 12th of
|
|
December, at 8:47 P.M., the moon having entered her last quarter.
|
|
This projectile has not arrived at its destination. It has
|
|
passed by the side; but sufficiently near to be retained by the
|
|
lunar attraction.
|
|
|
|
The rectilinear movement has thus become changed into a circular
|
|
motion of extreme velocity, and it is now pursuing an elliptical
|
|
orbit round the moon, of which it has become a true satellite.
|
|
|
|
The elements of this new star we have as yet been unable to
|
|
determine; we do not yet know the velocity of its passage.
|
|
The distance which separates it from the surface of the moon
|
|
may be estimated at about 2,833 miles.
|
|
|
|
However, two hypotheses come here into our consideration.
|
|
|
|
1. Either the attraction of the moon will end by drawing them
|
|
into itself, and the travelers will attain their destination; or,
|
|
|
|
2. The projectile, following an immutable law, will continue to
|
|
gravitate round the moon till the end of time.
|
|
|
|
At some future time, our observations will be able to determine
|
|
this point, but till then the experiment of the Gun Club can
|
|
have no other result than to have provided our solar system with
|
|
a new star.
|
|
J. BELFAST.
|
|
|
|
|
|
To how many questions did this unexpected _denouement_ give rise?
|
|
What mysterious results was the future reserving for the
|
|
investigation of science? At all events, the names of Nicholl,
|
|
Barbicane, and Michel Ardan were certain to be immortalized in
|
|
the annals of astronomy!
|
|
|
|
When the dispatch from Long's Peak had once become known, there
|
|
was but one universal feeling of surprise and alarm. Was it
|
|
possible to go to the aid of these bold travelers? No! for they
|
|
had placed themselves beyond the pale of humanity, by crossing
|
|
the limits imposed by the Creator on his earthly creatures.
|
|
They had air enough for _two_ months; they had victuals enough
|
|
for _twelve;-- but after that?_ There was only one man who
|
|
would not admit that the situation was desperate-- he alone had
|
|
confidence; and that was their devoted friend J. T. Maston.
|
|
|
|
Besides, he never let them get out of sight. His home was
|
|
henceforth the post at Long's Peak; his horizon, the mirror of
|
|
that immense reflector. As soon as the moon rose above the
|
|
horizon, he immediately caught her in the field of the
|
|
telescope; he never let her go for an instant out of his
|
|
sight, and followed her assiduously in her course through the
|
|
stellar spaces. He watched with untiring patience the passage
|
|
of the projectile across her silvery disc, and really the worthy
|
|
man remained in perpetual communication with his three friends,
|
|
whom he did not despair of seeing again some day.
|
|
|
|
"Those three men," said he, "have carried into space all the
|
|
resources of art, science, and industry. With that, one can do
|
|
anything; and you will see that, some day, they will come out
|
|
all right."
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
ROUND THE MOON
|
|
|
|
A SEQUEL TO
|
|
|
|
FROM THE EARTH TO THE MOON
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
ROUND THE MOON
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
PRELIMINARY CHAPTER
|
|
|
|
|
|
THE FIRST PART OF THIS WORK, AND SERVING AS A PREFACE TO THE SECOND
|
|
|
|
During the year 186-, the whole world was greatly excited by a
|
|
scientific experiment unprecedented in the annals of science.
|
|
The members of the Gun Club, a circle of artillerymen formed at
|
|
Baltimore after the American war, conceived the idea of
|
|
putting themselves in communication with the moon!-- yes, with
|
|
the moon-- by sending to her a projectile. Their president,
|
|
Barbicane, the promoter of the enterprise, having consulted the
|
|
astronomers of the Cambridge Observatory upon the subject, took
|
|
all necessary means to ensure the success of this extraordinary
|
|
enterprise, which had been declared practicable by the majority
|
|
of competent judges. After setting on foot a public
|
|
subscription, which realized nearly L1,200,000, they began the
|
|
gigantic work.
|
|
|
|
According to the advice forwarded from the members of the
|
|
Observatory, the gun destined to launch the projectile had to be
|
|
fixed in a country situated between the 0 and 28th degrees of
|
|
north or south latitude, in order to aim at the moon when at the
|
|
zenith; and its initiatory velocity was fixed at twelve thousand
|
|
yards to the second. Launched on the 1st of December, at 10hrs.
|
|
46m. 40s. P.M., it ought to reach the moon four days after its
|
|
departure, that is on the 5th of December, at midnight
|
|
precisely, at the moment of her attaining her perigee, that is
|
|
her nearest distance from the earth, which is exactly 86,410
|
|
leagues (French), or 238,833 miles mean distance (English).
|
|
|
|
The principal members of the Gun Club, President Barbicane,
|
|
Major Elphinstone, the secretary Joseph T. Maston, and other
|
|
learned men, held several meetings, at which the shape and
|
|
composition of the projectile were discussed, also the position
|
|
and nature of the gun, and the quality and quantity of powder
|
|
to be used. It was decided: First, that the projectile should
|
|
be a shell made of aluminum with a diameter of 108 inches and a
|
|
thickness of twelve inches to its walls; and should weigh
|
|
19,250 pounds. Second, that the gun should be a Columbiad
|
|
cast in iron, 900 feet long, and run perpendicularly into
|
|
the earth. Third, that the charge should contain 400,000 pounds
|
|
of gun-cotton, which, giving out six billions of litres of gas in
|
|
rear of the projectile, would easily carry it toward the orb of night.
|
|
|
|
These questions determined President Barbicane, assisted by
|
|
Murchison the engineer, to choose a spot situated in Florida, in
|
|
27@ 7' North latitude, and 77@ 3' West (Greenwich) longitude.
|
|
It was on this spot, after stupendous labor, that the Columbiad
|
|
was cast with full success. Things stood thus, when an incident
|
|
took place which increased the interest attached to this great
|
|
enterprise a hundredfold.
|
|
|
|
A Frenchman, an enthusiastic Parisian, as witty as he was bold,
|
|
asked to be enclosed in the projectile, in order that he might
|
|
reach the moon, and reconnoiter this terrestrial satellite.
|
|
The name of this intrepid adventurer was Michel Ardan. He landed
|
|
in America, was received with enthusiasm, held meetings, saw
|
|
himself carried in triumph, reconciled President Barbicane to
|
|
his mortal enemy, Captain Nicholl, and, as a token of
|
|
reconciliation, persuaded them both to start with him in
|
|
the projectile. The proposition being accepted, the shape
|
|
of the projectile was slightly altered. It was made of a
|
|
cylindro-conical form. This species of aerial car was lined with
|
|
strong springs and partitions to deaden the shock of departure.
|
|
It was provided with food for a year, water for some months,
|
|
and gas for some days. A self-acting apparatus supplied the
|
|
three travelers with air to breathe. At the same time, on one
|
|
of the highest points of the Rocky Mountains, the Gun Club had
|
|
a gigantic telescope erected, in order that they might be able
|
|
to follow the course of the projectile through space. All was
|
|
then ready.
|
|
|
|
On the 30th of November, at the hour fixed upon, from the midst
|
|
of an extraordinary crowd of spectators, the departure took place,
|
|
and for the first time, three human beings quitted the terrestrial
|
|
globe, and launched into inter-planetary space with almost a
|
|
certainty of reaching their destination. These bold travelers,
|
|
Michel Ardan, President Barbicane, and Captain Nicholl, ought to
|
|
make the passage in ninety-seven hours, thirteen minutes, and
|
|
twenty seconds. Consequently, their arrival on the lunar disc
|
|
could not take place until the 5th of December at twelve at night,
|
|
at the exact moment when the moon should be full, and not on the
|
|
4th, as some badly informed journalists had announced.
|
|
|
|
But an unforeseen circumstance, viz., the detonation produced
|
|
by the Columbiad, had the immediate effect of troubling the
|
|
terrestrial atmosphere, by accumulating a large quantity of
|
|
vapor, a phenomenon which excited universal indignation, for the
|
|
moon was hidden from the eyes of the watchers for several nights.
|
|
|
|
The worthy Joseph T. Maston, the staunchest friend of the three
|
|
travelers, started for the Rocky Mountains, accompanied by the
|
|
Hon. J. Belfast, director of the Cambridge Observatory, and
|
|
reached the station of Long's Peak, where the telescope was
|
|
erected which brought the moon within an apparent distance of
|
|
two leagues. The honorable secretary of the Gun Club wished
|
|
himself to observe the vehicle of his daring friends.
|
|
|
|
The accumulation of the clouds in the atmosphere prevented all
|
|
observation on the 5th, 6th, 7th, 8th, 9th, and 10th of December.
|
|
Indeed it was thought that all observations would have to be put
|
|
off to the 3d of January in the following year; for the moon
|
|
entering its last quarter on the 11th, would then only present
|
|
an ever-decreasing portion of her disc, insufficient to allow
|
|
of their following the course of the projectile.
|
|
|
|
At length, to the general satisfaction, a heavy storm cleared
|
|
the atmosphere on the night of the 11th and 12th of December,
|
|
and the moon, with half-illuminated disc, was plainly to be seen
|
|
upon the black sky.
|
|
|
|
That very night a telegram was sent from the station of Long's
|
|
Peak by Joseph T. Maston and Belfast to the gentlemen of the
|
|
Cambridge Observatory, announcing that on the 11th of December
|
|
at 8h. 47m. P.M., the projectile launched by the Columbiad of
|
|
Stones Hill had been detected by Messrs. Belfast and Maston--
|
|
that it had deviated from its course from some unknown cause,
|
|
and had not reached its destination; but that it had passed near
|
|
enough to be retained by the lunar attraction; that its
|
|
rectilinear movement had been changed to a circular one, and
|
|
that following an elliptical orbit round the star of night it
|
|
had become its satellite. The telegram added that the elements
|
|
of this new star had not yet been calculated; and indeed three
|
|
observations made upon a star in three different positions are
|
|
necessary to determine these elements. Then it showed that the
|
|
distance separating the projectile from the lunar surface "might"
|
|
be reckoned at about 2,833 miles.
|
|
|
|
It ended with the double hypothesis: either the attraction of
|
|
the moon would draw it to herself, and the travelers thus attain
|
|
their end; or that the projectile, held in one immutable orbit,
|
|
would gravitate around the lunar disc to all eternity.
|
|
|
|
With such alternatives, what would be the fate of the travelers?
|
|
Certainly they had food for some time. But supposing they did
|
|
succeed in their rash enterprise, how would they return?
|
|
Could they ever return? Should they hear from them?
|
|
These questions, debated by the most learned pens of the day,
|
|
strongly engrossed the public attention.
|
|
|
|
It is advisable here to make a remark which ought to be well
|
|
considered by hasty observers. When a purely speculative
|
|
discovery is announced to the public, it cannot be done with too
|
|
much prudence. No one is obliged to discover either a planet,
|
|
a comet, or a satellite; and whoever makes a mistake in such a
|
|
case exposes himself justly to the derision of the mass.
|
|
Far better is it to wait; and that is what the impatient Joseph
|
|
T. Maston should have done before sending this telegram forth to
|
|
the world, which, according to his idea, told the whole result
|
|
of the enterprise. Indeed this telegram contained two sorts of
|
|
errors, as was proved eventually. First, errors of observation,
|
|
concerning the distance of the projectile from the surface of
|
|
the moon, for on the 11th of December it was impossible to see
|
|
it; and what Joseph T. Maston had seen, or thought he saw, could
|
|
not have been the projectile of the Columbiad. Second, errors of
|
|
theory on the fate in store for the said projectile; for in making
|
|
it a satellite of the moon, it was putting it in direct
|
|
contradiction of all mechanical laws.
|
|
|
|
One single hypothesis of the observers of Long's Peak could ever
|
|
be realized, that which foresaw the case of the travelers (if
|
|
still alive) uniting their efforts with the lunar attraction to
|
|
attain the surface of the disc.
|
|
|
|
Now these men, as clever as they were daring, had survived the
|
|
terrible shock consequent on their departure, and it is their
|
|
journey in the projectile car which is here related in its most
|
|
dramatic as well as in its most singular details. This recital
|
|
will destroy many illusions and surmises; but it will give a
|
|
true idea of the singular changes in store for such an
|
|
enterprise; it will bring out the scientific instincts of
|
|
Barbicane, the industrious resources of Nicholl, and the
|
|
audacious humor of Michel Ardan. Besides this, it will prove
|
|
that their worthy friend, Joseph T. Maston, was wasting his
|
|
time, while leaning over the gigantic telescope he watched the
|
|
course of the moon through the starry space.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER I
|
|
|
|
|
|
TWENTY MINUTES PAST TEN TO FORTY-SEVEN MINUTES PAST TEN P. M.
|
|
|
|
As ten o'clock struck, Michel Ardan, Barbicane, and Nicholl,
|
|
took leave of the numerous friends they were leaving on the earth.
|
|
The two dogs, destined to propagate the canine race on the lunar
|
|
continents, were already shut up in the projectile.
|
|
|
|
The three travelers approached the orifice of the enormous
|
|
cast-iron tube, and a crane let them down to the conical top of
|
|
the projectile. There, an opening made for the purpose gave
|
|
them access to the aluminum car. The tackle belonging to the
|
|
crane being hauled from outside, the mouth of the Columbiad was
|
|
instantly disencumbered of its last supports.
|
|
|
|
Nicholl, once introduced with his companions inside the
|
|
projectile, began to close the opening by means of a strong
|
|
plate, held in position by powerful screws. Other plates,
|
|
closely fitted, covered the lenticular glasses, and the
|
|
travelers, hermetically enclosed in their metal prison, were
|
|
plunged in profound darkness.
|
|
|
|
"And now, my dear companions," said Michel Ardan, "let us
|
|
make ourselves at home; I am a domesticated man and strong
|
|
in housekeeping. We are bound to make the best of our new
|
|
lodgings, and make ourselves comfortable. And first let us
|
|
try and see a little. Gas was not invented for moles."
|
|
|
|
So saying, the thoughtless fellow lit a match by striking it on
|
|
the sole of his boot; and approached the burner fixed to the
|
|
receptacle, in which the carbonized hydrogen, stored at high
|
|
pressure, sufficed for the lighting and warming of the
|
|
projectile for a hundred and forty-four hours, or six days and
|
|
six nights. The gas caught fire, and thus lighted the
|
|
projectile looked like a comfortable room with thickly padded
|
|
walls, furnished with a circular divan, and a roof rounded in
|
|
the shape of a dome.
|
|
|
|
Michel Ardan examined everything, and declared himself satisfied
|
|
with his installation.
|
|
|
|
"It is a prison," said he, "but a traveling prison; and, with
|
|
the right of putting my nose to the window, I could well stand
|
|
a lease of a hundred years. You smile, Barbicane. Have you any
|
|
_arriere-pensee_? Do you say to yourself, `This prison may be
|
|
our tomb?' Tomb, perhaps; still I would not change it for
|
|
Mahomet's, which floats in space but never advances an inch!"
|
|
|
|
While Michel Ardan was speaking, Barbicane and Nicholl were
|
|
making their last preparations.
|
|
|
|
Nicholl's chronometer marked twenty minutes past ten P.M. when
|
|
the three travelers were finally enclosed in their projectile.
|
|
This chronometer was set within the tenth of a second by that of
|
|
Murchison the engineer. Barbicane consulted it.
|
|
|
|
"My friends," said he, "it is twenty minutes past ten. At forty-
|
|
seven minutes past ten Murchison will launch the electric spark
|
|
on the wire which communicates with the charge of the Columbiad.
|
|
At that precise moment we shall leave our spheroid. Thus we
|
|
still have twenty-seven minutes to remain on the earth."
|
|
|
|
"Twenty-six minutes thirteen seconds," replied the methodical Nicholl.
|
|
|
|
"Well!" exclaimed Michel Ardan, in a good-humored tone, "much
|
|
may be done in twenty-six minutes. The gravest questions of
|
|
morals and politics may be discussed, and even solved.
|
|
Twenty-six minutes well employed are worth more than twenty-six
|
|
years in which nothing is done. Some seconds of a Pascal or a
|
|
Newton are more precious than the whole existence of a crowd of
|
|
raw simpletons----"
|
|
|
|
"And you conclude, then, you everlasting talker?" asked Barbicane.
|
|
|
|
"I conclude that we have twenty-six minutes left," replied Ardan.
|
|
|
|
"Twenty-four only," said Nicholl.
|
|
|
|
"Well, twenty-four, if you like, my noble captain," said Ardan;
|
|
"twenty-four minutes in which to investigate----"
|
|
|
|
"Michel," said Barbicane, "during the passage we shall have
|
|
plenty of time to investigate the most difficult questions.
|
|
For the present we must occupy ourselves with our departure."
|
|
|
|
"Are we not ready?"
|
|
|
|
"Doubtless; but there are still some precautions to be taken,
|
|
to deaden as much as possible the first shock."
|
|
|
|
"Have we not the water-cushions placed between the partition-
|
|
breaks, whose elasticity will sufficiently protect us?"
|
|
|
|
"I hope so, Michel," replied Barbicane gently, "but I am not sure."
|
|
|
|
"Ah, the joker!" exclaimed Michel Ardan. "He hopes!--He is not
|
|
sure!-- and he waits for the moment when we are encased to make
|
|
this deplorable admission! I beg to be allowed to get out!"
|
|
|
|
"And how?" asked Barbicane.
|
|
|
|
"Humph!" said Michel Ardan, "it is not easy; we are in the
|
|
train, and the guard's whistle will sound before twenty-four
|
|
minutes are over."
|
|
|
|
"Twenty," said Nicholl.
|
|
|
|
For some moments the three travelers looked at each other.
|
|
Then they began to examine the objects imprisoned with them.
|
|
|
|
"Everything is in its place," said Barbicane. "We have now to
|
|
decide how we can best place ourselves to resist the shock.
|
|
Position cannot be an indifferent matter; and we must, as much
|
|
as possible, prevent the rush of blood to the head."
|
|
|
|
"Just so," said Nicholl.
|
|
|
|
"Then," replied Michel Ardan, ready to suit the action to the
|
|
word, "let us put our heads down and our feet in the air, like
|
|
the clowns in the grand circus."
|
|
|
|
"No," said Barbicane, "let us stretch ourselves on our sides; we
|
|
shall resist the shock better that way. Remember that, when the
|
|
projectile starts, it matters little whether we are in it or
|
|
before it; it amounts to much the same thing."
|
|
|
|
"If it is only `much the same thing,' I may cheer up," said
|
|
Michel Ardan.
|
|
|
|
"Do you approve of my idea, Nicholl?" asked Barbicane.
|
|
|
|
"Entirely," replied the captain. "We've still thirteen minutes
|
|
and a half."
|
|
|
|
"That Nicholl is not a man," exclaimed Michel; "he is a
|
|
chronometer with seconds, an escape, and eight holes."
|
|
|
|
But his companions were not listening; they were taking up their
|
|
last positions with the most perfect coolness. They were like
|
|
two methodical travelers in a car, seeking to place themselves
|
|
as comfortably as possible.
|
|
|
|
We might well ask ourselves of what materials are the hearts of
|
|
these Americans made, to whom the approach of the most frightful
|
|
danger added no pulsation.
|
|
|
|
Three thick and solidly-made couches had been placed in
|
|
the projectile. Nicholl and Barbicane placed them in the
|
|
center of the disc forming the floor. There the three
|
|
travelers were to stretch themselves some moments before
|
|
their departure.
|
|
|
|
During this time, Ardan, not being able to keep still, turned in
|
|
his narrow prison like a wild beast in a cage, chatting with his
|
|
friends, speaking to the dogs Diana and Satellite, to whom, as
|
|
may be seen, he had given significant names.
|
|
|
|
"Ah, Diana! Ah, Satellite!" he exclaimed, teasing them; "so you
|
|
are going to show the moon-dogs the good habits of the dogs of
|
|
the earth! That will do honor to the canine race! If ever we
|
|
do come down again, I will bring a cross type of `moon-dogs,'
|
|
which will make a stir!"
|
|
|
|
"If there _are_ dogs in the moon," said Barbicane.
|
|
|
|
"There are," said Michel Ardan, "just as there are horses, cows,
|
|
donkeys, and chickens. I bet that we shall find chickens."
|
|
|
|
"A hundred dollars we shall find none!" said Nicholl.
|
|
|
|
"Done, my captain!" replied Ardan, clasping Nicholl's hand.
|
|
"But, by the bye, you have already lost three bets with our
|
|
president, as the necessary funds for the enterprise have been
|
|
found, as the operation of casting has been successful, and
|
|
lastly, as the Columbiad has been loaded without accident, six
|
|
thousand dollars."
|
|
|
|
"Yes," replied Nicholl. "Thirty-seven minutes six seconds past ten."
|
|
|
|
"It is understood, captain. Well, before another quarter of an
|
|
hour you will have to count nine thousand dollars to the
|
|
president; four thousand because the Columbiad will not burst,
|
|
and five thousand because the projectile will rise more than six
|
|
miles in the air."
|
|
|
|
"I have the dollars," replied Nicholl, slapping the pocket of
|
|
this coat. "I only ask to be allowed to pay."
|
|
|
|
"Come, Nicholl. I see that you are a man of method, which
|
|
I could never be; but indeed you have made a series of bets
|
|
of very little advantage to yourself, allow me to tell you."
|
|
|
|
"And why?" asked Nicholl.
|
|
|
|
"Because, if you gain the first, the Columbiad will have burst,
|
|
and the projectile with it; and Barbicane will no longer be
|
|
there to reimburse your dollars."
|
|
|
|
"My stake is deposited at the bank in Baltimore," replied
|
|
Barbicane simply; "and if Nicholl is not there, it will go to
|
|
his heirs."
|
|
|
|
"Ah, you practical men!" exclaimed Michel Ardan; "I admire you
|
|
the more for not being able to understand you."
|
|
|
|
"Forty-two minutes past ten!" said Nicholl.
|
|
|
|
"Only five minutes more!" answered Barbicane.
|
|
|
|
"Yes, five little minutes!" replied Michel Ardan; "and we are
|
|
enclosed in a projectile, at the bottom of a gun 900 feet long!
|
|
And under this projectile are rammed 400,000 pounds of gun-cotton,
|
|
which is equal to 1,600,000 pounds of ordinary powder! And friend
|
|
Murchison, with his chronometer in hand, his eye fixed on the
|
|
needle, his finger on the electric apparatus, is counting the
|
|
seconds preparatory to launching us into interplanetary space."
|
|
|
|
"Enough, Michel, enough!" said Barbicane, in a serious voice;
|
|
"let us prepare. A few instants alone separate us from an
|
|
eventful moment. One clasp of the hand, my friends."
|
|
|
|
"Yes," exclaimed Michel Ardan, more moved than he wished to
|
|
appear; and the three bold companions were united in a last embrace.
|
|
|
|
"God preserve us!" said the religious Barbicane.
|
|
|
|
Michel Ardan and Nicholl stretched themselves on the couches
|
|
placed in the center of the disc.
|
|
|
|
"Forty-seven minutes past ten!" murmured the captain.
|
|
|
|
"Twenty seconds more!" Barbicane quickly put out the gas and
|
|
lay down by his companions, and the profound silence was only
|
|
broken by the ticking of the chronometer marking the seconds.
|
|
|
|
Suddenly a dreadful shock was felt, and the projectile, under
|
|
the force of six billions of litres of gas, developed by the
|
|
combustion of pyroxyle, mounted into space.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER II
|
|
|
|
|
|
THE FIRST HALF-HOUR
|
|
|
|
|
|
What had happened? What effect had this frightful shock produced?
|
|
Had the ingenuity of the constructors of the projectile obtained
|
|
any happy result? Had the shock been deadened, thanks to the
|
|
springs, the four plugs, the water-cushions, and the partition-breaks?
|
|
Had they been able to subdue the frightful pressure of the initiatory
|
|
speed of more than 11,000 yards, which was enough to traverse Paris
|
|
or New York in a second? This was evidently the question suggested
|
|
to the thousand spectators of this moving scene. They forgot the
|
|
aim of the journey, and thought only of the travelers. And if
|
|
one of them-- Joseph T. Maston for example-- could have cast one
|
|
glimpse into the projectile, what would he have seen?
|
|
|
|
Nothing then. The darkness was profound. But its cylindro-
|
|
conical partitions had resisted wonderfully. Not a rent or a
|
|
dent anywhere! The wonderful projectile was not even heated
|
|
under the intense deflagration of the powder, nor liquefied,
|
|
as they seemed to fear, in a shower of aluminum.
|
|
|
|
The interior showed but little disorder; indeed, only a few
|
|
objects had been violently thrown toward the roof; but the most
|
|
important seemed not to have suffered from the shock at all;
|
|
their fixtures were intact.
|
|
|
|
On the movable disc, sunk down to the bottom by the smashing of
|
|
the partition-breaks and the escape of the water, three bodies
|
|
lay apparently lifeless. Barbicane, Nicholl, and Michel Ardan--
|
|
did they still breathe? or was the projectile nothing now but a
|
|
metal coffin, bearing three corpses into space?
|
|
|
|
Some minutes after the departure of the projectile, one of
|
|
the bodies moved, shook its arms, lifted its head, and finally
|
|
succeeded in getting on its knees. It was Michel Ardan. He felt
|
|
himself all over, gave a sonorous "Hem!" and then said:
|
|
|
|
"Michel Ardan is whole. How about the others?"
|
|
|
|
The courageous Frenchman tried to rise, but could not stand.
|
|
His head swam, from the rush of blood; he was blind; he was a
|
|
drunken man.
|
|
|
|
"Bur-r!" said he. "It produces the same effect as two bottles
|
|
of Corton, though perhaps less agreeable to swallow."
|
|
Then, passing his hand several times across his forehead and
|
|
rubbing his temples, he called in a firm voice:
|
|
|
|
"Nicholl! Barbicane!"
|
|
|
|
He waited anxiously. No answer; not even a sigh to show that
|
|
the hearts of his companions were still beating. He called again.
|
|
The same silence.
|
|
|
|
"The devil!" he exclaimed. "They look as if they had fallen
|
|
from a fifth story on their heads. Bah!" he added, with that
|
|
imperturbable confidence which nothing could check, "if a
|
|
Frenchman can get on his knees, two Americans ought to be able
|
|
to get on their feet. But first let us light up."
|
|
|
|
Ardan felt the tide of life return by degrees. His blood became
|
|
calm, and returned to its accustomed circulation. Another effort
|
|
restored his equilibrium. He succeeded in rising, drew a match
|
|
from his pocket, and approaching the burner lighted it.
|
|
The receiver had not suffered at all. The gas had not escaped.
|
|
Besides, the smell would have betrayed it; and in that case
|
|
Michel Ardan could not have carried a lighted match with
|
|
impunity through the space filled with hydrogen. The gas mixing
|
|
with the air would have produced a detonating mixture, and the
|
|
explosion would have finished what the shock had perhaps begun.
|
|
When the burner was lit, Ardan leaned over the bodies of his
|
|
companions: they were lying one on the other, an inert mass,
|
|
Nicholl above, Barbicane underneath.
|
|
|
|
Ardan lifted the captain, propped him up against the divan, and
|
|
began to rub vigorously. This means, used with judgment,
|
|
restored Nicholl, who opened his eyes, and instantly recovering
|
|
his presence of mind, seized Ardan's hand and looked around him.
|
|
|
|
"And Barbicane?" said he.
|
|
|
|
"Each in turn," replied Michel Ardan. "I began with you,
|
|
Nicholl, because you were on the top. Now let us look
|
|
to Barbicane." Saying which, Ardan and Nicholl raised the
|
|
president of the Gun Club and laid him on the divan. He seemed
|
|
to have suffered more than either of his companions; he was
|
|
bleeding, but Nicholl was reassured by finding that the
|
|
hemorrhage came from a slight wound on the shoulder, a mere
|
|
graze, which he bound up carefully.
|
|
|
|
Still, Barbicane was a long time coming to himself, which
|
|
frightened his friends, who did not spare friction.
|
|
|
|
"He breathes though," said Nicholl, putting his ear to the chest
|
|
of the wounded man.
|
|
|
|
"Yes," replied Ardan, "he breathes like a man who has some
|
|
notion of that daily operation. Rub, Nicholl; let us rub harder."
|
|
And the two improvised practitioners worked so hard and so well
|
|
that Barbicane recovered his senses. He opened his eyes, sat up,
|
|
took his two friends by the hands, and his first words were--
|
|
|
|
"Nicholl, are we moving?"
|
|
|
|
Nicholl and Ardan looked at each other; they had not yet
|
|
troubled themselves about the projectile; their first thought
|
|
had been for the traveler, not for the car.
|
|
|
|
"Well, are we really moving?" repeated Michel Ardan.
|
|
|
|
"Or quietly resting on the soil of Florida?" asked Nicholl.
|
|
|
|
"Or at the bottom of the Gulf of Mexico?" added Michel Ardan.
|
|
|
|
"What an idea!" exclaimed the president.
|
|
|
|
And this double hypothesis suggested by his companions had the
|
|
effect of recalling him to his senses. In any case they could
|
|
not decide on the position of the projectile. Its apparent
|
|
immovability, and the want of communication with the outside,
|
|
prevented them from solving the question. Perhaps the projectile
|
|
was unwinding its course through space. Perhaps after a short
|
|
rise it had fallen upon the earth, or even in the Gulf of Mexico--
|
|
a fall which the narrowness of the peninsula of Florida would
|
|
render not impossible.
|
|
|
|
The case was serious, the problem interesting, and one that must
|
|
be solved as soon as possible. Thus, highly excited, Barbicane's
|
|
moral energy triumphed over physical weakness, and he rose to
|
|
his feet. He listened. Outside was perfect silence; but the
|
|
thick padding was enough to intercept all sounds coming from
|
|
the earth. But one circumstance struck Barbicane, viz., that
|
|
the temperature inside the projectile was singularly high.
|
|
The president drew a thermometer from its case and consulted it.
|
|
The instrument showed 81@ Fahr.
|
|
|
|
"Yes," he exclaimed, "yes, we are moving! This stifling heat,
|
|
penetrating through the partitions of the projectile, is
|
|
produced by its friction on the atmospheric strata. It will
|
|
soon diminish, because we are already floating in space, and
|
|
after having nearly stifled, we shall have to suffer intense cold.
|
|
|
|
"What!" said Michel Ardan. "According to your showing, Barbicane,
|
|
we are already beyond the limits of the terrestrial atmosphere?"
|
|
|
|
"Without a doubt, Michel. Listen to me. It is fifty-five
|
|
minutes past ten; we have been gone about eight minutes; and if
|
|
our initiatory speed has not been checked by the friction, six
|
|
seconds would be enough for us to pass through the forty miles
|
|
of atmosphere which surrounds the globe."
|
|
|
|
"Just so," replied Nicholl; "but in what proportion do you
|
|
estimate the diminution of speed by friction?"
|
|
|
|
"In the proportion of one-third, Nicholl. This diminution is
|
|
considerable, but according to my calculations it is nothing less.
|
|
If, then, we had an initiatory speed of 12,000 yards, on leaving
|
|
the atmosphere this speed would be reduced to 9,165 yards. In any
|
|
case we have already passed through this interval, and----"
|
|
|
|
"And then," said Michel Ardan, "friend Nicholl has lost his two
|
|
bets: four thousand dollars because the Columbiad did not burst;
|
|
five thousand dollars because the projectile has risen more than
|
|
six miles. Now, Nicholl, pay up."
|
|
|
|
"Let us prove it first," said the captain, "and we will
|
|
pay afterward. It is quite possible that Barbicane's reasoning
|
|
is correct, and that I have lost my nine thousand dollars. But a
|
|
new hypothesis presents itself to my mind, and it annuls the wager."
|
|
|
|
"What is that?" asked Barbicane quickly.
|
|
|
|
"The hypothesis that, for some reason or other, fire was never
|
|
set to the powder, and we have not started at all."
|
|
|
|
"My goodness, captain," exclaimed Michel Ardan, "that hypothesis
|
|
is not worthy of my brain! It cannot be a serious one. For have
|
|
we not been half annihilated by the shock? Did I not recall you
|
|
to life? Is not the president's shoulder still bleeding from the
|
|
blow it has received?"
|
|
|
|
"Granted," replied Nicholl; "but one question."
|
|
|
|
"Well, captain?"
|
|
|
|
"Did you hear the detonation, which certainly ought to be loud?"
|
|
|
|
"No," replied Ardan, much surprised; "certainly I did not hear
|
|
the detonation."
|
|
|
|
"And you, Barbicane?"
|
|
|
|
"Nor I, either."
|
|
|
|
"Very well," said Nicholl.
|
|
|
|
"Well now," murmured the president "why did we not hear the detonation?"
|
|
|
|
The three friends looked at each other with a disconcerted air.
|
|
It was quite an inexplicable phenomenon. The projectile had
|
|
started, and consequently there must have been a detonation.
|
|
|
|
"Let us first find out where we are," said Barbicane, "and let
|
|
down this panel."
|
|
|
|
This very simple operation was soon accomplished.
|
|
|
|
The nuts which held the bolts to the outer plates of the
|
|
right-hand scuttle gave way under the pressure of the
|
|
English wrench. These bolts were pushed outside, and the
|
|
buffers covered with India-rubber stopped up the holes which let
|
|
them through. Immediately the outer plate fell back upon its
|
|
hinges like a porthole, and the lenticular glass which closed
|
|
the scuttle appeared. A similar one was let into the thick
|
|
partition on the opposite side of the projectile, another in the
|
|
top of the dome, and finally a fourth in the middle of the base.
|
|
They could, therefore, make observations in four different
|
|
directions; the firmament by the side and most direct windows,
|
|
the earth or the moon by the upper and under openings in
|
|
the projectile.
|
|
|
|
Barbicane and his two companions immediately rushed to the
|
|
uncovered window. But it was lit by no ray of light.
|
|
Profound darkness surrounded them, which, however, did not
|
|
prevent the president from exclaiming:
|
|
|
|
"No, my friends, we have not fallen back upon the earth; no, nor
|
|
are we submerged in the Gulf of Mexico. Yes! we are mounting
|
|
into space. See those stars shining in the night, and that
|
|
impenetrable darkness heaped up between the earth and us!"
|
|
|
|
"Hurrah! hurrah!" exclaimed Michel Ardan and Nicholl in one voice.
|
|
|
|
Indeed, this thick darkness proved that the projectile had left
|
|
the earth, for the soil, brilliantly lit by the moon-beams would
|
|
have been visible to the travelers, if they had been lying on
|
|
its surface. This darkness also showed that the projectile had
|
|
passed the atmospheric strata, for the diffused light spread in
|
|
the air would have been reflected on the metal walls, which
|
|
reflection was wanting. This light would have lit the window,
|
|
and the window was dark. Doubt was no longer possible; the
|
|
travelers had left the earth.
|
|
|
|
"I have lost," said Nicholl.
|
|
|
|
"I congratulate you," replied Ardan.
|
|
|
|
"Here are the nine thousand dollars," said the captain, drawing
|
|
a roll of paper dollars from his pocket.
|
|
|
|
"Will you have a receipt for it?" asked Barbicane, taking the sum.
|
|
|
|
"If you do not mind," answered Nicholl; "it is more business-like."
|
|
|
|
And coolly and seriously, as if he had been at his strong-box,
|
|
the president drew forth his notebook, tore out a blank leaf,
|
|
wrote a proper receipt in pencil, dated and signed it with the
|
|
usual flourish, [1] and gave it to the captain, who carefully placed
|
|
it in his pocketbook. Michel Ardan, taking off his hat, bowed to
|
|
his two companions without speaking. So much formality under such
|
|
circumstances left him speechless. He had never before seen
|
|
anything so "American."
|
|
|
|
[1] This is a purely French habit.
|
|
|
|
This affair settled, Barbicane and Nicholl had returned to the
|
|
window, and were watching the constellations. The stars looked
|
|
like bright points on the black sky. But from that side they
|
|
could not see the orb of night, which, traveling from east to
|
|
west, would rise by degrees toward the zenith. Its absence drew
|
|
the following remark from Ardan:
|
|
|
|
"And the moon; will she perchance fail at our rendezvous?"
|
|
|
|
"Do not alarm yourself," said Barbicane; "our future globe is at
|
|
its post, but we cannot see her from this side; let us open the other."
|
|
|
|
"As Barbicane was about leaving the window to open the opposite
|
|
scuttle, his attention was attracted by the approach of a
|
|
brilliant object. It was an enormous disc, whose colossal
|
|
dimension could not be estimated. Its face, which was turned to
|
|
the earth, was very bright. One might have thought it a small
|
|
moon reflecting the light of the large one. She advanced with
|
|
great speed, and seemed to describe an orbit round the earth,
|
|
which would intersect the passage of the projectile. This body
|
|
revolved upon its axis, and exhibited the phenomena of all
|
|
celestial bodies abandoned in space.
|
|
|
|
"Ah!" exclaimed Michel Ardan, "What is that? another projectile?"
|
|
|
|
Barbicane did not answer. The appearance of this enormous body
|
|
surprised and troubled him. A collision was possible, and might
|
|
be attended with deplorable results; either the projectile would
|
|
deviate from its path, or a shock, breaking its impetus, might
|
|
precipitate it to earth; or, lastly, it might be irresistibly
|
|
drawn away by the powerful asteroid. The president caught at a
|
|
glance the consequences of these three hypotheses, either of
|
|
which would, one way or the other, bring their experiment to an
|
|
unsuccessful and fatal termination. His companions stood
|
|
silently looking into space. The object grew rapidly as it
|
|
approached them, and by an optical illusion the projectile
|
|
seemed to be throwing itself before it.
|
|
|
|
"By Jove!" exclaimed Michel Ardan, "we shall run into one another!"
|
|
|
|
Instinctively the travelers drew back. Their dread was great,
|
|
but it did not last many seconds. The asteroid passed several
|
|
hundred yards from the projectile and disappeared, not so much
|
|
from the rapidity of its course, as that its face being opposite
|
|
the moon, it was suddenly merged into the perfect darkness of space.
|
|
|
|
"A happy journey to you," exclaimed Michel Ardan, with a sigh
|
|
of relief. "Surely infinity of space is large enough for a poor
|
|
little projectile to walk through without fear. Now, what is
|
|
this portentous globe which nearly struck us?"
|
|
|
|
"I know," replied Barbicane.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, indeed! you know everything."
|
|
|
|
"It is," said Barbicane, "a simple meteorite, but an enormous one,
|
|
which the attraction of the earth has retained as a satellite."
|
|
|
|
"Is it possible!" exclaimed Michel Ardan; "the earth then has
|
|
two moons like Neptune?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, my friends, two moons, though it passes generally for
|
|
having only one; but this second moon is so small, and its
|
|
speed so great, that the inhabitants of the earth cannot see it.
|
|
It was by noticing disturbances that a French astronomer, M. Petit,
|
|
was able to determine the existence of this second satellite and
|
|
calculate its elements. According to his observations, this
|
|
meteorite will accomplish its revolution around the earth in
|
|
three hours and twenty minutes, which implies a wonderful rate
|
|
of speed."
|
|
|
|
"Do all astronomers admit the existence of this satellite?"
|
|
asked Nicholl.
|
|
|
|
"No," replied Barbicane; "but if, like us, they had met it, they
|
|
could no longer doubt it. Indeed, I think that this meteorite,
|
|
which, had it struck the projectile, would have much embarrassed
|
|
us, will give us the means of deciding what our position in
|
|
space is."
|
|
|
|
"How?" said Ardan.
|
|
|
|
"Because its distance is known, and when we met it, we were
|
|
exactly four thousand six hundred and fifty miles from the
|
|
surface of the terrestrial globe."
|
|
|
|
"More than two thousand French leagues," exclaimed Michel Ardan.
|
|
"That beats the express trains of the pitiful globe called the earth."
|
|
|
|
"I should think so," replied Nicholl, consulting his
|
|
chronometer; "it is eleven o'clock, and it is only thirteen
|
|
minutes since we left the American continent."
|
|
|
|
"Only thirteen minutes?" said Barbicane.
|
|
|
|
"Yes," said Nicholl; "and if our initiatory speed of twelve
|
|
thousand yards has been kept up, we shall have made about twenty
|
|
thousand miles in the hour."
|
|
|
|
"That is all very well, my friends," said the president, "but
|
|
the insoluble question still remains. Why did we not hear the
|
|
detonation of the Columbiad?"
|
|
|
|
For want of an answer the conversation dropped, and Barbicane
|
|
began thoughtfully to let down the shutter of the second side.
|
|
He succeeded; and through the uncovered glass the moon filled
|
|
the projectile with a brilliant light. Nicholl, as an
|
|
economical man, put out the gas, now useless, and whose
|
|
brilliancy prevented any observation of the inter-planetary space.
|
|
|
|
The lunar disc shone with wonderful purity. Her rays, no longer
|
|
filtered through the vapory atmosphere of the terrestrial globe,
|
|
shone through the glass, filling the air in the interior of the
|
|
projectile with silvery reflections. The black curtain of the
|
|
firmament in reality heightened the moon's brilliancy, which in
|
|
this void of ether unfavorable to diffusion did not eclipse the
|
|
neighboring stars. The heavens, thus seen, presented quite a
|
|
new aspect, and one which the human eye could never dream of.
|
|
One may conceive the interest with which these bold men watched
|
|
the orb of night, the great aim of their journey.
|
|
|
|
In its motion the earth's satellite was insensibly nearing the
|
|
zenith, the mathematical point which it ought to attain
|
|
ninety-six hours later. Her mountains, her plains, every
|
|
projection was as clearly discernible to their eyes as if they
|
|
were observing it from some spot upon the earth; but its light
|
|
was developed through space with wonderful intensity. The disc
|
|
shone like a platinum mirror. Of the earth flying from under
|
|
their feet, the travelers had lost all recollection.
|
|
|
|
It was captain Nicholl who first recalled their attention to the
|
|
vanishing globe.
|
|
|
|
"Yes," said Michel Ardan, "do not let us be ungrateful to it.
|
|
Since we are leaving our country, let our last looks be directed
|
|
to it. I wish to see the earth once more before it is quite
|
|
hidden from my eyes."
|
|
|
|
To satisfy his companions, Barbicane began to uncover the window
|
|
at the bottom of the projectile, which would allow them to
|
|
observe the earth direct. The disc, which the force of the
|
|
projection had beaten down to the base, was removed, not
|
|
without difficulty. Its fragments, placed carefully against a wall,
|
|
might serve again upon occasion. Then a circular gap appeared,
|
|
nineteen inches in diameter, hollowed out of the lower part of
|
|
the projectile. A glass cover, six inches thick and strengthened
|
|
with upper fastenings, closed it tightly. Beneath was fixed an
|
|
aluminum plate, held in place by bolts. The screws being undone,
|
|
and the bolts let go, the plate fell down, and visible
|
|
communication was established between the interior and the exterior.
|
|
|
|
Michel Ardan knelt by the glass. It was cloudy, seemingly opaque.
|
|
|
|
"Well!" he exclaimed, "and the earth?"
|
|
|
|
"The earth?" said Barbicane. "There it is."
|
|
|
|
"What! that little thread; that silver crescent?"
|
|
|
|
"Doubtless, Michel. In four days, when the moon will be full,
|
|
at the very time we shall reach it, the earth will be new, and
|
|
will only appear to us as a slender crescent which will soon
|
|
disappear, and for some days will be enveloped in utter darkness."
|
|
|
|
"That the earth?" repeated Michel Ardan, looking with all his
|
|
eyes at the thin slip of his native planet.
|
|
|
|
The explanation given by President Barbicane was correct.
|
|
The earth, with respect to the projectile, was entering its
|
|
last phase. It was in its octant, and showed a crescent finely
|
|
traced on the dark background of the sky. Its light, rendered
|
|
bluish by the thick strata of the atmosphere was less intense
|
|
than that of the crescent moon, but it was of considerable
|
|
dimensions, and looked like an enormous arch stretched across
|
|
the firmament. Some parts brilliantly lighted, especially on
|
|
its concave part, showed the presence of high mountains, often
|
|
disappearing behind thick spots, which are never seen on the
|
|
lunar disc. They were rings of clouds placed concentrically
|
|
round the terrestrial globe.
|
|
|
|
While the travelers were trying to pierce the profound darkness,
|
|
a brilliant cluster of shooting stars burst upon their eyes.
|
|
Hundreds of meteorites, ignited by the friction of the
|
|
atmosphere, irradiated the shadow of the luminous train, and
|
|
lined the cloudy parts of the disc with their fire. At this
|
|
period the earth was in its perihelion, and the month of
|
|
December is so propitious to these shooting stars, that
|
|
astronomers have counted as many as twenty-four thousand in
|
|
an hour. But Michel Ardan, disdaining scientific reasonings,
|
|
preferred thinking that the earth was thus saluting the
|
|
departure of her three children with her most brilliant fireworks.
|
|
|
|
Indeed this was all they saw of the globe lost in the solar
|
|
world, rising and setting to the great planets like a simple
|
|
morning or evening star! This globe, where they had left all
|
|
their affections, was nothing more than a fugitive crescent!
|
|
|
|
Long did the three friends look without speaking, though united
|
|
in heart, while the projectile sped onward with an
|
|
ever-decreasing speed. Then an irresistible drowsiness crept
|
|
over their brain. Was it weariness of body and mind? No doubt;
|
|
for after the over-excitement of those last hours passed upon
|
|
earth, reaction was inevitable.
|
|
|
|
"Well," said Nicholl, "since we must sleep, let us sleep."
|
|
|
|
And stretching themselves on their couches, they were all three
|
|
soon in a profound slumber.
|
|
|
|
But they had not forgotten themselves more than a quarter of an
|
|
hour, when Barbicane sat up suddenly, and rousing his companions
|
|
with a loud voice, exclaimed----
|
|
|
|
"I have found it!"
|
|
|
|
"What have you found?" asked Michel Ardan, jumping from his bed.
|
|
|
|
"The reason why we did not hear the detonation of the Columbiad."
|
|
|
|
"And it is----?" said Nicholl.
|
|
|
|
"Because our projectile traveled faster than the sound!"
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER III
|
|
|
|
|
|
THEIR PLACE OF SHELTER
|
|
|
|
|
|
This curious but certainly correct explanation once given, the
|
|
three friends returned to their slumbers. Could they have found
|
|
a calmer or more peaceful spot to sleep in? On the earth,
|
|
houses, towns, cottages, and country feel every shock given to
|
|
the exterior of the globe. On sea, the vessels rocked by the
|
|
waves are still in motion; in the air, the balloon oscillates
|
|
incessantly on the fluid strata of divers densities.
|
|
This projectile alone, floating in perfect space, in the midst
|
|
of perfect silence, offered perfect repose.
|
|
|
|
Thus the sleep of our adventurous travelers might have been
|
|
indefinitely prolonged, if an unexpected noise had not awakened
|
|
them at about seven o'clock in the morning of the 2nd of
|
|
December, eight hours after their departure.
|
|
|
|
This noise was a very natural barking.
|
|
|
|
"The dogs! it is the dogs!" exclaimed Michel Ardan, rising at once.
|
|
|
|
"They are hungry," said Nicholl.
|
|
|
|
"By Jove!" replied Michel, "we have forgotten them."
|
|
|
|
"Where are they?" asked Barbicane.
|
|
|
|
They looked and found one of the animals crouched under the divan.
|
|
Terrified and shaken by the initiatory shock, it had remained
|
|
in the corner till its voice returned with the pangs of hunger.
|
|
It was the amiable Diana, still very confused, who crept out of
|
|
her retreat, though not without much persuasion, Michel Ardan
|
|
encouraging her with most gracious words.
|
|
|
|
"Come, Diana," said he: "come, my girl! thou whose destiny will
|
|
be marked in the cynegetic annals; thou whom the pagans would
|
|
have given as companion to the god Anubis, and Christians as
|
|
friend to St. Roch; thou who art rushing into interplanetary
|
|
space, and wilt perhaps be the Eve of all Selenite dogs! come,
|
|
Diana, come here."
|
|
|
|
Diana, flattered or not, advanced by degrees, uttering
|
|
plaintive cries.
|
|
|
|
"Good," said Barbicane: "I see Eve, but where is Adam?"
|
|
|
|
"Adam?" replied Michel; "Adam cannot be far off; he is there
|
|
somewhere; we must call him. Satellite! here, Satellite!"
|
|
|
|
But Satellite did not appear. Diana would not leave off howling.
|
|
They found, however, that she was not bruised, and they gave her
|
|
a pie, which silenced her complaints. As to Satellite, he seemed
|
|
quite lost. They had to hunt a long time before finding him in
|
|
one of the upper compartments of the projectile, whither some
|
|
unaccountable shock must have violently hurled him. The poor
|
|
beast, much hurt, was in a piteous state.
|
|
|
|
"The devil!" said Michel.
|
|
|
|
They brought the unfortunate dog down with great care. Its skull
|
|
had been broken against the roof, and it seemed unlikely that he
|
|
could recover from such a shock. Meanwhile, he was stretched
|
|
comfortably on a cushion. Once there, he heaved a sigh.
|
|
|
|
"We will take care of you," said Michel; "we are responsible for
|
|
your existence. I would rather lose an arm than a paw of my
|
|
poor Satellite."
|
|
|
|
Saying which, he offered some water to the wounded dog, who
|
|
swallowed it with avidity.
|
|
|
|
This attention paid, the travelers watched the earth and the
|
|
moon attentively. The earth was now only discernible by a
|
|
cloudy disc ending in a crescent, rather more contracted than
|
|
that of the previous evening; but its expanse was still
|
|
enormous, compared with that of the moon, which was approaching
|
|
nearer and nearer to a perfect circle.
|
|
|
|
"By Jove!" said Michel Ardan, "I am really sorry that we did not
|
|
start when the earth was full, that is to say, when our globe
|
|
was in opposition to the sun."
|
|
|
|
"Why?" said Nicholl.
|
|
|
|
"Because we should have seen our continents and seas in a new
|
|
light-- the first resplendent under the solar rays, the latter
|
|
cloudy as represented on some maps of the world. I should like
|
|
to have seen those poles of the earth on which the eye of man
|
|
has never yet rested.
|
|
|
|
"I dare say," replied Barbicane; "but if the earth had been
|
|
_full_, the moon would have been _new_; that is to say,
|
|
invisible, because of the rays of the sun. It is better
|
|
for us to see the destination we wish to reach, than the point
|
|
of departure."
|
|
|
|
"You are right, Barbicane," replied Captain Nicholl; "and,
|
|
besides, when we have reached the moon, we shall have time
|
|
during the long lunar nights to consider at our leisure the
|
|
globe on which our likenesses swarm."
|
|
|
|
"Our likenesses!" exclaimed Michel Ardan; "They are no more our
|
|
likenesses than the Selenites are! We inhabit a new world,
|
|
peopled by ourselves-- the projectile! I am Barbicane's
|
|
likeness, and Barbicane is Nicholl's. Beyond us, around us,
|
|
human nature is at an end, and we are the only population of
|
|
this microcosm until we become pure Selenites."
|
|
|
|
"In about eighty-eight hours," replied the captain.
|
|
|
|
"Which means to say?" asked Michel Ardan.
|
|
|
|
"That it is half-past eight," replied Nicholl.
|
|
|
|
"Very well," retorted Michel; "then it is impossible for me to
|
|
find even the shadow of a reason why we should not go to breakfast."
|
|
|
|
Indeed the inhabitants of the new star could not live without
|
|
eating, and their stomachs were suffering from the imperious
|
|
laws of hunger. Michel Ardan, as a Frenchman, was declared
|
|
chief cook, an important function, which raised no rival.
|
|
The gas gave sufficient heat for the culinary apparatus, and
|
|
the provision box furnished the elements of this first feast.
|
|
|
|
The breakfast began with three bowls of excellent soup, thanks to
|
|
the liquefaction in hot water of those precious cakes of Liebig,
|
|
prepared from the best parts of the ruminants of the Pampas.
|
|
To the soup succeeded some beefsteaks, compressed by an hydraulic
|
|
press, as tender and succulent as if brought straight from the
|
|
kitchen of an English eating-house. Michel, who was imaginative,
|
|
maintained that they were even "red."
|
|
|
|
Preserved vegetables ("fresher than nature," said the amiable
|
|
Michel) succeeded the dish of meat; and was followed by some
|
|
cups of tea with bread and butter, after the American fashion.
|
|
|
|
The beverage was declared exquisite, and was due to the
|
|
infusion of the choicest leaves, of which the emperor of Russia
|
|
had given some chests for the benefit of the travelers.
|
|
|
|
And lastly, to crown the repast, Ardan had brought out a fine
|
|
bottle of Nuits, which was found "by chance" in the
|
|
provision-box. The three friends drank to the union of the
|
|
earth and her satellite.
|
|
|
|
And, as if he had not already done enough for the generous wine
|
|
which he had distilled on the slopes of Burgundy, the sun chose
|
|
to be part of the party. At this moment the projectile emerged
|
|
from the conical shadow cast by the terrestrial globe, and the
|
|
rays of the radiant orb struck the lower disc of the projectile
|
|
direct occasioned by the angle which the moon's orbit makes with
|
|
that of the earth.
|
|
|
|
"The sun!" exclaimed Michel Ardan.
|
|
|
|
"No doubt," replied Barbicane; "I expected it."
|
|
|
|
"But," said Michel, "the conical shadow which the earth leaves
|
|
in space extends beyond the moon?"
|
|
|
|
"Far beyond it, if the atmospheric refraction is not taken into
|
|
consideration," said Barbicane. "But when the moon is enveloped
|
|
in this shadow, it is because the centers of the three stars,
|
|
the sun, the earth, and the moon, are all in one and the same
|
|
straight line. Then the _nodes_ coincide with the _phases_ of
|
|
the moon, and there is an eclipse. If we had started when there
|
|
was an eclipse of the moon, all our passage would have been in
|
|
the shadow, which would have been a pity."
|
|
|
|
"Why?"
|
|
|
|
"Because, though we are floating in space, our projectile,
|
|
bathed in the solar rays, will receive light and heat.
|
|
It economizes the gas, which is in every respect a good economy."
|
|
|
|
Indeed, under these rays which no atmosphere can temper, either
|
|
in temperature or brilliancy, the projectile grew warm and
|
|
bright, as if it had passed suddenly from winter to summer.
|
|
The moon above, the sun beneath, were inundating it with their fire.
|
|
|
|
"It is pleasant here," said Nicholl.
|
|
|
|
"I should think so," said Michel Ardan. "With a little earth
|
|
spread on our aluminum planet we should have green peas in
|
|
twenty-four hours. I have but one fear, which is that the
|
|
walls of the projectile might melt."
|
|
|
|
"Calm yourself, my worthy friend," replied Barbicane; "the
|
|
projectile withstood a very much higher temperature than this as
|
|
it slid through the strata of the atmosphere. I should not be
|
|
surprised if it did not look like a meteor on fire to the eyes
|
|
of the spectators in Florida."
|
|
|
|
"But then J. T. Maston will think we are roasted!"
|
|
|
|
"What astonishes me," said Barbicane, "is that we have not been.
|
|
That was a danger we had not provided for."
|
|
|
|
"I feared it," said Nicholl simply.
|
|
|
|
"And you never mentioned it, my sublime captain," exclaimed
|
|
Michel Ardan, clasping his friend's hand.
|
|
|
|
Barbicane now began to settle himself in the projectile as if he
|
|
was never to leave it. One must remember that this aerial car
|
|
had a base with a _superficies_ of fifty-four square feet.
|
|
Its height to the roof was twelve feet. Carefully laid out in
|
|
the inside, and little encumbered by instruments and traveling
|
|
utensils, which each had their particular place, it left the
|
|
three travelers a certain freedom of movement. The thick window
|
|
inserted in the bottom could bear any amount of weight, and
|
|
Barbicane and his companions walked upon it as if it were solid
|
|
plank; but the sun striking it directly with its rays lit the
|
|
interior of the projectile from beneath, thus producing singular
|
|
effects of light.
|
|
|
|
They began by investigating the state of their store of water
|
|
and provisions, neither of which had suffered, thanks to the
|
|
care taken to deaden the shock. Their provisions were abundant,
|
|
and plentiful enough to last the three travelers for more than
|
|
a year. Barbicane wished to be cautious, in case the projectile
|
|
should land on a part of the moon which was utterly barren.
|
|
As to water and the reserve of brandy, which consisted of fifty
|
|
gallons, there was only enough for two months; but according to
|
|
the last observations of astronomers, the moon had a low, dense,
|
|
and thick atmosphere, at least in the deep valleys, and there
|
|
springs and streams could not fail. Thus, during their passage,
|
|
and for the first year of their settlement on the lunar
|
|
continent, these adventurous explorers would suffer neither
|
|
hunger nor thirst.
|
|
|
|
Now about the air in the projectile. There, too, they were secure.
|
|
Reiset and Regnaut's apparatus, intended for the production of
|
|
oxygen, was supplied with chlorate of potassium for two months.
|
|
They necessarily consumed a certain quantity of gas, for they
|
|
were obliged to keep the producing substance at a temperature
|
|
of above 400@. But there again they were all safe. The apparatus
|
|
only wanted a little care. But it was not enough to renew the
|
|
oxygen; they must absorb the carbonic acid produced by expiration.
|
|
During the last twelve hours the atmosphere of the projectile had
|
|
become charged with this deleterious gas. Nicholl discovered
|
|
the state of the air by observing Diana panting painfully.
|
|
The carbonic acid, by a phenomenon similar to that produced in
|
|
the famous Grotto del Cane, had collected at the bottom of the
|
|
projectile owing to its weight. Poor Diana, with her head low,
|
|
would suffer before her masters from the presence of this gas.
|
|
But Captain Nicholl hastened to remedy this state of things,
|
|
by placing on the floor several receivers containing caustic
|
|
potash, which he shook about for a time, and this substance,
|
|
greedy of carbonic acid, soon completely absorbed it, thus
|
|
purifying the air.
|
|
|
|
An inventory of instruments was then begun. The thermometers
|
|
and barometers had resisted, all but one minimum thermometer,
|
|
the glass of which was broken. An excellent aneroid was drawn
|
|
from the wadded box which contained it and hung on the wall.
|
|
Of course it was only affected by and marked the pressure of the
|
|
air inside the projectile, but it also showed the quantity of
|
|
moisture which it contained. At that moment its needle
|
|
oscillated between 25.24 and 25.08.
|
|
|
|
It was fine weather.
|
|
|
|
Barbicane had also brought several compasses, which he found intact.
|
|
One must understand that under present conditions their needles
|
|
were acting _wildly_, that is without any _constant_ direction.
|
|
Indeed, at the distance they were from the earth, the magnetic
|
|
pole could have no perceptible action upon the apparatus; but
|
|
the box placed on the lunar disc might perhaps exhibit some
|
|
strange phenomena. In any case it would be interesting to see
|
|
whether the earth's satellite submitted like herself to its
|
|
magnetic influence.
|
|
|
|
A hypsometer to measure the height of the lunar mountains, a
|
|
sextant to take the height of the sun, glasses which would be
|
|
useful as they neared the moon, all these instruments were
|
|
carefully looked over, and pronounced good in spite of the
|
|
violent shock.
|
|
|
|
As to the pickaxes and different tools which were Nicholl's
|
|
especial choice; as to the sacks of different kinds of grain and
|
|
shrubs which Michel Ardan hoped to transplant into Selenite
|
|
ground, they were stowed away in the upper part of the projectile.
|
|
There was a sort of granary there, loaded with things which the
|
|
extravagant Frenchman had heaped up. What they were no one knew,
|
|
and the good-tempered fellow did not explain. Now and then he
|
|
climbed up by cramp-irons riveted to the walls, but kept the
|
|
inspection to himself. He arranged and rearranged, he plunged
|
|
his hand rapidly into certain mysterious boxes, singing in one
|
|
of the falsest of voices an old French refrain to enliven
|
|
the situation.
|
|
|
|
Barbicane observed with some interest that his guns and other
|
|
arms had not been damaged. These were important, because,
|
|
heavily loaded, they were to help lessen the fall of the
|
|
projectile, when drawn by the lunar attraction (after having
|
|
passed the point of neutral attraction) on to the moon's
|
|
surface; a fall which ought to be six times less rapid than it
|
|
would have been on the earth's surface, thanks to the difference
|
|
of bulk. The inspection ended with general satisfaction, when
|
|
each returned to watch space through the side windows and the
|
|
lower glass coverlid.
|
|
|
|
There was the same view. The whole extent of the celestial
|
|
sphere swarmed with stars and constellations of wonderful
|
|
purity, enough to drive an astronomer out of his mind! On one
|
|
side the sun, like the mouth of a lighted oven, a dazzling disc
|
|
without a halo, standing out on the dark background of the sky!
|
|
On the other, the moon returning its fire by reflection, and
|
|
apparently motionless in the midst of the starry world. Then, a
|
|
large spot seemingly nailed to the firmament, bordered by a
|
|
silvery cord; it was the earth! Here and there nebulous masses
|
|
like large flakes of starry snow; and from the zenith to the nadir,
|
|
an immense ring formed by an impalpable dust of stars, the "Milky
|
|
Way," in the midst of which the sun ranks only as a star of the
|
|
fourth magnitude. The observers could not take their eyes from
|
|
this novel spectacle, of which no description could give an
|
|
adequate idea. What reflections it suggested! What emotions
|
|
hitherto unknown awoke in their souls! Barbicane wished to begin
|
|
the relation of his journey while under its first impressions,
|
|
and hour after hour took notes of all facts happening in the
|
|
beginning of the enterprise. He wrote quietly, with his large
|
|
square writing, in a business-like style.
|
|
|
|
During this time Nicholl, the calculator, looked over the
|
|
minutes of their passage, and worked out figures with
|
|
unparalleled dexterity. Michel Ardan chatted first with
|
|
Barbicane, who did not answer him, and then with Nicholl, who
|
|
did not hear him, with Diana, who understood none of his
|
|
theories, and lastly with himself, questioning and answering,
|
|
going and coming, busy with a thousand details; at one time bent
|
|
over the lower glass, at another roosting in the heights of the
|
|
projectile, and always singing. In this microcosm he
|
|
represented French loquacity and excitability, and we beg you to
|
|
believe that they were well represented. The day, or rather
|
|
(for the expression is not correct) the lapse of twelve hours,
|
|
which forms a day upon the earth, closed with a plentiful supper
|
|
carefully prepared. No accident of any nature had yet happened
|
|
to shake the travelers' confidence; so, full of hope, already
|
|
sure of success, they slept peacefully, while the projectile
|
|
under an uniformly decreasing speed was crossing the sky.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER IV
|
|
|
|
|
|
A LITTLE ALGEBRA
|
|
|
|
|
|
The night passed without incident. The word "night," however,
|
|
is scarcely applicable.
|
|
|
|
The position of the projectile with regard to the sun did
|
|
not change. Astronomically, it was daylight on the lower part,
|
|
and night on the upper; so when during this narrative these
|
|
words are used, they represent the lapse of time between rising
|
|
and setting of the sun upon the earth.
|
|
|
|
The travelers' sleep was rendered more peaceful by the
|
|
projectile's excessive speed, for it seemed absolutely motionless.
|
|
Not a motion betrayed its onward course through space. The rate
|
|
of progress, however rapid it might be, cannot produce any
|
|
sensible effect on the human frame when it takes place in a
|
|
vacuum, or when the mass of air circulates with the body which
|
|
is carried with it. What inhabitant of the earth perceives its
|
|
speed, which, however, is at the rate of 68,000 miles per hour?
|
|
Motion under such conditions is "felt" no more than repose; and
|
|
when a body is in repose it will remain so as long as no strange
|
|
force displaces it; if moving, it will not stop unless an
|
|
obstacle comes in its way. This indifference to motion or
|
|
repose is called inertia.
|
|
|
|
Barbicane and his companions might have believed themselves
|
|
perfectly stationary, being shut up in the projectile; indeed,
|
|
the effect would have been the same if they had been on the
|
|
outside of it. Had it not been for the moon, which was
|
|
increasing above them, they might have sworn that they were
|
|
floating in complete stagnation.
|
|
|
|
That morning, the 3rd of December, the travelers were awakened by
|
|
a joyous but unexpected noise; it was the crowing of a cock
|
|
which sounded through the car. Michel Ardan, who was the first
|
|
on his feet, climbed to the top of the projectile, and shutting
|
|
a box, the lid of which was partly open, said in a low voice,
|
|
"Will you hold your tongue? That creature will spoil my design!"
|
|
|
|
But Nicholl and Barbicane were awake.
|
|
|
|
"A cock!" said Nicholl.
|
|
|
|
"Why no, my friends," Michel answered quickly; "it was I who
|
|
wished to awake you by this rural sound." So saying, he gave
|
|
vent to a splendid cock-a-doodledoo, which would have done honor
|
|
to the proudest of poultry-yards.
|
|
|
|
The two Americans could not help laughing.
|
|
|
|
"Fine talent that," said Nicholl, looking suspiciously at his companion.
|
|
|
|
"Yes," said Michel; "a joke in my country. It is very Gallic;
|
|
they play the cock so in the best society."
|
|
|
|
Then turning the conversation:
|
|
|
|
"Barbicane, do you know what I have been thinking of all night?"
|
|
|
|
"No," answered the president.
|
|
|
|
"Of our Cambridge friends. You have already remarked that I am
|
|
an ignoramus in mathematical subjects; and it is impossible for
|
|
me to find out how the savants of the observatory were able to
|
|
calculate what initiatory speed the projectile ought to have on
|
|
leaving the Columbiad in order to attain the moon."
|
|
|
|
"You mean to say," replied Barbicane, "to attain that neutral
|
|
point where the terrestrial and lunar attractions are equal;
|
|
for, starting from that point, situated about nine-tenths of the
|
|
distance traveled over, the projectile would simply fall upon
|
|
the moon, on account of its weight."
|
|
|
|
"So be it," said Michel; "but, once more; how could they
|
|
calculate the initiatory speed?"
|
|
|
|
"Nothing can be easier," replied Barbicane.
|
|
|
|
"And you knew how to make that calculation?" asked Michel Ardan.
|
|
|
|
"Perfectly. Nicholl and I would have made it, if the
|
|
observatory had not saved us the trouble."
|
|
|
|
"Very well, old Barbicane," replied Michel; "they might have cut
|
|
off my head, beginning at my feet, before they could have made
|
|
me solve that problem."
|
|
|
|
"Because you do not know algebra," answered Barbicane quietly.
|
|
|
|
"Ah, there you are, you eaters of _x_^1; you think you have said
|
|
all when you have said `Algebra.'"
|
|
|
|
"Michel," said Barbicane, "can you use a forge without a hammer,
|
|
or a plow without a plowshare?"
|
|
|
|
"Hardly."
|
|
|
|
"Well, algebra is a tool, like the plow or the hammer, and a
|
|
good tool to those who know how to use it."
|
|
|
|
"Seriously?"
|
|
|
|
"Quite seriously."
|
|
|
|
"And can you use that tool in my presence?"
|
|
|
|
"If it will interest you."
|
|
|
|
"And show me how they calculated the initiatory speed of our car?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, my worthy friend; taking into consideration all the
|
|
elements of the problem, the distance from the center of the
|
|
earth to the center of the moon, of the radius of the earth, of
|
|
its bulk, and of the bulk of the moon, I can tell exactly what
|
|
ought to be the initiatory speed of the projectile, and that by
|
|
a simple formula."
|
|
|
|
"Let us see."
|
|
|
|
"You shall see it; only I shall not give you the real course
|
|
drawn by the projectile between the moon and the earth in
|
|
considering their motion round the sun. No, I shall consider
|
|
these two orbs as perfectly motionless, which will answer all
|
|
our purpose."
|
|
|
|
"And why?"
|
|
|
|
"Because it will be trying to solve the problem called `the
|
|
problem of the three bodies,' for which the integral calculus is
|
|
not yet far enough advanced."
|
|
|
|
"Then," said Michel Ardan, in his sly tone, "mathematics have
|
|
not said their last word?"
|
|
|
|
"Certainly not," replied Barbicane.
|
|
|
|
"Well, perhaps the Selenites have carried the integral calculus
|
|
farther than you have; and, by the bye, what is this
|
|
`integral calculus?'"
|
|
|
|
"It is a calculation the converse of the differential," replied
|
|
Barbicane seriously.
|
|
|
|
"Much obliged; it is all very clear, no doubt."
|
|
|
|
"And now," continued Barbicane, "a slip of paper and a bit of
|
|
pencil, and before a half-hour is over I will have found the
|
|
required formula."
|
|
|
|
Half an hour had not elapsed before Barbicane, raising his head,
|
|
showed Michel Ardan a page covered with algebraical signs, in
|
|
which the general formula for the solution was contained.
|
|
|
|
"Well, and does Nicholl understand what that means?"
|
|
|
|
"Of course, Michel," replied the captain. "All these signs,
|
|
which seem cabalistic to you, form the plainest, the clearest,
|
|
and the most logical language to those who know how to read it."
|
|
|
|
"And you pretend, Nicholl," asked Michel, "that by means of
|
|
these hieroglyphics, more incomprehensible than the Egyptian
|
|
Ibis, you can find what initiatory speed it was necessary to
|
|
give the projectile?"
|
|
|
|
"Incontestably," replied Nicholl; "and even by this same formula
|
|
I can always tell you its speed at any point of its transit."
|
|
|
|
"On your word?"
|
|
|
|
"On my word."
|
|
|
|
"Then you are as cunning as our president."
|
|
|
|
"No, Michel; the difficult part is what Barbicane has done; that
|
|
is, to get an equation which shall satisfy all the conditions of
|
|
the problem. The remainder is only a question of arithmetic,
|
|
requiring merely the knowledge of the four rules."
|
|
|
|
"That is something!" replied Michel Ardan, who for his life
|
|
could not do addition right, and who defined the rule as a
|
|
Chinese puzzle, which allowed one to obtain all sorts of totals.
|
|
|
|
"The expression _v_ zero, which you see in that equation, is the
|
|
speed which the projectile will have on leaving the atmosphere."
|
|
|
|
"Just so," said Nicholl; "it is from that point that we must
|
|
calculate the velocity, since we know already that the velocity
|
|
at departure was exactly one and a half times more than on
|
|
leaving the atmosphere."
|
|
|
|
"I understand no more," said Michel.
|
|
|
|
"It is a very simple calculation," said Barbicane.
|
|
|
|
"Not as simple as I am," retorted Michel.
|
|
|
|
"That means, that when our projectile reached the limits of the
|
|
terrestrial atmosphere it had already lost one-third of its
|
|
initiatory speed."
|
|
|
|
"As much as that?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, my friend; merely by friction against the atmospheric strata.
|
|
You understand that the faster it goes the more resistance it meets
|
|
with from the air."
|
|
|
|
"That I admit," answered Michel; "and I understand it,
|
|
although your x's and zero's, and algebraic formula, are
|
|
rattling in my head like nails in a bag."
|
|
|
|
"First effects of algebra," replied Barbicane; "and now, to
|
|
finish, we are going to prove the given number of these
|
|
different expressions, that is, work out their value."
|
|
|
|
"Finish me!" replied Michel.
|
|
|
|
Barbicane took the paper, and began to make his calculations
|
|
with great rapidity. Nicholl looked over and greedily read the
|
|
work as it proceeded.
|
|
|
|
"That's it! that's it!" at last he cried.
|
|
|
|
"Is it clear?" asked Barbicane.
|
|
|
|
"It is written in letters of fire," said Nicholl.
|
|
|
|
"Wonderful fellows!" muttered Ardan.
|
|
|
|
"Do you understand it at last?" asked Barbicane.
|
|
|
|
"Do I understand it?" cried Ardan; "my head is splitting with it."
|
|
|
|
"And now," said Nicholl, "to find out the speed of the
|
|
projectile when it leaves the atmosphere, we have only to
|
|
calculate that."
|
|
|
|
The captain, as a practical man equal to all difficulties, began
|
|
to write with frightful rapidity. Divisions and multiplications
|
|
grew under his fingers; the figures were like hail on the white page.
|
|
Barbicane watched him, while Michel Ardan nursed a growing headache
|
|
with both hands.
|
|
|
|
"Very well?" asked Barbicane, after some minutes' silence.
|
|
|
|
"Well!" replied Nicholl; every calculation made, _v_ zero, that
|
|
is to say, the speed necessary for the projectile on leaving the
|
|
atmosphere, to enable it to reach the equal point of attraction,
|
|
ought to be----"
|
|
|
|
"Yes?" said Barbicane.
|
|
|
|
"Twelve thousand yards."
|
|
|
|
"What!" exclaimed Barbicane, starting; "you say----"
|
|
|
|
"Twelve thousand yards."
|
|
|
|
"The devil!" cried the president, making a gesture of despair.
|
|
|
|
"What is the matter?" asked Michel Ardan, much surprised.
|
|
|
|
"What is the matter! why, if at this moment our speed had
|
|
already diminished one-third by friction, the initiatory speed
|
|
ought to have been----"
|
|
|
|
"Seventeen thousand yards."
|
|
|
|
"And the Cambridge Observatory declared that twelve thousand
|
|
yards was enough at starting; and our projectile, which only
|
|
started with that speed----"
|
|
|
|
"Well?" asked Nicholl.
|
|
|
|
"Well, it will not be enough."
|
|
|
|
"Good."
|
|
|
|
"We shall not be able to reach the neutral point."
|
|
|
|
"The deuce!"
|
|
|
|
"We shall not even get halfway."
|
|
|
|
"In the name of the projectile!" exclaimed Michel Ardan, jumping
|
|
as if it was already on the point of striking the terrestrial globe.
|
|
|
|
"And we shall fall back upon the earth!"
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER V
|
|
|
|
|
|
THE COLD OF SPACE
|
|
|
|
|
|
This revelation came like a thunderbolt. Who could have
|
|
expected such an error in calculation? Barbicane would not
|
|
believe it. Nicholl revised his figures: they were exact.
|
|
As to the formula which had determined them, they could not
|
|
suspect its truth; it was evident that an initiatory velocity of
|
|
seventeen thousand yards in the first second was necessary to
|
|
enable them to reach the neutral point.
|
|
|
|
The three friends looked at each other silently. There was no
|
|
thought of breakfast. Barbicane, with clenched teeth, knitted
|
|
brows, and hands clasped convulsively, was watching through
|
|
the window. Nicholl had crossed his arms, and was examining
|
|
his calculations. Michel Ardan was muttering:
|
|
|
|
"That is just like these scientific men: they never do anything else.
|
|
I would give twenty pistoles if we could fall upon the Cambridge
|
|
Observatory and crush it, together with the whole lot of dabblers
|
|
in figures which it contains."
|
|
|
|
Suddenly a thought struck the captain, which he at once
|
|
communicated to Barbicane.
|
|
|
|
"Ah!" said he; "it is seven o'clock in the morning; we have
|
|
already been gone thirty-two hours; more than half our passage
|
|
is over, and we are not falling that I am aware of."
|
|
|
|
Barbicane did not answer, but after a rapid glance at the
|
|
captain, took a pair of compasses wherewith to measure the
|
|
angular distance of the terrestrial globe; then from the lower
|
|
window he took an exact observation, and noticed that the
|
|
projectile was apparently stationary. Then rising and wiping
|
|
his forehead, on which large drops of perspiration were
|
|
standing, he put some figures on paper. Nicholl understood that
|
|
the president was deducting from the terrestrial diameter the
|
|
projectile's distance from the earth. He watched him anxiously.
|
|
|
|
"No," exclaimed Barbicane, after some moments, "no, we are not
|
|
falling! no, we are already more than 50,000 leagues from the earth.
|
|
We have passed the point at which the projectile would have stopped
|
|
if its speed had only been 12,000 yards at starting. We are still
|
|
going up."
|
|
|
|
"That is evident," replied Nicholl; "and we must conclude that
|
|
our initial speed, under the power of the 400,000 pounds of
|
|
gun-cotton, must have exceeded the required 12,000 yards.
|
|
Now I can understand how, after thirteen minutes only, we met the
|
|
second satellite, which gravitates round the earth at more than
|
|
2,000 leagues' distance."
|
|
|
|
"And this explanation is the more probable," added Barbicane,
|
|
"Because, in throwing off the water enclosed between its
|
|
partition-breaks, the projectile found itself lightened of a
|
|
considerable weight."
|
|
|
|
"Just so," said Nicholl.
|
|
|
|
"Ah, my brave Nicholl, we are saved!"
|
|
|
|
"Very well then," said Michel Ardan quietly; "as we are safe,
|
|
let us have breakfast."
|
|
|
|
Nicholl was not mistaken. The initial speed had been, very
|
|
fortunately, much above that estimated by the Cambridge
|
|
Observatory; but the Cambridge Observatory had nevertheless made
|
|
a mistake.
|
|
|
|
The travelers, recovered from this false alarm, breakfasted merrily.
|
|
If they ate a good deal, they talked more. Their confidence was
|
|
greater after than before "the incident of the algebra."
|
|
|
|
"Why should we not succeed?" said Michel Ardan; "why should we
|
|
not arrive safely? We are launched; we have no obstacle before
|
|
us, no stones in the way; the road is open, more so than that of
|
|
a ship battling with the sea; more open than that of a balloon
|
|
battling with the wind; and if a ship can reach its destination,
|
|
a balloon go where it pleases, why cannot our projectile attain
|
|
its end and aim?"
|
|
|
|
"It _will_ attain it," said Barbicane.
|
|
|
|
"If only to do honor to the Americans," added Michel Ardan, "the
|
|
only people who could bring such an enterprise to a happy termination,
|
|
and the only one which could produce a President Barbicane. Ah, now
|
|
we are no longer uneasy, I begin to think, What will become of us?
|
|
We shall get right royally weary."
|
|
|
|
Barbicane and Nicholl made a gesture of denial.
|
|
|
|
"But I have provided for the contingency, my friends," replied
|
|
Michel; "you have only to speak, and I have chess, draughts,
|
|
cards, and dominoes at your disposal; nothing is wanting but a
|
|
billiard-table."
|
|
|
|
"What!" exclaimed Barbicane; "you brought away such trifles?"
|
|
|
|
"Certainly," replied Michel, "and not only to distract
|
|
ourselves, but also with the laudable intention of endowing the
|
|
Selenite smoking divans with them."
|
|
|
|
"My friend," said Barbicane, "if the moon is inhabited, its
|
|
inhabitants must have appeared some thousands of years before
|
|
those of the earth, for we cannot doubt that their star is much
|
|
older than ours. If then these Selenites have existed their
|
|
hundreds of thousands of years, and if their brain is of the same
|
|
organization of the human brain, they have already invented all
|
|
that we have invented, and even what we may invent in future ages.
|
|
They have nothing to learn from _us_, and we have everything to
|
|
learn from _them_."
|
|
|
|
"What!" said Michel; "you believe that they have artists like
|
|
Phidias, Michael Angelo, or Raphael?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes."
|
|
|
|
"Poets like Homer, Virgil, Milton, Lamartine, and Hugo?"
|
|
|
|
"I am sure of it."
|
|
|
|
"Philosophers like Plato, Aristotle, Descartes, Kant?"
|
|
|
|
"I have no doubt of it."
|
|
|
|
"Scientific men like Archimedes, Euclid, Pascal, Newton?"
|
|
|
|
"I could swear it."
|
|
|
|
"Comic writers like Arnal, and photographers like-- like Nadar?"
|
|
|
|
"Certain."
|
|
|
|
"Then, friend Barbicane, if they are as strong as we are, and
|
|
even stronger-- these Selenites-- why have they not tried to
|
|
communicate with the earth? why have they not launched a lunar
|
|
projectile to our terrestrial regions?"
|
|
|
|
"Who told you that they have never done so?" said Barbicane seriously.
|
|
|
|
"Indeed," added Nicholl, "it would be easier for them than for
|
|
us, for two reasons; first, because the attraction on the moon's
|
|
surface is six times less than on that of the earth, which would
|
|
allow a projectile to rise more easily; secondly, because it
|
|
would be enough to send such a projectile only at 8,000 leagues
|
|
instead of 80,000, which would require the force of projection
|
|
to be ten times less strong."
|
|
|
|
"Then," continued Michel, "I repeat it, why have they not done it?"
|
|
|
|
"And I repeat," said Barbicane; "who told you that they have not
|
|
done it?"
|
|
|
|
"When?"
|
|
|
|
"Thousands of years before man appeared on earth."
|
|
|
|
"And the projectile-- where is the projectile? I demand to see
|
|
the projectile."
|
|
|
|
"My friend," replied Barbicane, "the sea covers five-sixths of
|
|
our globe. From that we may draw five good reasons for
|
|
supposing that the lunar projectile, if ever launched, is now at
|
|
the bottom of the Atlantic or the Pacific, unless it sped into
|
|
some crevasse at that period when the crust of the earth was not
|
|
yet hardened."
|
|
|
|
"Old Barbicane," said Michel, "you have an answer for
|
|
everything, and I bow before your wisdom. But there is one
|
|
hypothesis that would suit me better than all the others, which
|
|
is, the Selenites, being older than we, are wiser, and have not
|
|
invented gunpowder."
|
|
|
|
At this moment Diana joined in the conversation by a sonorous barking.
|
|
She was asking for her breakfast.
|
|
|
|
"Ah!" said Michel Ardan, "in our discussion we have forgotten
|
|
Diana and Satellite."
|
|
|
|
Immediately a good-sized pie was given to the dog, which
|
|
devoured it hungrily.
|
|
|
|
"Do you see, Barbicane," said Michel, "we should have made a
|
|
second Noah's ark of this projectile, and borne with us to the
|
|
moon a couple of every kind of domestic animal."
|
|
|
|
"I dare say; but room would have failed us."
|
|
|
|
"Oh!" said Michel, "we might have squeezed a little."
|
|
|
|
"The fact is," replied Nicholl, "that cows, bulls, and horses,
|
|
and all ruminants, would have been very useful on the lunar
|
|
continent, but unfortunately the car could neither have been
|
|
made a stable nor a shed."
|
|
|
|
"Well, we might have at least brought a donkey, only a little
|
|
donkey; that courageous beast which old Silenus loved to mount.
|
|
I love those old donkeys; they are the least favored animals in
|
|
creation; they are not only beaten while alive, but even after
|
|
they are dead."
|
|
|
|
"How do you make that out?" asked Barbicane. "Why," said
|
|
Michel, "they make their skins into drums."
|
|
|
|
Barbicane and Nicholl could not help laughing at this ridiculous remark.
|
|
But a cry from their merry companion stopped them. The latter was
|
|
leaning over the spot where Satellite lay. He rose, saying:
|
|
|
|
"My good Satellite is no longer ill."
|
|
|
|
"Ah!" said Nicholl.
|
|
|
|
"No," answered Michel, "he is dead! There," added he, in a
|
|
piteous tone, "that is embarrassing. I much fear, my poor
|
|
Diana, that you will leave no progeny in the lunar regions!"
|
|
|
|
Indeed the unfortunate Satellite had not survived its wound.
|
|
It was quite dead. Michel Ardan looked at his friends with a
|
|
rueful countenance.
|
|
|
|
"One question presents itself," said Barbicane. "We cannot keep
|
|
the dead body of this dog with us for the next forty-eight hours."
|
|
|
|
"No! certainly not," replied Nicholl; "but our scuttles are
|
|
fixed on hinges; they can be let down. We will open one, and
|
|
throw the body out into space."
|
|
|
|
The president thought for some moments, and then said:
|
|
|
|
"Yes, we must do so, but at the same time taking very great precautions."
|
|
|
|
"Why?" asked Michel.
|
|
|
|
"For two reasons which you will understand," answered Barbicane.
|
|
"The first relates to the air shut up in the projectile, and of
|
|
which we must lose as little as possible."
|
|
|
|
"But we manufacture the air?"
|
|
|
|
"Only in part. We make only the oxygen, my worthy Michel; and
|
|
with regard to that, we must watch that the apparatus does not
|
|
furnish the oxygen in too great a quantity; for an excess would
|
|
bring us very serious physiological troubles. But if we make
|
|
the oxygen, we do not make the azote, that medium which the
|
|
lungs do not absorb, and which ought to remain intact; and that
|
|
azote will escape rapidly through the open scuttles."
|
|
|
|
"Oh! the time for throwing out poor Satellite?" said Michel.
|
|
|
|
"Agreed; but we must act quickly."
|
|
|
|
"And the second reason?" asked Michel.
|
|
|
|
"The second reason is that we must not let the outer cold, which
|
|
is excessive, penetrate the projectile or we shall be frozen to death."
|
|
|
|
"But the sun?"
|
|
|
|
"The sun warms our projectile, which absorbs its rays; but it
|
|
does not warm the vacuum in which we are floating at this moment.
|
|
Where there is no air, there is no more heat than diffused light;
|
|
and the same with darkness; it is cold where the sun's rays do not
|
|
strike direct. This temperature is only the temperature produced
|
|
by the radiation of the stars; that is to say, what the
|
|
terrestrial globe would undergo if the sun disappeared one day."
|
|
|
|
"Which is not to be feared," replied Nicholl.
|
|
|
|
"Who knows?" said Michel Ardan. "But, in admitting that the sun
|
|
does not go out, might it not happen that the earth might move
|
|
away from it?"
|
|
|
|
"There!" said Barbicane, "there is Michel with his ideas."
|
|
|
|
"And," continued Michel, "do we not know that in 1861 the earth
|
|
passed through the tail of a comet? Or let us suppose a comet
|
|
whose power of attraction is greater than that of the sun.
|
|
The terrestrial orbit will bend toward the wandering star, and
|
|
the earth, becoming its satellite, will be drawn such a distance
|
|
that the rays of the sun will have no action on its surface."
|
|
|
|
"That _might_ happen, indeed," replied Barbicane, "but the
|
|
consequences of such a displacement need not be so formidable as
|
|
you suppose."
|
|
|
|
"And why not?"
|
|
|
|
"Because the heat and cold would be equalized on our globe.
|
|
It has been calculated that, had our earth been carried along in
|
|
its course by the comet of 1861, at its perihelion, that is, its
|
|
nearest approach to the sun, it would have undergone a heat
|
|
28,000 times greater than that of summer. But this heat, which
|
|
is sufficient to evaporate the waters, would have formed a thick
|
|
ring of cloud, which would have modified that excessive
|
|
temperature; hence the compensation between the cold of the
|
|
aphelion and the heat of the perihelion."
|
|
|
|
"At how many degrees," asked Nicholl, "is the temperature of the
|
|
planetary spaces estimated?"
|
|
|
|
"Formerly," replied Barbicane, "it was greatly exagerated; but
|
|
now, after the calculations of Fourier, of the French Academy of
|
|
Science, it is not supposed to exceed 60@ Centigrade below zero."
|
|
|
|
"Pooh!" said Michel, "that's nothing!"
|
|
|
|
"It is very much," replied Barbicane; "the temperature which was
|
|
observed in the polar regions, at Melville Island and Fort
|
|
Reliance, that is 76@ Fahrenheit below zero."
|
|
|
|
"If I mistake not," said Nicholl, "M. Pouillet, another savant,
|
|
estimates the temperature of space at 250@ Fahrenheit below zero.
|
|
We shall, however, be able to verify these calculations for ourselves."
|
|
|
|
"Not at present; because the solar rays, beating directly
|
|
upon our thermometer, would give, on the contrary, a very high
|
|
temperature. But, when we arrive in the moon, during its
|
|
fifteen days of night at either face, we shall have leisure to
|
|
make the experiment, for our satellite lies in a vacuum."
|
|
|
|
"What do you mean by a vacuum?" asked Michel. "Is it perfectly such?"
|
|
|
|
"It is absolutely void of air."
|
|
|
|
"And is the air replaced by nothing whatever?"
|
|
|
|
"By the ether only," replied Barbicane.
|
|
|
|
"And pray what is the ether?"
|
|
|
|
"The ether, my friend, is an agglomeration of imponderable
|
|
atoms, which, relatively to their dimensions, are as far removed
|
|
from each other as the celestial bodies are in space. It is
|
|
these atoms which, by their vibratory motion, produce both light
|
|
and heat in the universe."
|
|
|
|
They now proceeded to the burial of Satellite. They had merely
|
|
to drop him into space, in the same way that sailors drop a body
|
|
into the sea; but, as President Barbicane suggested, they must
|
|
act quickly, so as to lose as little as possible of that air
|
|
whose elasticity would rapidly have spread it into space.
|
|
The bolts of the right scuttle, the opening of which measured
|
|
about twelve inches across, were carefully drawn, while Michel,
|
|
quite grieved, prepared to launch his dog into space. The glass,
|
|
raised by a powerful lever, which enabled it to overcome the
|
|
pressure of the inside air on the walls of the projectile,
|
|
turned rapidly on its hinges, and Satellite was thrown out.
|
|
Scarcely a particle of air could have escaped, and the operation
|
|
was so successful that later on Barbicane did not fear to
|
|
dispose of the rubbish which encumbered the car.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER VI
|
|
|
|
|
|
QUESTION AND ANSWER
|
|
|
|
|
|
On the 4th of December, when the travelers awoke after
|
|
fifty-four hours' journey, the chronometer marked five o'clock
|
|
of the terrestrial morning. In time it was just over five
|
|
hours and forty minutes, half of that assigned to their sojourn
|
|
in the projectile; but they had already accomplished nearly
|
|
seven-tenths of the way. This peculiarity was due to their
|
|
regularly decreasing speed.
|
|
|
|
Now when they observed the earth through the lower window,
|
|
it looked like nothing more than a dark spot, drowned in the
|
|
solar rays. No more crescent, no more cloudy light! The next
|
|
day, at midnight, the earth would be _new_, at the very moment
|
|
when the moon would be full. Above, the orb of night was nearing
|
|
the line followed by the projectile, so as to meet it at the
|
|
given hour. All around the black vault was studded with brilliant
|
|
points, which seemed to move slowly; but, at the great distance
|
|
they were from them, their relative size did not seem to change.
|
|
The sun and stars appeared exactly as they do to us upon earth.
|
|
As to the moon, she was considerably larger; but the travelers'
|
|
glasses, not very powerful, did not allow them as yet to make
|
|
any useful observations upon her surface, or reconnoiter her
|
|
topographically or geologically.
|
|
|
|
Thus the time passed in never-ending conversations all about
|
|
the moon. Each one brought forward his own contingent of
|
|
particular facts; Barbicane and Nicholl always serious, Michel
|
|
Ardan always enthusiastic. The projectile, its situation,
|
|
its direction, incidents which might happen, the precautions
|
|
necessitated by their fall on to the moon, were inexhaustible
|
|
matters of conjecture.
|
|
|
|
As they were breakfasting, a question of Michel's, relating to
|
|
the projectile, provoked rather a curious answer from Barbicane,
|
|
which is worth repeating. Michel, supposing it to be roughly
|
|
stopped, while still under its formidable initial speed, wished
|
|
to know what the consequences of the stoppage would have been.
|
|
|
|
"But," said Barbicane, "I do not see how it could have been stopped."
|
|
|
|
"But let us suppose so," said Michel.
|
|
|
|
"It is an impossible supposition," said the practical Barbicane;
|
|
"unless that impulsive force had failed; but even then its speed
|
|
would diminish by degrees, and it would not have stopped suddenly."
|
|
|
|
"Admit that it had struck a body in space."
|
|
|
|
"What body?"
|
|
|
|
"Why that enormous meteor which we met."
|
|
|
|
"Then," said Nicholl, "the projectile would have been broken
|
|
into a thousand pieces, and we with it."
|
|
|
|
"More than that," replied Barbicane; "we should have been burned
|
|
to death."
|
|
|
|
"Burned?" exclaimed Michel, "by Jove! I am sorry it did not
|
|
happen, `just to see.'"
|
|
|
|
"And you would have seen," replied Barbicane. "It is known now
|
|
that heat is only a modification of motion. When water is
|
|
warmed-- that is to say, when heat is added to it--its particles
|
|
are set in motion."
|
|
|
|
"Well," said michel, "that is an ingenious theory!"
|
|
|
|
"And a true one, my worthy friend; for it explains every
|
|
phenomenon of caloric. Heat is but the motion of atoms, a
|
|
simple oscillation of the particles of a body. When they apply
|
|
the brake to a train, the train comes to a stop; but what
|
|
becomes of the motion which it had previously possessed? It is
|
|
transformed into heat, and the brake becomes hot. Why do they
|
|
grease the axles of the wheels? To prevent their heating,
|
|
because this heat would be generated by the motion which is thus
|
|
lost by transformation."
|
|
|
|
"Yes, I understand," replied Michel, "perfectly. For example,
|
|
when I have run a long time, when I am swimming, when I am
|
|
perspiring in large drops, why am I obliged to stop?
|
|
Simply because my motion is changed into heat."
|
|
|
|
Barbicane could not help smiling at Michel's reply; then,
|
|
returning to his theory, said:
|
|
|
|
"Thus, in case of a shock, it would have been with our
|
|
projectile as with a ball which falls in a burning state after
|
|
having struck the metal plate; it is its motion which is turned
|
|
into heat. Consequently I affirm that, if our projectile had
|
|
struck the meteor, its speed thus suddenly checked would have
|
|
raised a heat great enough to turn it into vapor instantaneously."
|
|
|
|
"Then," asked Nicholl, "what would happen if the earth's motion
|
|
were to stop suddenly?"
|
|
|
|
"Her temperature would be raised to such a pitch," said
|
|
Barbicane, "that she would be at once reduced to vapor."
|
|
|
|
"Well," said Michel, "that is a way of ending the earth which
|
|
will greatly simplify things."
|
|
|
|
"And if the earth fell upon the sun?" asked Nicholl.
|
|
|
|
"According to calculation," replied Barbicane, "the fall would
|
|
develop a heat equal to that produced by 16,000 globes of coal,
|
|
each equal in bulk to our terrestrial globe."
|
|
|
|
"Good additional heat for the sun," replied Michel Ardan, "of
|
|
which the inhabitants of Uranus or Neptune would doubtless not
|
|
complain; they must be perished with cold on their planets."
|
|
|
|
"Thus, my friends," said Barbicane, "all motion suddenly stopped
|
|
produces heat. And this theory allows us to infer that the heat
|
|
of the solar disc is fed by a hail of meteors falling
|
|
incessantly on its surface. They have even calculated----"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, dear!" murmured Michel, "the figures are coming."
|
|
|
|
"They have even calculated," continued the imperturbable Barbicane,
|
|
"that the shock of each meteor on the sun ought to produce a heat
|
|
equal to that of 4,000 masses of coal of an equal bulk."
|
|
|
|
"And what is the solar heat?" asked Michel.
|
|
|
|
"It is equal to that produced by the combustion of a stratum of
|
|
coal surrounding the sun to a depth of forty-seven miles."
|
|
|
|
"And that heat----"
|
|
|
|
"Would be able to boil two billions nine hundred millions of
|
|
cubic myriameters [2] of water."
|
|
|
|
[2] The myriameter is equal to rather more than 10,936
|
|
cubic yards English.
|
|
|
|
"And it does not roast us!" exclaimed Michel.
|
|
|
|
"No," replied Barbicane, "because the terrestrial atmosphere
|
|
absorbs four-tenths of the solar heat; besides, the quantity of
|
|
heat intercepted by the earth is but a billionth part of the
|
|
entire radiation."
|
|
|
|
"I see that all is for the best," said Michel, "and that this
|
|
atmosphere is a useful invention; for it not only allows us to
|
|
breathe, but it prevents us from roasting."
|
|
|
|
"Yes!" said Nicholl, "unfortunately, it will not be the same in
|
|
the moon."
|
|
|
|
"Bah!" said Michel, always hopeful. "If there are inhabitants,
|
|
they must breathe. If there are no longer any, they must have
|
|
left enough oxygen for three people, if only at the bottom of
|
|
ravines, where its own weight will cause it to accumulate, and
|
|
we will not climb the mountains; that is all." And Michel,
|
|
rising, went to look at the lunar disc, which shone with
|
|
intolerable brilliancy.
|
|
|
|
"By Jove!" said he, "it must be hot up there!"
|
|
|
|
"Without considering," replied Nicholl, "that the day lasts 360 hours!"
|
|
|
|
"And to compensate that," said Barbicane, "the nights have the
|
|
same length; and as heat is restored by radiation, their
|
|
temperature can only be that of the planetary space."
|
|
|
|
"A pretty country, that!" exclaimed Michel. "Never mind!
|
|
I wish I was there! Ah! my dear comrades, it will be rather
|
|
curious to have the earth for our moon, to see it rise on the
|
|
horizon, to recognize the shape of its continents, and to say
|
|
to oneself, `There is America, there is Europe;' then to follow
|
|
it when it is about to lose itself in the sun's rays! By the
|
|
bye, Barbicane, have the Selenites eclipses?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, eclipses of the sun," replied Barbicane, "when the centers
|
|
of the three orbs are on a line, the earth being in the middle.
|
|
But they are only partial, during which the earth, cast like a
|
|
screen upon the solar disc, allows the greater portion to be seen."
|
|
|
|
"And why," asked Nicholl, "is there no total eclipse? Does not
|
|
the cone of the shadow cast by the earth extend beyond the moon?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, if we do not take into consideration the refraction
|
|
produced by the terrestrial atmosphere. No, if we take that
|
|
refraction into consideration. Thus let <lower case delta> be
|
|
the horizontal parallel, and _p_ the apparent semidiameter----"
|
|
|
|
"Oh!" said Michel. "Do speak plainly, you man of algebra!"
|
|
|
|
"Very well, replied Barbicane; "in popular language the mean
|
|
distance from the moon to the earth being sixty terrestrial
|
|
radii, the length of the cone of the shadow, on account of
|
|
refraction, is reduced to less than forty-two radii.
|
|
The result is that when there are eclipses, the moon finds
|
|
itself beyond the cone of pure shadow, and that the sun sends
|
|
her its rays, not only from its edges, but also from its center."
|
|
|
|
"Then," said Michel, in a merry tone, "why are there eclipses,
|
|
when there ought not to be any?"
|
|
|
|
"Simply because the solar rays are weakened by this refraction,
|
|
and the atmosphere through which they pass extinguished the
|
|
greater part of them!"
|
|
|
|
"That reason satisfies me," replied Michel. "Besides we shall
|
|
see when we get there. Now, tell me, Barbicane, do you believe
|
|
that the moon is an old comet?"
|
|
|
|
"There's an idea!"
|
|
|
|
"Yes," replied Michel, with an amiable swagger, "I have a few
|
|
ideas of that sort."
|
|
|
|
"But that idea does not spring from Michel," answered Nicholl.
|
|
|
|
"Well, then, I am a plagiarist."
|
|
|
|
"No doubt about it. According to the ancients, the Arcadians
|
|
pretend that their ancestors inhabited the earth before the moon
|
|
became her satellite. Starting from this fact, some scientific
|
|
men have seen in the moon a comet whose orbit will one day bring
|
|
it so near to the earth that it will be held there by its attraction."
|
|
|
|
"Is there any truth in this hypothesis?" asked Michel.
|
|
|
|
"None whatever," said Barbicane, "and the proof is, that the
|
|
moon has preserved no trace of the gaseous envelope which always
|
|
accompanies comets."
|
|
|
|
"But," continued Nicholl, "Before becoming the earth's satellite,
|
|
could not the moon, when in her perihelion, pass so near the sun
|
|
as by evaporation to get rid of all those gaseous substances?"
|
|
|
|
"It is possible, friend Nicholl, but not probable."
|
|
|
|
"Why not?"
|
|
|
|
"Because-- Faith I do not know."
|
|
|
|
"Ah!" exclaimed Michel, "what hundred of volumes we might make
|
|
of all that we do not know!"
|
|
|
|
"Ah! indeed. What time is it?" asked Barbicane.
|
|
|
|
"Three o'clock," answered Nicholl.
|
|
|
|
"How time goes," said Michel, "in the conversation of scientific
|
|
men such as we are! Certainly, I feel I know too much! I feel
|
|
that I am becoming a well!"
|
|
|
|
Saying which, Michel hoisted himself to the roof of the projectile,
|
|
"to observe the moon better," he pretended. During this time his
|
|
companions were watching through the lower glass. Nothing new to note!
|
|
|
|
When Michel Ardan came down, he went to the side scuttle; and
|
|
suddenly they heard an exclamation of surprise!
|
|
|
|
"What is it?" asked Barbicane.
|
|
|
|
The president approached the window, and saw a sort of flattened
|
|
sack floating some yards from the projectile. This object
|
|
seemed as motionless as the projectile, and was consequently
|
|
animated with the same ascending movement.
|
|
|
|
"What is that machine?" continued Michel Ardan. "Is it one of
|
|
the bodies which our projectile keeps within its attraction, and
|
|
which will accompany it to the moon?"
|
|
|
|
"What astonishes me," said Nicholl, "is that the specific weight
|
|
of the body, which is certainly less than that of the
|
|
projectile, allows it to keep so perfectly on a level with it."
|
|
|
|
"Nicholl," replied Barbicane, after a moment's reflection, "I do
|
|
not know what the object it, but I do know why it maintains our level."
|
|
|
|
"And why?"
|
|
|
|
"Because we are floating in space, my dear captain, and in space
|
|
bodies fall or move (which is the same thing) with equal speed
|
|
whatever be their weight or form; it is the air, which by its
|
|
resistance creates these differences in weight. When you create
|
|
a vacuum in a tube, the objects you send through it, grains of
|
|
dust or grains of lead, fall with the same rapidity. Here in
|
|
space is the same cause and the same effect."
|
|
|
|
"Just so," said Nicholl, "and everything we throw out of the
|
|
projectile will accompany it until it reaches the moon."
|
|
|
|
"Ah! fools that we are!" exclaimed Michel.
|
|
|
|
"Why that expletive?" asked Barbicane.
|
|
|
|
"Because we might have filled the projectile with useful objects,
|
|
books, instruments, tools, etc. We could have thrown them all
|
|
out, and all would have followed in our train. But happy thought!
|
|
Why cannot we walk outside like the meteor? Why cannot we launch
|
|
into space through the scuttle? What enjoyment it would be to
|
|
feel oneself thus suspended in ether, more favored than the birds
|
|
who must use their wings to keep themselves up!"
|
|
|
|
"Granted," said Barbicane, "but how to breathe?"
|
|
|
|
"Hang the air, to fail so inopportunely!"
|
|
|
|
"But if it did not fail, Michel, your density being less than
|
|
that of the projectile, you would soon be left behind."
|
|
|
|
"Then we must remain in our car?"
|
|
|
|
"We must!"
|
|
|
|
"Ah!" exclaimed Michel, in a load voice.
|
|
|
|
"What is the matter," asked Nicholl.
|
|
|
|
"I know, I guess, what this pretended meteor is! It is no
|
|
asteroid which is accompanying us! It is not a piece of a planet."
|
|
|
|
"What is it then?" asked Barbicane.
|
|
|
|
"It is our unfortunate dog! It is Diana's husband!"
|
|
|
|
Indeed, this deformed, unrecognizable object, reduced to
|
|
nothing, was the body of Satellite, flattened like a bagpipe
|
|
without wind, and ever mounting, mounting!
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER VII
|
|
|
|
|
|
A MOMENT OF INTOXICATION
|
|
|
|
|
|
Thus a phenomenon, curious but explicable, was happening under
|
|
these strange conditions.
|
|
|
|
Every object thrown from the projectile would follow the same
|
|
course and never stop until it did. There was a subject for
|
|
conversation which the whole evening could not exhaust.
|
|
|
|
Besides, the excitement of the three travelers increased as they
|
|
drew near the end of their journey. They expected unforseen
|
|
incidents, and new phenomena; and nothing would have astonished
|
|
them in the frame of mind they then were in. Their overexcited
|
|
imagination went faster than the projectile, whose speed was
|
|
evidently diminishing, though insensibly to themselves. But the
|
|
moon grew larger to their eyes, and they fancied if they
|
|
stretched out their hands they could seize it.
|
|
|
|
The next day, the 5th of November, at five in the morning,
|
|
all three were on foot. That day was to be the last of their
|
|
journey, if all calculations were true. That very night, at
|
|
twelve o'clock, in eighteen hours, exactly at the full moon,
|
|
they would reach its brilliant disc. The next midnight would
|
|
see that journey ended, the most extraordinary of ancient or
|
|
modern times. Thus from the first of the morning, through the
|
|
scuttles silvered by its rays, they saluted the orb of night
|
|
with a confident and joyous hurrah.
|
|
|
|
The moon was advancing majestically along the starry firmament.
|
|
A few more degrees, and she would reach the exact point where
|
|
her meeting with the projectile was to take place.
|
|
|
|
According to his own observations, Barbicane reckoned that they
|
|
would land on her northern hemisphere, where stretch immense plains,
|
|
and where mountains are rare. A favorable circumstance if, as
|
|
they thought, the lunar atmosphere was stored only in its depths.
|
|
|
|
"Besides," observed Michel Ardan, "a plain is easier to
|
|
disembark upon than a mountain. A Selenite, deposited in Europe
|
|
on the summit of Mont Blanc, or in Asia on the top of the
|
|
Himalayas, would not be quite in the right place."
|
|
|
|
"And," added Captain Nicholl, "on a flat ground, the projectile
|
|
will remain motionless when it has once touched; whereas on a
|
|
declivity it would roll like an avalanche, and not being
|
|
squirrels we should not come out safe and sound. So it is all
|
|
for the best."
|
|
|
|
Indeed, the success of the audacious attempt no longer
|
|
appeared doubtful. But Barbicane was preoccupied with one
|
|
thought; but not wishing to make his companions uneasy, he
|
|
kept silence on this subject.
|
|
|
|
The direction the projectile was taking toward the moon's
|
|
northern hemisphere, showed that her course had been
|
|
slightly altered. The discharge, mathematically calculated,
|
|
would carry the projectile to the very center of the lunar disc.
|
|
If it did not land there, there must have been some deviation.
|
|
What had caused it? Barbicane could neither imagine nor
|
|
determine the importance of the deviation, for there were no
|
|
points to go by.
|
|
|
|
He hoped, however, that it would have no other result than that
|
|
of bringing them nearer the upper border of the moon, a region
|
|
more suitable for landing.
|
|
|
|
Without imparting his uneasiness to his companions, Barbicane
|
|
contented himself with constantly observing the moon, in order
|
|
to see whether the course of the projectile would not be
|
|
altered; for the situation would have been terrible if it failed
|
|
in its aim, and being carried beyond the disc should be launched
|
|
into interplanetary space. At that moment, the moon, instead of
|
|
appearing flat like a disc, showed its convexity. If the sun's
|
|
rays had struck it obliquely, the shadow thrown would have brought
|
|
out the high mountains, which would have been clearly detached.
|
|
The eye might have gazed into the crater's gaping abysses,
|
|
and followed the capricious fissures which wound through the
|
|
immense plains. But all relief was as yet leveled in
|
|
intense brilliancy. They could scarcely distinguish those
|
|
large spots which give the moon the appearance of a human face.
|
|
|
|
"Face, indeed!" said Michel Ardan; "but I am sorry for the
|
|
amiable sister of Apollo. A very pitted face!"
|
|
|
|
But the travelers, now so near the end, were incessantly
|
|
observing this new world. They imagined themselves walking
|
|
through its unknown countries, climbing its highest peaks,
|
|
descending into its lowest depths. Here and there they fancied
|
|
they saw vast seas, scarcely kept together under so rarefied an
|
|
atmosphere, and water-courses emptying the mountain tributaries.
|
|
Leaning over the abyss, they hoped to catch some sounds from
|
|
that orb forever mute in the solitude of space. That last day
|
|
left them.
|
|
|
|
They took down the most trifling details. A vague uneasiness
|
|
took possession of them as they neared the end. This uneasiness
|
|
would have been doubled had they felt how their speed had decreased.
|
|
It would have seemed to them quite insufficient to carry them to
|
|
the end. It was because the projectile then "weighed" almost nothing.
|
|
Its weight was ever decreasing, and would be entirely annihilated on
|
|
that line where the lunar and terrestrial attractions would
|
|
neutralize each other.
|
|
|
|
But in spite of his preoccupation, Michel Ardan did not forget
|
|
to prepare the morning repast with his accustomed punctuality.
|
|
They ate with a good appetite. Nothing was so excellent as the
|
|
soup liquefied by the heat of the gas; nothing better than the
|
|
preserved meat. Some glasses of good French wine crowned the
|
|
repast, causing Michel Ardan to remark that the lunar vines,
|
|
warmed by that ardent sun, ought to distill even more generous
|
|
wines; that is, if they existed. In any case, the far-seeing
|
|
Frenchman had taken care not to forget in his collection some
|
|
precious cuttings of the Medoc and Cote d'Or, upon which he
|
|
founded his hopes.
|
|
|
|
Reiset and Regnaut's apparatus worked with great regularity.
|
|
Not an atom of carbonic acid resisted the potash; and as to
|
|
the oxygen, Captain Nicholl said "it was of the first quality."
|
|
The little watery vapor enclosed in the projectile mixing with
|
|
the air tempered the dryness; and many apartments in London,
|
|
Paris, or New York, and many theaters, were certainly not in
|
|
such a healthy condition.
|
|
|
|
But that it might act with regularity, the apparatus must be
|
|
kept in perfect order; so each morning Michel visited the escape
|
|
regulators, tried the taps, and regulated the heat of the gas by
|
|
the pyrometer. Everything had gone well up to that time, and
|
|
the travelers, imitating the worthy Joseph T. Maston, began to
|
|
acquire a degree of embonpoint which would have rendered them
|
|
unrecognizable if their imprisonment had been prolonged to
|
|
some months. In a word, they behaved like chickens in a coop;
|
|
they were getting fat.
|
|
|
|
In looking through the scuttle Barbicane saw the specter of the
|
|
dog, and other divers objects which had been thrown from the
|
|
projectile, obstinately following them. Diana howled
|
|
lugubriously on seeing the remains of Satellite, which seemed as
|
|
motionless as if they reposed on solid earth.
|
|
|
|
"Do you know, my friends," said Michel Ardan, "that if one of us
|
|
had succumbed to the shock consequent on departure, we should
|
|
have had a great deal of trouble to bury him? What am I saying?
|
|
to _etherize_ him, as here ether takes the place of earth.
|
|
You see the accusing body would have followed us into space like
|
|
a remorse."
|
|
|
|
"That would have been sad," said Nicholl.
|
|
|
|
"Ah!" continued Michel, "what I regret is not being able to take a
|
|
walk outside. What voluptuousness to float amid this radiant ether,
|
|
to bathe oneself in it, to wrap oneself in the sun's pure rays.
|
|
If Barbicane had only thought of furnishing us with a diving
|
|
apparatus and an air-pump, I could have ventured out and assumed
|
|
fanciful attitudes of feigned monsters on the top of the projectile."
|
|
|
|
"Well, old Michel," replied Barbicane, "you would not have made
|
|
a feigned monster long, for in spite of your diver's dress, swollen
|
|
by the expansion of air within you, you would have burst like a
|
|
shell, or rather like a balloon which has risen too high. So do
|
|
not regret it, and do not forget this-- as long as we float in
|
|
space, all sentimental walks beyond the projectile are forbidden."
|
|
|
|
Michel Ardan allowed himself to be convinced to a certain extent.
|
|
He admitted that the thing was difficult but not impossible,
|
|
a word which he never uttered.
|
|
|
|
The conversation passed from this subject to another, not failing
|
|
him for an instant. It seemed to the three friends as though,
|
|
under present conditions, ideas shot up in their brains as leaves
|
|
shoot at the first warmth of spring. They felt bewildered. In the
|
|
middle of the questions and answers which crossed each other,
|
|
Nicholl put one question which did not find an immediate solution.
|
|
|
|
"Ah, indeed!" said he; "it is all very well to go to the moon,
|
|
but how to get back again?"
|
|
|
|
His two interlocutors looked surprised. One would have thought
|
|
that this possibility now occurred to them for the first time.
|
|
|
|
"What do you mean by that, Nicholl?" asked Barbicane gravely.
|
|
|
|
"To ask for means to leave a country," added Michel, "When we
|
|
have not yet arrived there, seems to me rather inopportune."
|
|
|
|
"I do not say that, wishing to draw back," replied Nicholl;
|
|
"but I repeat my question, and I ask, `How shall we return?'"
|
|
|
|
"I know nothing about it," answered Barbicane.
|
|
|
|
"And I," said Michel, "if I had known how to return, I would
|
|
never have started."
|
|
|
|
"There's an answer!" cried Nicholl.
|
|
|
|
"I quite approve of Michel's words," said Barbicane; "and add,
|
|
that the question has no real interest. Later, when we think it
|
|
is advisable to return, we will take counsel together. If the
|
|
Columbiad is not there, the projectile will be."
|
|
|
|
"That is a step certainly. A ball without a gun!"
|
|
|
|
"The gun," replied Barbicane, "can be manufactured. The powder
|
|
can be made. Neither metals, saltpeter, nor coal can fail in
|
|
the depths of the moon, and we need only go 8,000 leagues in
|
|
order to fall upon the terrestrial globe by virtue of the mere
|
|
laws of weight."
|
|
|
|
"Enough," said Michel with animation. "Let it be no longer a
|
|
question of returning: we have already entertained it too long.
|
|
As to communicating with our former earthly colleagues, that
|
|
will not be difficult."
|
|
|
|
"And how?"
|
|
|
|
"By means of meteors launched by lunar volcanoes."
|
|
|
|
"Well thought of, Michel," said Barbicane in a convinced tone
|
|
of voice. "Laplace has calculated that a force five times greater
|
|
than that of our gun would suffice to send a meteor from the
|
|
moon to the earth, and there is not one volcano which has not a
|
|
greater power of propulsion than that."
|
|
|
|
"Hurrah!" exclaimed Michel; "these meteors are handy postmen,
|
|
and cost nothing. And how we shall be able to laugh at the
|
|
post-office administration! But now I think of it----"
|
|
|
|
"What do you think of?"
|
|
|
|
"A capital idea. Why did we not fasten a thread to our
|
|
projectile, and we could have exchanged telegrams with the earth?"
|
|
|
|
"The deuce!" answered Nicholl. "Do you consider the weight of
|
|
a thread 250,000 miles long nothing?"
|
|
|
|
"As nothing. They could have trebled the Columbiad's charge;
|
|
they could have quadrupled or quintupled it!" exclaimed Michel,
|
|
with whom the verb took a higher intonation each time.
|
|
|
|
"There is but one little objection to make to your proposition,"
|
|
replied Barbicane, "which is that, during the rotary motion of
|
|
the globe, our thread would have wound itself round it like a
|
|
chain on a capstan, and that it would inevitably have brought us
|
|
to the ground."
|
|
|
|
"By the thirty-nine stars of the Union!" said Michel, "I have
|
|
nothing but impracticable ideas to-day; ideas worthy of J.
|
|
T. Maston. But I have a notion that, if we do not return to
|
|
earth, J. T. Maston will be able to come to us."
|
|
|
|
"Yes, he'll come," replied Barbicane; "he is a worthy and a
|
|
courageous comrade. Besides, what is easier? Is not the
|
|
Columbiad still buried in the soil of Florida? Is cotton and
|
|
nitric acid wanted wherewith to manufacture the pyroxyle?
|
|
Will not the moon pass the zenith of Florida? In eighteen
|
|
years' time will she not occupy exactly the same place as to-day?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes," continued Michel, "yes, Maston will come, and with him
|
|
our friends Elphinstone, Blomsberry, all the members of the Gun
|
|
Club, and they will be well received. And by and by they will
|
|
run trains of projectiles between the earth and the moon!
|
|
Hurrah for J. T. Maston!"
|
|
|
|
It is probable that, if the Hon. J. T. Maston did not hear the
|
|
hurrahs uttered in his honor, his ears at least tingled. What was
|
|
he doing then? Doubtless, posted in the Rocky Mountains, at the
|
|
station of Long's Peak, he was trying to find the invisible
|
|
projectile gravitating in space. If he was thinking of his dear
|
|
companions, we must allow that they were not far behind him; and
|
|
that, under the influence of a strange excitement, they were
|
|
devoting to him their best thoughts.
|
|
|
|
But whence this excitement, which was evidently growing upon the
|
|
tenants of the projectile? Their sobriety could not be doubted.
|
|
This strange irritation of the brain, must it be attributed to
|
|
the peculiar circumstances under which they found themselves, to
|
|
their proximity to the orb of night, from which only a few hours
|
|
separated them, to some secret influence of the moon acting upon
|
|
their nervous system? Their faces were as rosy as if they had
|
|
been exposed to the roaring flames of an oven; their voices
|
|
resounded in loud accents; their words escaped like a champagne
|
|
cork driven out by carbonic acid; their gestures became annoying,
|
|
they wanted so much room to perform them; and, strange to say,
|
|
they none of them noticed this great tension of the mind.
|
|
|
|
"Now," said Nicholl, in a short tone, "now that I do not know
|
|
whether we shall ever return from the moon, I want to know what
|
|
we are going to do there?"
|
|
|
|
"What we are going to do there?" replied Barbicane, stamping
|
|
with his foot as if he was in a fencing saloon; "I do not know."
|
|
|
|
"You do not know!" exclaimed Michel, with a bellow which
|
|
provoked a sonorous echo in the projectile.
|
|
|
|
"No, I have not even thought about it," retorted Barbicane, in
|
|
the same loud tone.
|
|
|
|
"Well, I know," replied Michel.
|
|
|
|
"Speak, then," cried Nicholl, who could no longer contain the
|
|
growling of his voice.
|
|
|
|
"I shall speak if it suits me," exclaimed Michel, seizing his
|
|
companions' arms with violence.
|
|
|
|
"_It must_ suit you," said Barbicane, with an eye on fire and a
|
|
threatening hand. "It was you who drew us into this frightful
|
|
journey, and we want to know what for."
|
|
|
|
"Yes," said the captain, "now that I do not know _where_ I am
|
|
going, I want to know _why_ I am going."
|
|
|
|
"Why?" exclaimed Michel, jumping a yard high, "why? To take
|
|
possession of the moon in the name of the United States; to add
|
|
a fortieth State to the Union; to colonize the lunar regions;
|
|
to cultivate them, to people them, to transport thither all the
|
|
prodigies of art, of science, and industry; to civilize the
|
|
Selenites, unless they are more civilized than we are; and to
|
|
constitute them a republic, if they are not already one!"
|
|
|
|
"And if there are no Selenites?" retorted Nicholl, who, under the
|
|
influence of this unaccountable intoxication, was very contradictory.
|
|
|
|
"Who said that there were no Selenites?" exclaimed Michel in a
|
|
threatening tone.
|
|
|
|
"I do," howled Nicholl.
|
|
|
|
"Captain," said Michel, "do not repreat that insolence, or I
|
|
will knock your teeth down your throat!"
|
|
|
|
The two adversaries were going to fall upon each other, and the
|
|
incoherent discussion threatened to merge into a fight, when
|
|
Barbicane intervened with one bound.
|
|
|
|
"Stop, miserable men," said he, separating his two companions;
|
|
"if there are no Selenites, we will do without them."
|
|
|
|
"Yes," exclaimed Michel, who was not particular; "yes, we will
|
|
do without them. We have only to make Selenites. Down with
|
|
the Selenites!"
|
|
|
|
"The empire of the moon belongs to us," said Nicholl.
|
|
|
|
"Let us three constitute the republic."
|
|
|
|
"I will be the congress," cried Michel.
|
|
|
|
"And I the senate," retorted Nicholl.
|
|
|
|
"And Barbicane, the president," howled Michel.
|
|
|
|
"Not a president elected by the nation," replied Barbicane.
|
|
|
|
"Very well, a president elected by the congress," cried Michel;
|
|
"and as I am the congress, you are unanimously elected!"
|
|
|
|
"Hurrah! hurrah! hurrah! for President Barbicane," exclaimed Nicholl.
|
|
|
|
"Hip! hip! hip!" vociferated Michel Ardan.
|
|
|
|
Then the president and the senate struck up in a tremendous
|
|
voice the popular song "Yankee Doodle," while from the congress
|
|
resounded the masculine tones of the "Marseillaise."
|
|
|
|
Then they struck up a frantic dance, with maniacal gestures,
|
|
idiotic stampings, and somersaults like those of the boneless
|
|
clowns in the circus. Diana, joining in the dance, and howling
|
|
in her turn, jumped to the top of the projectile. An unaccountable
|
|
flapping of wings was then heard amid most fantastic cock-crows,
|
|
while five or six hens fluttered like bats against the walls.
|
|
|
|
Then the three traveling companions, acted upon by some
|
|
unaccountable influence above that of intoxication, inflamed by
|
|
the air which had set their respiratory apparatus on fire, fell
|
|
motionless to the bottom of the projectile.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER VIII
|
|
|
|
|
|
AT SEVENTY-EIGHT THOUSAND FIVE HUNDRED AND FOURTEEN LEAGUES
|
|
|
|
What had happened? Whence the cause of this singular
|
|
intoxication, the consequences of which might have been
|
|
very disastrous? A simple blunder of Michel's, which,
|
|
fortunately, Nicholl was able to correct in time.
|
|
|
|
After a perfect swoon, which lasted some minutes, the captain,
|
|
recovering first, soon collected his scattered senses.
|
|
Although he had breakfasted only two hours before, he felt a
|
|
gnawing hunger, as if he had not eaten anything for several days.
|
|
Everything about him, stomach and brain, were overexcited to the
|
|
highest degree. He got up and demanded from Michel a
|
|
supplementary repast. Michel, utterly done up, did not answer.
|
|
|
|
Nicholl then tried to prepare some tea destined to help the
|
|
absorption of a dozen sandwiches. He first tried to get some
|
|
fire, and struck a match sharply. What was his surprise to see
|
|
the sulphur shine with so extraordinary a brilliancy as to be
|
|
almost unbearable to the eye. From the gas-burner which he lit
|
|
rose a flame equal to a jet of electric light.
|
|
|
|
A revelation dawned on Nicholl's mind. That intensity of light,
|
|
the physiological troubles which had arisen in him, the
|
|
overexcitement of all his moral and quarrelsome faculties-- he
|
|
understood all.
|
|
|
|
"The oxygen!" he exclaimed.
|
|
|
|
And leaning over the air apparatus, he saw that the tap was
|
|
allowing the colorless gas to escape freely, life-giving, but in
|
|
its pure state producing the gravest disorders in the system.
|
|
Michel had blunderingly opened the tap of the apparatus to the full.
|
|
|
|
Nicholl hastened to stop the escape of oxygen with which the
|
|
atmosphere was saturated, which would have been the death of the
|
|
travelers, not by suffocation, but by combustion. An hour
|
|
later, the air less charged with it restored the lungs to their
|
|
normal condition. By degrees the three friends recovered from
|
|
their intoxication; but they were obliged to sleep themselves
|
|
sober over their oxygen as a drunkard does over his wine.
|
|
|
|
When Michel learned his share of the responsibility of this
|
|
incident, he was not much disconcerted. This unexpected
|
|
drunkenness broke the monotony of the journey. Many foolish
|
|
things had been said while under its influence, but also
|
|
quickly forgotten.
|
|
|
|
"And then," added the merry Frenchman, "I am not sorry to have
|
|
tasted a little of this heady gas. Do you know, my friends,
|
|
that a curious establishment might be founded with rooms of
|
|
oxygen, where people whose system is weakened could for a few
|
|
hours live a more active life. Fancy parties where the room was
|
|
saturated with this heroic fluid, theaters where it should be
|
|
kept at high pressure; what passion in the souls of the actors
|
|
and spectators! what fire, what enthusiasm! And if, instead of
|
|
an assembly only a whole people could be saturated, what activity
|
|
in its functions, what a supplement to life it would derive.
|
|
From an exhausted nation they might make a great and strong one,
|
|
and I know more than one state in old Europe which ought to put
|
|
itself under the regime of oxygen for the sake of its health!"
|
|
|
|
Michel spoke with so much animation that one might have fancied
|
|
that the tap was still too open. But a few words from Barbicane
|
|
soon shattered his enthusiasm.
|
|
|
|
"That is all very well, friend Michel," said he, "but will you
|
|
inform us where these chickens came from which have mixed
|
|
themselves up in our concert?"
|
|
|
|
"Those chickens?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes."
|
|
|
|
Indeed, half a dozen chickens and a fine cock were walking
|
|
about, flapping their wings and chattering.
|
|
|
|
"Ah, the awkward things!" exclaimed Michel. "The oxygen has
|
|
made them revolt."
|
|
|
|
"But what do you want to do with these chickens?" asked Barbicane.
|
|
|
|
"To acclimatize them in the moon, by Jove!"
|
|
|
|
"Then why did you hide them?"
|
|
|
|
"A joke, my worthy president, a simple joke, which has proved a
|
|
miserable failure. I wanted to set them free on the lunar
|
|
continent, without saying anything. Oh, what would have been
|
|
your amazement on seeing these earthly-winged animals pecking in
|
|
your lunar fields!"
|
|
|
|
"You rascal, you unmitigated rascal," replied Barbicane, "you do
|
|
not want oxygen to mount to the head. You are always what we
|
|
were under the influence of the gas; you are always foolish!"
|
|
|
|
"Ah, who says that we were not wise then?" replied Michel Ardan.
|
|
|
|
After this philosophical reflection, the three friends set about
|
|
restoring the order of the projectile. Chickens and cock were
|
|
reinstated in their coop. But while proceeding with this
|
|
operation, Barbicane and his two companions had a most desired
|
|
perception of a new phenomenon. From the moment of leaving the
|
|
earth, their own weight, that of the projectile, and the objects
|
|
it enclosed, had been subject to an increasing diminution. If they
|
|
could not prove this loss of the projectile, a moment would arrive
|
|
when it would be sensibly felt upon themselves and the utensils
|
|
and instruments they used.
|
|
|
|
It is needless to say that a scale would not show this loss; for
|
|
the weight destined to weight the object would have lost exactly
|
|
as much as the object itself; but a spring steelyard for
|
|
example, the tension of which was independent of the attraction,
|
|
would have given a just estimate of this loss.
|
|
|
|
We know that the attraction, otherwise called the weight, is in
|
|
proportion to the densities of the bodies, and inversely as the
|
|
squares of the distances. Hence this effect: If the earth had
|
|
been alone in space, if the other celestial bodies had been
|
|
suddenly annihilated, the projectile, according to Newton's
|
|
laws, would weigh less as it got farther from the earth, but
|
|
without ever losing its weight entirely, for the terrestrial
|
|
attraction would always have made itself felt, at whatever distance.
|
|
|
|
But, in reality, a time must come when the projectile would no
|
|
longer be subject to the law of weight, after allowing for the
|
|
other celestial bodies whose effect could not be set down as zero.
|
|
Indeed, the projectile's course was being traced between
|
|
the earth and the moon. As it distanced the earth, the
|
|
terrestrial attraction diminished: but the lunar attraction
|
|
rose in proportion. There must come a point where these two
|
|
attractions would neutralize each other: the projectile would
|
|
possess weight no longer. If the moon's and the earth's
|
|
densities had been equal, this point would have been at an equal
|
|
distance between the two orbs. But taking the different
|
|
densities into consideration, it was easy to reckon that this
|
|
point would be situated at 47/60ths of the whole journey,
|
|
_i.e._, at 78,514 leagues from the earth. At this point, a body
|
|
having no principle of speed or displacement in itself, would
|
|
remain immovable forever, being attracted equally by both orbs,
|
|
and not being drawn more toward one than toward the other.
|
|
|
|
Now if the projectile's impulsive force had been correctly
|
|
calculated, it would attain this point without speed, having
|
|
lost all trace of weight, as well as all the objects within it.
|
|
What would happen then? Three hypotheses presented themselves.
|
|
|
|
1. Either it would retain a certain amount of motion, and pass
|
|
the point of equal attraction, and fall upon the moon by virtue
|
|
of the excess of the lunar attraction over the terrestrial.
|
|
|
|
2. Or, its speed failing, and unable to reach the point of equal
|
|
attraction, it would fall upon the moon by virtue of the excess
|
|
of the lunar attraction over the terrestrial.
|
|
|
|
3. Or, lastly, animated with sufficient speed to enable it to
|
|
reach the neutral point, but not sufficient to pass it, it would
|
|
remain forever suspended in that spot like the pretended tomb of
|
|
Mahomet, between the zenith and the nadir.
|
|
|
|
Such was their situation; and Barbicane clearly explained the
|
|
consequences to his traveling companions, which greatly
|
|
interested them. But how should they know when the projectile
|
|
had reached this neutral point situated at that distance,
|
|
especially when neither themselves, nor the objects enclosed in
|
|
the projectile, would be any longer subject to the laws of weight?
|
|
|
|
Up to this time, the travelers, while admitting that this action
|
|
was constantly decreasing, had not yet become sensible to its
|
|
total absence.
|
|
|
|
But that day, about eleven o'clock in the morning, Nicholl
|
|
having accidentally let a glass slip from his hand, the glass,
|
|
instead of falling, remained suspended in the air.
|
|
|
|
"Ah!" exclaimed Michel Ardan, "that is rather an amusing piece
|
|
of natural philosophy."
|
|
|
|
And immediately divers other objects, firearms and bottles,
|
|
abandoned to themselves, held themselves up as by enchantment.
|
|
Diana too, placed in space by Michel, reproduced, but without
|
|
any trick, the wonderful suspension practiced by Caston and
|
|
Robert Houdin. Indeed the dog did not seem to know that she was
|
|
floating in air.
|
|
|
|
The three adventurous companions were surprised and stupefied,
|
|
despite their scientific reasonings. They felt themselves being
|
|
carried into the domain of wonders! they felt that weight was
|
|
really wanting to their bodies. If they stretched out their
|
|
arms, they did not attempt to fall. Their heads shook on
|
|
their shoulders. Their feet no longer clung to the floor of
|
|
the projectile. They were like drunken men having no stability
|
|
in themselves.
|
|
|
|
Fancy has depicted men without reflection, others without shadow.
|
|
But here reality, by the neutralizations of attractive forces,
|
|
produced men in whom nothing had any weight, and who weighed
|
|
nothing themselves.
|
|
|
|
Suddenly Michel, taking a spring, left the floor and remained
|
|
suspended in the air, like Murillo's monk of the _Cusine des Anges_.
|
|
|
|
The two friends joined him instantly, and all three formed a
|
|
miraculous "Ascension" in the center of the projectile.
|
|
|
|
"Is it to be believed? is it probable? is it possible?"
|
|
exclaimed Michel; "and yet it is so. Ah! if Raphael had seen us
|
|
thus, what an `Assumption' he would have thrown upon canvas!"
|
|
|
|
"The `Assumption' cannot last," replied Barbicane. "If the
|
|
projectile passes the neutral point, the lunar attraction will
|
|
draw us to the moon."
|
|
|
|
"Then our feet will be upon the roof," replied Michel.
|
|
|
|
"No," said Barbicane, "because the projectile's center of
|
|
gravity is very low; it will only turn by degrees."
|
|
|
|
"Then all our portables will be upset from top to bottom, that
|
|
is a fact."
|
|
|
|
"Calm yourself, Michel," replied Nicholl; "no upset is to be
|
|
feared; not a thing will move, for the projectile's evolution
|
|
will be imperceptible."
|
|
|
|
"Just so," continued Barbicane; "and when it has passed the
|
|
point of equal attraction, its base, being the heavier, will
|
|
draw it perpendicularly to the moon; but, in order that this
|
|
phenomenon should take place, we must have passed the neutral line."
|
|
|
|
"Pass the neutral line," cried Michel; "then let us do as the
|
|
sailors do when they cross the equator."
|
|
|
|
A slight side movement brought Michel back toward the padded
|
|
side; thence he took a bottle and glasses, placed them "in
|
|
space" before his companions, and, drinking merrily, they
|
|
saluted the line with a triple hurrah. The influence of these
|
|
attractions scarcely lasted an hour; the travelers felt
|
|
themselves insensibly drawn toward the floor, and Barbicane
|
|
fancied that the conical end of the projectile was varying a
|
|
little from its normal direction toward the moon. By an inverse
|
|
motion the base was approaching first; the lunar attraction was
|
|
prevailing over the terrestrial; the fall toward the moon was
|
|
beginning, almost imperceptibly as yet, but by degrees the
|
|
attractive force would become stronger, the fall would be more
|
|
decided, the projectile, drawn by its base, would turn its cone
|
|
to the earth, and fall with ever-increasing speed on to the
|
|
surface of the Selenite continent; their destination would then
|
|
be attained. Now nothing could prevent the success of their
|
|
enterprise, and Nicholl and Michel Ardan shared Barbicane's joy.
|
|
|
|
Then they chatted of all the phenomena which had astonished them
|
|
one after the other, particularly the neutralization of the laws
|
|
of weight. Michel Ardan, always enthusiastic, drew conclusions
|
|
which were purely fanciful.
|
|
|
|
"Ah, my worthy friends," he exclaimed, "what progress we should
|
|
make if on earth we could throw off some of that weight, some of
|
|
that chain which binds us to her; it would be the prisoner set
|
|
at liberty; no more fatigue of either arms or legs. Or, if it
|
|
is true that in order to fly on the earth's surface, to keep
|
|
oneself suspended in the air merely by the play of the muscles,
|
|
there requires a strength a hundred and fifty times greater than
|
|
that which we possess, a simple act of volition, a caprice,
|
|
would bear us into space, if attraction did not exist."
|
|
|
|
"Just so," said Nicholl, smiling; "if we could succeed in
|
|
suppressing weight as they suppress pain by anaesthesia,
|
|
that would change the face of modern society!"
|
|
|
|
"Yes," cried Michel, full of his subject, "destroy weight, and
|
|
no more burdens!"
|
|
|
|
"Well said," replied Barbicane; "but if nothing had any weight,
|
|
nothing would keep in its place, not even your hat on your head,
|
|
worthy Michel; nor your house, whose stones only adhere by
|
|
weight; nor a boat, whose stability on the waves is only caused
|
|
by weight; not even the ocean, whose waves would no longer be
|
|
equalized by terrestrial attraction; and lastly, not even the
|
|
atmosphere, whose atoms, being no longer held in their places,
|
|
would disperse in space!"
|
|
|
|
"That is tiresome," retorted Michel; "nothing like these
|
|
matter-of-fact people for bringing one back to the bare reality."
|
|
|
|
"But console yourself, Michel," continued Barbicane, "for if no
|
|
orb exists from whence all laws of weight are banished, you are
|
|
at least going to visit one where it is much less than on the earth."
|
|
|
|
"The moon?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, the moon, on whose surface objects weigh six times less
|
|
than on the earth, a phenomenon easy to prove."
|
|
|
|
"And we shall feel it?" asked Michel.
|
|
|
|
"Evidently, as two hundred pounds will only weigh thirty pounds
|
|
on the surface of the moon."
|
|
|
|
"And our muscular strength will not diminish?"
|
|
|
|
"Not at all; instead of jumping one yard high, you will rise
|
|
eighteen feet high."
|
|
|
|
"But we shall be regular Herculeses in the moon!" exclaimed Michel.
|
|
|
|
"Yes," replied Nicholl; "for if the height of the Selenites is
|
|
in proportion to the density of their globe, they will be
|
|
scarcely a foot high."
|
|
|
|
"Lilliputians!" ejaculated Michel; "I shall play the part
|
|
of Gulliver. We are going to realize the fable of the giants.
|
|
This is the advantage of leaving one's own planet and
|
|
over-running the solar world."
|
|
|
|
"One moment, Michel," answered Barbicane; "if you wish to play
|
|
the part of Gulliver, only visit the inferior planets, such as
|
|
Mercury, Venus, or Mars, whose density is a little less than
|
|
that of the earth; but do not venture into the great planets,
|
|
Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune; for there the order will be
|
|
changed, and you will become Lilliputian."
|
|
|
|
"And in the sun?"
|
|
|
|
"In the sun, if its density is thirteen hundred and twenty-four
|
|
thousand times greater, and the attraction is twenty-seven times
|
|
greater than on the surface of our globe, keeping everything in
|
|
proportion, the inhabitants ought to be at least two hundred
|
|
feet high."
|
|
|
|
"By Jove!" exclaimed Michel; "I should be nothing more than a
|
|
pigmy, a shrimp!"
|
|
|
|
"Gulliver with the giants," said Nicholl.
|
|
|
|
"Just so," replied Barbicane.
|
|
|
|
"And it would not be quite useless to carry some pieces of
|
|
artillery to defend oneself."
|
|
|
|
"Good," replied Nicholl; "your projectiles would have no effect
|
|
on the sun; they would fall back upon the earth after some minutes."
|
|
|
|
"That is a strong remark."
|
|
|
|
"It is certain," replied Barbicane; "the attraction is so great
|
|
on this enormous orb, that an object weighing 70,000 pounds on
|
|
the earth would weigh but 1,920 pounds on the surface of the sun.
|
|
If you were to fall upon it you would weigh-- let me see-- about
|
|
5,000 pounds, a weight which you would never be able to raise again."
|
|
|
|
"The devil!" said Michel; "one would want a portable crane.
|
|
However, we will be satisfied with the moon for the present;
|
|
there at least we shall cut a great figure. We will see about
|
|
the sun by and by."
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER IX
|
|
|
|
|
|
THE CONSEQUENCES OF A DEVIATION
|
|
|
|
|
|
Barbicane had now no fear of the issue of the journey, at least
|
|
as far as the projectile's impulsive force was concerned; its
|
|
own speed would carry it beyond the neutral line; it would
|
|
certainly not return to earth; it would certainly not remain
|
|
motionless on the line of attraction. One single hypothesis
|
|
remained to be realized, the arrival of the projectile at its
|
|
destination by the action of the lunar attraction.
|
|
|
|
It was in reality a fall of 8,296 leagues on an orb, it is true,
|
|
where weight could only be reckoned at one sixth of terrestrial
|
|
weight; a formidable fall, nevertheless, and one against which
|
|
every precaution must be taken without delay.
|
|
|
|
These precautions were of two sorts, some to deaden the shock
|
|
when the projectile should touch the lunar soil, others to delay
|
|
the fall, and consequently make it less violent.
|
|
|
|
To deaden the shock, it was a pity that Barbicane was no longer
|
|
able to employ the means which had so ably weakened the shock at
|
|
departure, that is to say, by water used as springs and the
|
|
partition breaks.
|
|
|
|
The partitions still existed, but water failed, for they could
|
|
not use their reserve, which was precious, in case during the
|
|
first days the liquid element should be found wanting on lunar soil.
|
|
|
|
And indeed this reserve would have been quite insufficient for
|
|
a spring. The layer of water stored in the projectile at
|
|
the time of starting upon their journey occupied no less than
|
|
three feet in depth, and spread over a surface of not less than
|
|
fifty-four square feet. Besides, the cistern did not contain
|
|
one-fifth part of it; they must therefore give up this efficient
|
|
means of deadening the shock of arrival. Happily, Barbicane,
|
|
not content with employing water, had furnished the movable disc
|
|
with strong spring plugs, destined to lessen the shock against
|
|
the base after the breaking of the horizontal partitions.
|
|
These plugs still existed; they had only to readjust them and
|
|
replace the movable disc; every piece, easy to handle, as their
|
|
weight was now scarcely felt, was quickly mounted.
|
|
|
|
The different pieces were fitted without trouble, it being only
|
|
a matter of bolts and screws; tools were not wanting, and soon
|
|
the reinstated disc lay on steel plugs, like a table on its legs.
|
|
One inconvenience resulted from the replacing of the disc,
|
|
the lower window was blocked up; thus it was impossible for
|
|
the travelers to observe the moon from that opening while
|
|
they were being precipitated perpendicularly upon her; but they
|
|
were obliged to give it up; even by the side openings they could
|
|
still see vast lunar regions, as an aeronaut sees the earth from
|
|
his car.
|
|
|
|
This replacing of the disc was at least an hour's work. It was
|
|
past twelve when all preparations were finished. Barbicane took
|
|
fresh observations on the inclination of the projectile, but to
|
|
his annoyance it had not turned over sufficiently for its fall;
|
|
it seemed to take a curve parallel to the lunar disc. The orb
|
|
of night shone splendidly into space, while opposite, the orb of
|
|
day blazed with fire.
|
|
|
|
Their situation began to make them uneasy.
|
|
|
|
"Are we reaching our destination?" said Nicholl.
|
|
|
|
"Let us act as if we were about reaching it," replied Barbicane.
|
|
|
|
"You are sceptical," retorted Michel Ardan. "We shall arrive,
|
|
and that, too, quicker than we like."
|
|
|
|
This answer brought Barbicane back to his preparations, and he
|
|
occupied himself with placing the contrivances intended to break
|
|
their descent. We may remember the scene of the meeting held at
|
|
Tampa Town, in Florida, when Captain Nicholl came forward as
|
|
Barbicane's enemy and Michel Ardan's adversary. To Captain
|
|
Nicholl's maintaining that the projectile would smash like glass,
|
|
Michel replied that he would break their fall by means of rockets
|
|
properly placed.
|
|
|
|
Thus, powerful fireworks, taking their starting-point from the
|
|
base and bursting outside, could, by producing a recoil, check
|
|
to a certain degree the projectile's speed. These rockets were
|
|
to burn in space, it is true; but oxygen would not fail them,
|
|
for they could supply themselves with it, like the lunar
|
|
volcanoes, the burning of which has never yet been stopped by
|
|
the want of atmosphere round the moon.
|
|
|
|
Barbicane had accordingly supplied himself with these fireworks,
|
|
enclosed in little steel guns, which could be screwed on to the
|
|
base of the projectile. Inside, these guns were flush with the
|
|
bottom; outside, they protruded about eighteen inches. There were
|
|
twenty of them. An opening left in the disc allowed them to light
|
|
the match with which each was provided. All the effect was
|
|
felt outside. The burning mixture had already been rammed
|
|
into each gun. They had, then, nothing to do but raise the
|
|
metallic buffers fixed in the base, and replace them by the
|
|
guns, which fitted closely in their places.
|
|
|
|
This new work was finished about three o'clock, and after taking
|
|
all these precautions there remained but to wait. But the
|
|
projectile was perceptibly nearing the moon, and evidently
|
|
succumbed to her influence to a certain degree; though its
|
|
own velocity also drew it in an oblique direction. From these
|
|
conflicting influences resulted a line which might become
|
|
a tangent. But it was certain that the projectile would not
|
|
fall directly on the moon; for its lower part, by reason of
|
|
its weight, ought to be turned toward her.
|
|
|
|
Barbicane's uneasiness increased as he saw his projectile resist
|
|
the influence of gravitation. The Unknown was opening before
|
|
him, the Unknown in interplanetary space. The man of science
|
|
thought he had foreseen the only three hypotheses possible-- the
|
|
return to the earth, the return to the moon, or stagnation on
|
|
the neutral line; and here a fourth hypothesis, big with all the
|
|
terrors of the Infinite, surged up inopportunely. To face it
|
|
without flinching, one must be a resolute savant like Barbicane,
|
|
a phlegmatic being like Nicholl, or an audacious adventurer like
|
|
Michel Ardan.
|
|
|
|
Conversation was started upon this subject. Other men would
|
|
have considered the question from a practical point of view;
|
|
they would have asked themselves whither their projectile
|
|
carriage was carrying them. Not so with these; they sought for
|
|
the cause which produced this effect.
|
|
|
|
"So we have become diverted from our route," said Michel; "but why?"
|
|
|
|
"I very much fear," answered Nicholl, "that, in spite of
|
|
all precautions taken, the Columbiad was not fairly pointed.
|
|
An error, however small, would be enough to throw us out of
|
|
the moon's attraction."
|
|
|
|
"Then they must have aimed badly?" asked Michel.
|
|
|
|
"I do not think so," replied Barbicane. "The perpendicularity
|
|
of the gun was exact, its direction to the zenith of the spot
|
|
incontestible; and the moon passing to the zenith of the spot,
|
|
we ought to reach it at the full. There is another reason,
|
|
but it escapes me."
|
|
|
|
"Are we not arriving too late?" asked Nicholl.
|
|
|
|
"Too late?" said Barbicane.
|
|
|
|
"Yes," continued Nicholl. "The Cambridge Observatory's note
|
|
says that the transit ought to be accomplished in ninety-seven
|
|
hours thirteen minutes and twenty seconds; which means to say,
|
|
that _sooner_ the moon will _not_ be at the point indicated, and
|
|
_later_ it will have passed it."
|
|
|
|
"True," replied Barbicane. "But we started the 1st of December,
|
|
at thirteen minutes and twenty-five seconds to eleven at night;
|
|
and we ought to arrive on the 5th at midnight, at the exact
|
|
moment when the moon would be full; and we are now at the
|
|
5th of December. It is now half-past three in the evening;
|
|
half-past eight ought to see us at the end of our journey.
|
|
Why do we not arrive?"
|
|
|
|
"Might it not be an excess of speed?" answered Nicholl; "for we
|
|
know now that its initial velocity was greater than they supposed."
|
|
|
|
"No! a hundred times, no!" replied Barbicane. "An excess of
|
|
speed, if the direction of the projectile had been right, would
|
|
not have prevented us reaching the moon. No, there has been
|
|
a deviation. We have been turned out of our course."
|
|
|
|
"By whom? by what?" asked Nicholl.
|
|
|
|
"I cannot say," replied Barbicane.
|
|
|
|
"Very well, then, Barbicane," said Michel, "do you wish to know
|
|
my opinion on the subject of finding out this deviation?"
|
|
|
|
"Speak."
|
|
|
|
"I would not give half a dollar to know it. That we have
|
|
deviated is a fact. Where we are going matters little; we shall
|
|
soon see. Since we are being borne along in space we shall end
|
|
by falling into some center of attraction or other."
|
|
|
|
Michel Ardan's indifference did not content Barbicane. Not that
|
|
he was uneasy about the future, but he wanted to know at any
|
|
cost _why_ his projectile had deviated.
|
|
|
|
But the projectile continued its course sideways to the moon,
|
|
and with it the mass of things thrown out. Barbicane could even
|
|
prove, by the elevations which served as landmarks upon the
|
|
moon, which was only two thousand leagues distant, that its
|
|
speed was becoming uniform-- fresh proof that there was no fall.
|
|
Its impulsive force still prevailed over the lunar attraction,
|
|
but the projectile's course was certainly bringing it nearer to
|
|
the moon, and they might hope that at a nearer point the weight,
|
|
predominating, would cause a decided fall.
|
|
|
|
The three friends, having nothing better to do, continued their
|
|
observations; but they could not yet determine the topographical
|
|
position of the satellite; every relief was leveled under the
|
|
reflection of the solar rays.
|
|
|
|
They watched thus through the side windows until eight o'clock
|
|
at night. The moon had grown so large in their eyes that it
|
|
filled half of the firmament. The sun on one side, and the orb
|
|
of night on the other, flooded the projectile with light.
|
|
|
|
At that moment Barbicane thought he could estimate the distance
|
|
which separated them from their aim at no more than 700 leagues.
|
|
The speed of the projectile seemed to him to be more than 200
|
|
yards, or about 170 leagues a second. Under the centripetal
|
|
force, the base of the projectile tended toward the moon; but
|
|
the centrifugal still prevailed; and it was probable that its
|
|
rectilineal course would be changed to a curve of some sort,
|
|
the nature of which they could not at present determine.
|
|
|
|
Barbicane was still seeking the solution of his insoluble problem.
|
|
Hours passed without any result. The projectile was evidently
|
|
nearing the moon, but it was also evident that it would never
|
|
reach her. As to the nearest distance at which it would pass her,
|
|
that must be the result of two forces, attraction and repulsion,
|
|
affecting its motion.
|
|
|
|
"I ask but one thing," said Michel; "that we may pass near
|
|
enough to penetrate her secrets."
|
|
|
|
"Cursed be the thing that has caused our projectile to deviate
|
|
from its course," cried Nicholl.
|
|
|
|
And, as if a light had suddenly broken in upon his mind, Barbicane
|
|
answered, "Then cursed be the meteor which crossed our path."
|
|
|
|
"What?" said Michel Ardan.
|
|
|
|
"What do you mean?" exclaimed Nicholl.
|
|
|
|
"I mean," said Barbicane in a decided tone, "I mean that our
|
|
deviation is owing solely to our meeting with this erring body."
|
|
|
|
"But it did not even brush us as it passed," said Michel.
|
|
|
|
"What does that matter? Its mass, compared to that of our
|
|
projectile, was enormous, and its attraction was enough to
|
|
influence our course."
|
|
|
|
"So little?" cried Nicholl.
|
|
|
|
"Yes, Nicholl; but however little it might be," replied
|
|
Barbicane, "in a distance of 84,000 leagues, it wanted no more
|
|
to make us miss the moon."
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER X
|
|
|
|
|
|
THE OBSERVERS OF THE MOON
|
|
|
|
|
|
Barbicane had evidently hit upon the only plausible reason
|
|
of this deviation. However slight it might have been, it
|
|
had sufficed to modify the course of the projectile. It was
|
|
a fatality. The bold attempt had miscarried by a fortuitous
|
|
circumstance; and unless by some exceptional event, they could
|
|
now never reach the moon's disc.
|
|
|
|
Would they pass near enough to be able to solve certain physical
|
|
and geological questions until then insoluble? This was the
|
|
question, and the only one, which occupied the minds of these
|
|
bold travelers. As to the fate in store for themselves, they
|
|
did not even dream of it.
|
|
|
|
But what would become of them amid these infinite solitudes,
|
|
these who would soon want air? A few more days, and they would
|
|
fall stifled in this wandering projectile. But some days to
|
|
these intrepid fellows was a century; and they devoted all their
|
|
time to observe that moon which they no longer hoped to reach.
|
|
|
|
The distance which had then separated the projectile from the
|
|
satellite was estimated at about two hundred leagues. Under these
|
|
conditions, as regards the visibility of the details of the disc,
|
|
the travelers were farther from the moon than are the inhabitants
|
|
of earth with their powerful telescopes.
|
|
|
|
Indeed, we know that the instrument mounted by Lord Rosse at
|
|
Parsonstown, which magnifies 6,500 times, brings the moon to
|
|
within an apparent distance of sixteen leagues. And more than
|
|
that, with the powerful one set up at Long's Peak, the orb of
|
|
night, magnified 48,000 times, is brought to within less than
|
|
two leagues, and objects having a diameter of thirty feet are
|
|
seen very distinctly. So that, at this distance, the
|
|
topographical details of the moon, observed without glasses,
|
|
could not be determined with precision. The eye caught the vast
|
|
outline of those immense depressions inappropriately called
|
|
"seas," but they could not recognize their nature. The prominence
|
|
of the mountains disappeared under the splendid irradiation
|
|
produced by the reflection of the solar rays. The eye, dazzled
|
|
as if it was leaning over a bath of molten silver, turned from
|
|
it involuntarily; but the oblong form of the orb was quite clear.
|
|
It appeared like a gigantic egg, with the small end turned toward
|
|
the earth. Indeed the moon, liquid and pliable in the first days
|
|
of its formation, was originally a perfect sphere; but being soon
|
|
drawn within the attraction of the earth, it became elongated
|
|
under the influence of gravitation. In becoming a satellite,
|
|
she lost her native purity of form; her center of gravity was in
|
|
advance of the center of her figure; and from this fact some
|
|
savants draw the conclusion that the air and water had taken
|
|
refuge on the opposite surface of the moon, which is never seen
|
|
from the earth. This alteration in the primitive form of the
|
|
satellite was only perceptible for a few moments. The distance
|
|
of the projectile from the moon diminished very rapidly under
|
|
its speed, though that was much less than its initial velocity--
|
|
but eight or nine times greater than that which propels our
|
|
express trains. The oblique course of the projectile, from its
|
|
very obliquity, gave Michel Ardan some hopes of striking the
|
|
lunar disc at some point or other. He could not think that they
|
|
would never reach it. No! he could not believe it; and this
|
|
opinion he often repeated. But Barbicane, who was a better
|
|
judge, always answered him with merciless logic.
|
|
|
|
"No, Michel, no! We can only reach the moon by a fall, and we
|
|
are not falling. The centripetal force keeps us under the
|
|
moon's influence, but the centrifugal force draws us
|
|
irresistibly away from it."
|
|
|
|
This was said in a tone which quenched Michel Ardan's last hope.
|
|
|
|
The portion of the moon which the projectile was nearing was the
|
|
northern hemisphere, that which the selenographic maps place
|
|
below; for these maps are generally drawn after the outline
|
|
given by the glasses, and we know that they reverse the objects.
|
|
Such was the _Mappa Selenographica_ of Boeer and Moedler which
|
|
Barbicane consulted. This northern hemisphere presented vast
|
|
plains, dotted with isolated mountains.
|
|
|
|
At midnight the moon was full. At that precise moment the
|
|
travelers should have alighted upon it, if the mischievous
|
|
meteor had not diverted their course. The orb was exactly in
|
|
the condition determined by the Cambridge Observatory. It was
|
|
mathematically at its perigee, and at the zenith of the
|
|
twenty-eighth parallel. An observer placed at the bottom of the
|
|
enormous Columbiad, pointed perpendicularly to the horizon,
|
|
would have framed the moon in the mouth of the gun. A straight
|
|
line drawn through the axis of the piece would have passed
|
|
through the center of the orb of night. It is needless to say,
|
|
that during the night of the 5th-6th of December, the travelers
|
|
took not an instant's rest. Could they close their eyes when so
|
|
near this new world? No! All their feelings were concentrated
|
|
in one single thought:-- See! Representatives of the earth, of
|
|
humanity, past and present, all centered in them! It is through
|
|
their eyes that the human race look at these lunar regions, and
|
|
penetrate the secrets of their satellite! A strange emotion
|
|
filled their hearts as they went from one window to the other.
|
|
Their observations, reproduced by Barbicane, were rigidly determined.
|
|
To take them, they had glasses; to correct them, maps.
|
|
|
|
As regards the optical instruments at their disposal, they had
|
|
excellent marine glasses specially constructed for this journey.
|
|
They possessed magnifying powers of 100. They would thus have
|
|
brought the moon to within a distance (apparent) of less than
|
|
2,000 leagues from the earth. But then, at a distance which for
|
|
three hours in the morning did not exceed sixty-five miles, and
|
|
in a medium free from all atmospheric disturbances, these
|
|
instruments could reduce the lunar surface to within less than
|
|
1,500 yards!
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XI
|
|
|
|
|
|
FANCY AND REALITY
|
|
|
|
|
|
"Have you ever seen the moon?" asked a professor, ironically,
|
|
of one of his pupils.
|
|
|
|
"No, sir!" replied the pupil, still more ironically, "but I must
|
|
say I have heard it spoken of."
|
|
|
|
In one sense, the pupil's witty answer might be given by a large
|
|
majority of sublunary beings. How many people have heard speak
|
|
of the moon who have never seen it-- at least through a glass or
|
|
a telescope! How many have never examined the map of their satellite!
|
|
|
|
In looking at a selenographic map, one peculiarity strikes us.
|
|
Contrary to the arrangement followed for that of the Earth and
|
|
Mars, the continents occupy more particularly the southern
|
|
hemisphere of the lunar globe. These continents do not show
|
|
such decided, clear, and regular boundary lines as South
|
|
America, Africa, and the Indian peninsula. Their angular,
|
|
capricious, and deeply indented coasts are rich in gulfs
|
|
and peninsulas. They remind one of the confusion in the
|
|
islands of the Sound, where the land is excessively indented.
|
|
If navigation ever existed on the surface of the moon, it must
|
|
have been wonderfully difficult and dangerous; and we may well
|
|
pity the Selenite sailors and hydrographers; the former, when
|
|
they came upon these perilous coasts, the latter when they
|
|
took the soundings of its stormy banks.
|
|
|
|
We may also notice that, on the lunar sphere, the south pole is
|
|
much more continental than the north pole. On the latter, there
|
|
is but one slight strip of land separated from other continents
|
|
by vast seas. Toward the south, continents clothe almost the
|
|
whole of the hemisphere. It is even possible that the Selenites
|
|
have already planted the flag on one of their poles, while
|
|
Franklin, Ross, Kane, Dumont, d'Urville, and Lambert have never
|
|
yet been able to attain that unknown point of the terrestrial globe.
|
|
|
|
As to islands, they are numerous on the surface of the moon.
|
|
Nearly all oblong or circular, and as if traced with the
|
|
compass, they seem to form one vast archipelago, equal to that
|
|
charming group lying between Greece and Asia Minor, and which
|
|
mythology in ancient times adorned with most graceful legends.
|
|
Involuntarily the names of Naxos, Tenedos, and Carpathos, rise
|
|
before the mind, and we seek vainly for Ulysses' vessel or the
|
|
"clipper" of the Argonauts. So at least it was in Michel
|
|
Ardan's eyes. To him it was a Grecian archipelago that he saw
|
|
on the map. To the eyes of his matter-of-fact companions, the
|
|
aspect of these coasts recalled rather the parceled-out land of
|
|
New Brunswick and Nova Scotia, and where the Frenchman
|
|
discovered traces of the heroes of fable, these Americans
|
|
were marking the most favorable points for the establishment
|
|
of stores in the interests of lunar commerce and industry.
|
|
|
|
After wandering over these vast continents, the eye is attracted
|
|
by the still greater seas. Not only their formation, but their
|
|
situation and aspect remind one of the terrestrial oceans; but
|
|
again, as on earth, these seas occupy the greater portion of
|
|
the globe. But in point of fact, these are not liquid spaces,
|
|
but plains, the nature of which the travelers hoped soon
|
|
to determine. Astronomers, we must allow, have graced these
|
|
pretended seas with at least odd names, which science has
|
|
respected up to the present time. Michel Ardan was right when
|
|
he compared this map to a "Tendre card," got up by a Scudary or
|
|
a Cyrano de Bergerac. "Only," said he, "it is no longer the
|
|
sentimental card of the seventeenth century, it is the card of
|
|
life, very neatly divided into two parts, one feminine, the
|
|
other masculine; the right hemisphere for woman, the left for man."
|
|
|
|
In speaking thus, Michel made his prosaic companions shrug
|
|
their shoulders. Barbicane and Nicholl looked upon the lunar
|
|
map from a very different point of view to that of their
|
|
fantastic friend. Nevertheless, their fantastic friend was a
|
|
little in the right. Judge for yourselves.
|
|
|
|
In the left hemisphere stretches the "Sea of Clouds," where
|
|
human reason is so often shipwrecked. Not far off lies the "Sea
|
|
of Rains," fed by all the fever of existence. Near this is the
|
|
"Sea of Storms," where man is ever fighting against his
|
|
passions, which too often gain the victory. Then, worn out by
|
|
deceit, treasons, infidelity, and the whole body of terrestrial
|
|
misery, what does he find at the end of his career? that vast
|
|
"Sea of Humors," barely softened by some drops of the waters
|
|
from the "Gulf of Dew!" Clouds, rain, storms, and humors-- does
|
|
the life of man contain aught but these? and is it not summed up
|
|
in these four words?
|
|
|
|
The right hemisphere, "dedicated to the ladies," encloses
|
|
smaller seas, whose significant names contain every incident of
|
|
a feminine existence. There is the "Sea of Serenity," over
|
|
which the young girl bends; "The Lake of Dreams," reflecting a
|
|
joyous future; "The Sea of Nectar," with its waves of tenderness
|
|
and breezes of love; "The Sea of Fruitfulness;" "The Sea of
|
|
Crises;" then the "Sea of Vapors," whose dimensions are perhaps
|
|
a little too confined; and lastly, that vast "Sea of
|
|
Tranquillity," in which every false passion, every useless
|
|
dream, every unsatisfied desire is at length absorbed, and whose
|
|
waves emerge peacefully into the "Lake of Death!"
|
|
|
|
What a strange succession of names! What a singular division of
|
|
the moon's two hemispheres, joined to one another like man and
|
|
woman, and forming that sphere of life carried into space!
|
|
And was not the fantastic Michel right in thus interpreting the
|
|
fancies of the ancient astronomers? But while his imagination
|
|
thus roved over "the seas," his grave companions were considering
|
|
things more geographically. They were learning this new world
|
|
by heart. They were measuring angles and diameters.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XII
|
|
|
|
|
|
OROGRAPHIC DETAILS
|
|
|
|
|
|
The course taken by the projectile, as we have before remarked, was
|
|
bearing it toward the moon's northern hemisphere. The travelers
|
|
were far from the central point which they would have struck,
|
|
had their course not been subject to an irremediable deviation.
|
|
It was past midnight; and Barbicane then estimated the distance
|
|
at seven hundred and fifty miles, which was a little greater than
|
|
the length of the lunar radius, and which would diminish as it
|
|
advanced nearer to the North Pole. The projectile was then not
|
|
at the altitude of the equator; but across the tenth parallel,
|
|
and from that latitude, carefully taken on the map to the pole,
|
|
Barbicane and his two companions were able to observe the moon
|
|
under the most favorable conditions. Indeed, by means of glasses,
|
|
the above-named distance was reduced to little more than
|
|
fourteen miles. The telescope of the Rocky Mountains brought
|
|
the moon much nearer; but the terrestrial atmosphere singularly
|
|
lessened its power. Thus Barbicane, posted in his projectile,
|
|
with the glasses to his eyes, could seize upon details which were
|
|
almost imperceptible to earthly observers.
|
|
|
|
"My friends," said the president, in a serious voice, "I do not
|
|
know whither we are going; I do not know if we shall ever see
|
|
the terrestrial globe again. Nevertheless, let us proceed as if
|
|
our work would one day by useful to our fellow-men. Let us keep
|
|
our minds free from every other consideration. We are
|
|
astronomers; and this projectile is a room in the Cambridge
|
|
University, carried into space. Let us make our observations!"
|
|
|
|
This said, work was begun with great exactness; and they
|
|
faithfully reproduced the different aspects of the moon,
|
|
at the different distances which the projectile reached.
|
|
|
|
At the time that the projectile was as high as the tenth
|
|
parallel, north latitude, it seemed rigidly to follow the
|
|
twentieth degree, east longitude. We must here make one
|
|
important remark with regard to the map by which they were
|
|
taking observations. In the selenographical maps where, on
|
|
account of the reversing of the objects by the glasses, the
|
|
south is above and the north below, it would seem natural that,
|
|
on account of that inversion, the east should be to the left
|
|
hand, and the west to the right. But it is not so. If the map
|
|
were turned upside down, showing the moon as we see her, the
|
|
east would be to the left, and the west to the right, contrary
|
|
to that which exists on terrestrial maps. The following is the
|
|
reason of this anomaly. Observers in the northern hemisphere
|
|
(say in Europe) see the moon in the south-- according to them.
|
|
When they take observations, they turn their backs to the north,
|
|
the reverse position to that which they occupy when they study
|
|
a terrestrial map. As they turn their backs to the north, the
|
|
east is on their left, and the west to their right. To observers
|
|
in the southern hemisphere (Patagonia for example), the moon's
|
|
west would be quite to their left, and the east to their right,
|
|
as the south is behind them. Such is the reason of the apparent
|
|
reversing of these two cardinal points, and we must bear it in mind
|
|
in order to be able to follow President Barbicane's observations.
|
|
|
|
With the help of Boeer and Moedler's _Mappa Selenographica_,
|
|
the travelers were able at once to recognize that portion
|
|
of the disc enclosed within the field of their glasses.
|
|
|
|
"What are we looking at, at this moment?" asked Michel.
|
|
|
|
"At the northern part of the `Sea of Clouds,'" answered Barbicane.
|
|
"We are too far off to recognize its nature. Are these plains
|
|
composed of arid sand, as the first astronomer maintained?
|
|
Or are they nothing but immense forests, according to M. Warren
|
|
de la Rue's opinion, who gives the moon an atmosphere, though
|
|
a very low and a very dense one? That we shall know by and by.
|
|
We must affirm nothing until we are in a position to do so."
|
|
|
|
This "Sea of Clouds" is rather doubtfully marked out upon the maps.
|
|
It is supposed that these vast plains are strewn with blocks of
|
|
lava from the neighboring volcanoes on its right, Ptolemy,
|
|
Purbach, Arzachel. But the projectile was advancing, and sensibly
|
|
nearing it. Soon there appeared the heights which bound this sea
|
|
at this northern limit. Before them rose a mountain radiant with
|
|
beauty, the top of which seemed lost in an eruption of solar rays.
|
|
|
|
"That is--?" asked Michel.
|
|
|
|
"Copernicus," replied Barbicane.
|
|
|
|
"Let us see Copernicus."
|
|
|
|
This mount, situated in 9@ north latitude and 20@ east
|
|
longitude, rose to a height of 10,600 feet above the surface of
|
|
the moon. It is quite visible from the earth; and astronomers
|
|
can study it with ease, particularly during the phase between
|
|
the last quarter and the new moon, because then the shadows are
|
|
thrown lengthways from east to west, allowing them to measure
|
|
the heights.
|
|
|
|
This Copernicus forms the most important of the radiating
|
|
system, situated in the southern hemisphere, according to Tycho
|
|
Brahe. It rises isolated like a gigantic lighthouse on that
|
|
portion of the "Sea of Clouds," which is bounded by the "Sea of
|
|
Tempests," thus lighting by its splendid rays two oceans at
|
|
a time. It was a sight without an equal, those long luminous
|
|
trains, so dazzling in the full moon, and which, passing the
|
|
boundary chain on the north, extends to the "Sea of Rains."
|
|
At one o'clock of the terrestrial morning, the projectile,
|
|
like a balloon borne into space, overlooked the top of this
|
|
superb mount. Barbicane could recognize perfectly its
|
|
chief features. Copernicus is comprised in the series of
|
|
ringed mountains of the first order, in the division of
|
|
great circles. Like Kepler and Aristarchus, which overlook
|
|
the "Ocean of Tempests," sometimes it appeared like a brilliant
|
|
point through the cloudy light, and was taken for a volcano
|
|
in activity. But it is only an extinct one-- like all on that
|
|
side of the moon. Its circumference showed a diameter of about
|
|
twenty-two leagues. The glasses discovered traces of
|
|
stratification produced by successive eruptions, and the
|
|
neighborhood was strewn with volcanic remains which still choked
|
|
some of the craters.
|
|
|
|
"There exist," said Barbicane, "several kinds of circles on the
|
|
surface of the moon, and it is easy to see that Copernicus
|
|
belongs to the radiating class. If we were nearer, we should
|
|
see the cones bristling on the inside, which in former times
|
|
were so many fiery mouths. A curious arrangement, and one
|
|
without an exception on the lunar disc, is that the interior
|
|
surface of these circles is the reverse of the exterior, and
|
|
contrary to the form taken by terrestrial craters. It follows,
|
|
then, that the general curve of the bottom of these circles
|
|
gives a sphere of a smaller diameter than that of the moon."
|
|
|
|
"And why this peculiar disposition?" asked Nicholl.
|
|
|
|
"We do not know," replied Barbicane.
|
|
|
|
"What splendid radiation!" said Michel. "One could hardly see
|
|
a finer spectacle, I think."
|
|
|
|
"What would you say, then," replied Barbicane, "if chance should
|
|
bear us toward the southern hemisphere?"
|
|
|
|
"Well, I should say that it was still more beautiful," retorted
|
|
Michel Ardan.
|
|
|
|
At this moment the projectile hung perpendicularly over the circle.
|
|
The circumference of Copernicus formed almost a perfect circle,
|
|
and its steep escarpments were clearly defined. They could even
|
|
distinguish a second ringed enclosure. Around spread a grayish
|
|
plain, of a wild aspect, on which every relief was marked in yellow.
|
|
At the bottom of the circle, as if enclosed in a jewel case,
|
|
sparkled for one instant two or three eruptive cones, like enormous
|
|
dazzling gems. Toward the north the escarpments were lowered by a
|
|
depression which would probably have given access to the interior
|
|
of the crater.
|
|
|
|
In passing over the surrounding plains, Barbicane noticed a
|
|
great number of less important mountains; and among others a
|
|
little ringed one called Guy Lussac, the breadth of which
|
|
measured twelve miles.
|
|
|
|
Toward the south, the plain was very flat, without one
|
|
elevation, without one projection. Toward the north, on the
|
|
contrary, till where it was bounded by the "Sea of Storms," it
|
|
resembled a liquid surface agitated by a storm, of which the
|
|
hills and hollows formed a succession of waves suddenly congealed.
|
|
Over the whole of this, and in all directions, lay the luminous
|
|
lines, all converging to the summit of Copernicus.
|
|
|
|
The travelers discussed the origin of these strange rays; but they
|
|
could not determine their nature any more than terrestrial observers.
|
|
|
|
"But why," said Nicholl, "should not these rays be simply spurs
|
|
of mountains which reflect more vividly the light of the sun?"
|
|
|
|
"No," replied Barbicane; "if it was so, under certain conditions
|
|
of the moon, these ridges would cast shadows, and they do not
|
|
cast any."
|
|
|
|
And indeed, these rays only appeared when the orb of day was in
|
|
opposition to the moon, and disappeared as soon as its rays
|
|
became oblique.
|
|
|
|
"But how have they endeavored to explain these lines of light?"
|
|
asked Michel; "for I cannot believe that savants would ever be
|
|
stranded for want of an explanation."
|
|
|
|
"Yes," replied Barbicane; "Herschel has put forward an opinion,
|
|
but he did not venture to affirm it."
|
|
|
|
"Never mind. What was the opinion?"
|
|
|
|
"He thought that these rays might be streams of cooled lava
|
|
which shone when the sun beat straight upon them. It may be so;
|
|
but nothing can be less certain. Besides, if we pass nearer to
|
|
Tycho, we shall be in a better position to find out the cause of
|
|
this radiation."
|
|
|
|
"Do you know, my friends, what that plain, seen from the height
|
|
we are at, resembles?" said Michel.
|
|
|
|
"No," replied Nicholl.
|
|
|
|
"Very well; with all those pieces of lava lengthened like rockets,
|
|
it resembles an immense game of spelikans thrown pellmell.
|
|
There wants but the hook to pull them out one by one."
|
|
|
|
"Do be serious," said Barbicane.
|
|
|
|
"Well, let us be serious," replied Michel quietly; "and instead
|
|
of spelikans, let us put bones. This plain, would then be
|
|
nothing but an immense cemetery, on which would repose the
|
|
mortal remains of thousands of extinct generations. Do you
|
|
prefer that high-flown comparison?"
|
|
|
|
"One is as good as the other," retorted Barbicane.
|
|
|
|
"My word, you are difficult to please," answered Michel.
|
|
|
|
"My worthy friend," continued the matter-of-fact Barbicane, "it
|
|
matters but little what it _resembles_, when we do not know what
|
|
it _is_."
|
|
|
|
"Well answered," exclaimed Michel. "That will teach me to
|
|
reason with savants."
|
|
|
|
But the projectile continued to advance with almost uniform
|
|
speed around the lunar disc. The travelers, we may easily
|
|
imagine, did not dream of taking a moment's rest. Every minute
|
|
changed the landscape which fled from beneath their gaze.
|
|
About half past one o'clock in the morning, they caught a glimpse
|
|
of the tops of another mountain. Barbicane, consulting his map,
|
|
recognized Eratosthenes.
|
|
|
|
It was a ringed mountain nine thousand feet high, and one of
|
|
those circles so numerous on this satellite. With regard to
|
|
this, Barbicane related Kepler's singular opinion on the
|
|
formation of circles. According to that celebrated
|
|
mathematician, these crater-like cavities had been dug by the
|
|
hand of man.
|
|
|
|
"For what purpose?" asked Nicholl.
|
|
|
|
"For a very natural one," replied Barbicane. "The Selenites
|
|
might have undertaken these immense works and dug these enormous
|
|
holes for a refuge and shield from the solar rays which beat
|
|
upon them during fifteen consecutive days."
|
|
|
|
"The Selenites are not fools," said Michel.
|
|
|
|
"A singular idea," replied Nicholl; "but it is probable that
|
|
Kepler did not know the true dimensions of these circles, for
|
|
the digging of them would have been the work of giants quite
|
|
impossible for the Selenites."
|
|
|
|
"Why? if weight on the moon's surface is six times less than on
|
|
the earth?" said Michel.
|
|
|
|
"But if the Selenites are six times smaller?" retorted Nicholl.
|
|
|
|
"And if there are _no_ Selenites?" added Barbicane.
|
|
|
|
This put an end to the discussion.
|
|
|
|
Soon Eratosthenes disappeared under the horizon without the
|
|
projectile being sufficiently near to allow close observation.
|
|
This mountain separated the Apennines from the Carpathians. In the
|
|
lunar orography they have discerned some chains of mountains, which
|
|
are chiefly distributed over the northern hemisphere. Some, however,
|
|
occupy certain portions of the southern hemisphere also.
|
|
|
|
About two o'clock in the morning Barbicane found that they were
|
|
above the twentieth lunar parallel. The distance of the
|
|
projectile from the moon was not more than six hundred miles.
|
|
Barbicane, now perceiving that the projectile was steadily
|
|
approaching the lunar disc, did not despair; if not of reaching
|
|
her, at least of discovering the secrets of her configuration.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XIII
|
|
|
|
|
|
LUNAR LANDSCAPES
|
|
|
|
|
|
At half-past two in the morning, the projectile was over the
|
|
thirteenth lunar parallel and at the effective distance of five
|
|
hundred miles, reduced by the glasses to five. It still seemed
|
|
impossible, however, that it could ever touch any part of the disc.
|
|
Its motive speed, comparatively so moderate, was inexplicable to
|
|
President Barbicane. At that distance from the moon it must have
|
|
been considerable, to enable it to bear up against her attraction.
|
|
Here was a phenomenon the cause of which escaped them again.
|
|
Besides, time failed them to investigate the cause. All lunar
|
|
relief was defiling under the eyes of the travelers, and they
|
|
would not lose a single detail.
|
|
|
|
Under the glasses the disc appeared at the distance of five
|
|
miles. What would an aeronaut, borne to this distance from the
|
|
earth, distinguish on its surface? We cannot say, since the
|
|
greatest ascension has not been more than 25,000 feet.
|
|
|
|
This, however, is an exact description of what Barbicane and his
|
|
companions saw at this height. Large patches of different
|
|
colors appeared on the disc. Selenographers are not agreed upon
|
|
the nature of these colors. There are several, and rather
|
|
vividly marked. Julius Schmidt pretends that, if the
|
|
terrestrial oceans were dried up, a Selenite observer could not
|
|
distinguish on the globe a greater diversity of shades between
|
|
the oceans and the continental plains than those on the moon
|
|
present to a terrestrial observer. According to him, the color
|
|
common to the vast plains known by the name of "seas" is a dark
|
|
gray mixed with green and brown. Some of the large craters
|
|
present the same appearance. Barbicane knew this opinion of the
|
|
German selenographer, an opinion shared by Boeer and Moedler.
|
|
Observation has proved that right was on their side, and not on
|
|
that of some astronomers who admit the existence of only gray on
|
|
the moon's surface. In some parts green was very distinct, such
|
|
as springs, according to Julius Schmidt, from the seas of
|
|
"Serenity and Humors." Barbicane also noticed large craters,
|
|
without any interior cones, which shed a bluish tint similar to
|
|
the reflection of a sheet of steel freshly polished. These colors
|
|
belonged really to the lunar disc, and did not result, as some
|
|
astronomers say, either from the imperfection in the objective
|
|
of the glasses or from the interposition of the terrestrial atmosphere.
|
|
|
|
Not a doubt existed in Barbicane's mind with regard to it, as he
|
|
observed it through space, and so could not commit any optical error.
|
|
He considered the establishment of this fact as an acquisition
|
|
to science. Now, were these shades of green, belonging to
|
|
tropical vegetation, kept up by a low dense atmosphere? He could
|
|
not yet say.
|
|
|
|
Farther on, he noticed a reddish tint, quite defined. The same
|
|
shade had before been observed at the bottom of an isolated
|
|
enclosure, known by the name of Lichtenburg's circle, which is
|
|
situated near the Hercynian mountains, on the borders of the
|
|
moon; but they could not tell the nature of it.
|
|
|
|
They were not more fortunate with regard to another peculiarity
|
|
of the disc, for they could not decide upon the cause of it.
|
|
|
|
Michel Ardan was watching near the president, when he noticed
|
|
long white lines, vividly lighted up by the direct rays of the sun.
|
|
It was a succession of luminous furrows, very different from the
|
|
radiation of Copernicus not long before; they ran parallel with
|
|
each other.
|
|
|
|
Michel, with his usual readiness, hastened to exclaim:
|
|
|
|
"Look there! cultivated fields!"
|
|
|
|
"Cultivated fields!" replied Nicholl, shrugging his shoulders.
|
|
|
|
"Plowed, at all events," retorted Michel Ardan; "but what
|
|
laborers those Selenites must be, and what giant oxen they must
|
|
harness to their plow to cut such furrows!"
|
|
|
|
"They are not furrows," said Barbicane; "they are _rifts_."
|
|
|
|
"Rifts? stuff!" replied Michel mildly; "but what do you mean by
|
|
`rifts' in the scientific world?"
|
|
|
|
Barbicane immediately enlightened his companion as to what he
|
|
knew about lunar rifts. He knew that they were a kind of furrow
|
|
found on every part of the disc which was not mountainous; that
|
|
these furrows, generally isolated, measured from 400 to 500
|
|
leagues in length; that their breadth varied from 1,000 to 1,500
|
|
yards, and that their borders were strictly parallel; but he
|
|
knew nothing more either of their formation or their nature.
|
|
|
|
Barbicane, through his glasses, observed these rifts with
|
|
great attention. He noticed that their borders were formed of
|
|
steep declivities; they were long parallel ramparts, and with some
|
|
small amount of imagination he might have admitted the existence
|
|
of long lines of fortifications, raised by Selenite engineers.
|
|
Of these different rifts some were perfectly straight, as if cut
|
|
by a line; others were slightly curved, though still keeping
|
|
their borders parallel; some crossed each other, some cut through
|
|
craters; here they wound through ordinary cavities, such as
|
|
Posidonius or Petavius; there they wound through the seas, such
|
|
as the "Sea of Serenity."
|
|
|
|
These natural accidents naturally excited the imaginations of
|
|
these terrestrial astronomers. The first observations had not
|
|
discovered these rifts. Neither Hevelius, Cassin, La Hire, nor
|
|
Herschel seemed to have known them. It was Schroeter who in
|
|
1789 first drew attention to them. Others followed who studied
|
|
them, as Pastorff, Gruithuysen, Boeer, and Moedler. At this
|
|
time their number amounts to seventy; but, if they have been
|
|
counted, their nature has not yet been determined; they are
|
|
certainly _not_ fortifications, any more than they are the
|
|
ancient beds of dried-up rivers; for, on one side, the waters,
|
|
so slight on the moon's surface, could never have worn such
|
|
drains for themselves; and, on the other, they often cross
|
|
craters of great elevation.
|
|
|
|
We must, however, allow that Michel Ardan had "an idea," and
|
|
that, without knowing it, he coincided in that respect with
|
|
Julius Schmidt.
|
|
|
|
"Why," said he, "should not these unaccountable appearances be
|
|
simply phenomena of vegetation?"
|
|
|
|
"What do you mean?" asked Barbicane quickly.
|
|
|
|
"Do not excite yourself, my worthy president," replied Michel;
|
|
"might it not be possible that the dark lines forming that
|
|
bastion were rows of trees regularly placed?"
|
|
|
|
"You stick to your vegetation, then?" said Barbicane.
|
|
|
|
"I like," retorted Michel Ardan, "to explain what you savants
|
|
cannot explain; at least my hypotheses has the advantage of
|
|
indicating why these rifts disappear, or seem to disappear, at
|
|
certain seasons."
|
|
|
|
"And for what reason?"
|
|
|
|
"For the reason that the trees become invisible when they lose
|
|
their leaves, and visible again when they regain them."
|
|
|
|
"Your explanation is ingenious, my dear companion," replied
|
|
Barbicane, "but inadmissible."
|
|
|
|
"Why?"
|
|
|
|
"Because, so to speak, there are no seasons on the moon's surface,
|
|
and that, consequently, the phenomena of vegetation of which you
|
|
speak cannot occur."
|
|
|
|
Indeed, the slight obliquity of the lunar axis keeps the sun at
|
|
an almost equal height in every latitude. Above the equatorial
|
|
regions the radiant orb almost invariably occupies the zenith,
|
|
and does not pass the limits of the horizon in the polar
|
|
regions; thus, according to each region, there reigns a
|
|
perpetual winter, spring, summer, or autumn, as in the planet
|
|
Jupiter, whose axis is but little inclined upon its orbit.
|
|
|
|
What origin do they attribute to these rifts? That is a
|
|
question difficult to solve. They are certainly anterior to the
|
|
formation of craters and circles, for several have introduced
|
|
themselves by breaking through their circular ramparts. Thus it
|
|
may be that, contemporary with the later geological epochs, they
|
|
are due to the expansion of natural forces.
|
|
|
|
But the projectile had now attained the fortieth degree of lunar
|
|
latitude, at a distance not exceeding 40 miles. Through the
|
|
glasses objects appeared to be only four miles distant.
|
|
|
|
At this point, under their feet, rose Mount Helicon, 1,520 feet
|
|
high, and round about the left rose moderate elevations,
|
|
enclosing a small portion of the "Sea of Rains," under the name
|
|
of the Gulf of Iris. The terrestrial atmosphere would have to
|
|
be one hundred and seventy times more transparent than it is,
|
|
to allow astronomers to make perfect observations on the moon's
|
|
surface; but in the void in which the projectile floated no
|
|
fluid interposed itself between the eye of the observer and
|
|
the object observed. And more, Barbicane found himself carried
|
|
to a greater distance than the most powerful telescopes had
|
|
ever done before, either that of Lord Rosse or that of the
|
|
Rocky Mountains. He was, therefore, under extremely favorable
|
|
conditions for solving that great question of the habitability
|
|
of the moon; but the solution still escaped him; he could
|
|
distinguish nothing but desert beds, immense plains, and toward
|
|
the north, arid mountains. Not a work betrayed the hand of man;
|
|
not a ruin marked his course; not a group of animals was to be
|
|
seen indicating life, even in an inferior degree. In no part
|
|
was there life, in no part was there an appearance of vegetation.
|
|
Of the three kingdoms which share the terrestrial globe between
|
|
them, one alone was represented on the lunar and that the mineral.
|
|
|
|
"Ah, indeed!" said Michel Ardan, a little out of countenance;
|
|
"then you see no one?"
|
|
|
|
"No," answered Nicholl; "up to this time, not a man, not an
|
|
animal, not a tree! After all, whether the atmosphere has taken
|
|
refuge at the bottom of cavities, in the midst of the circles,
|
|
or even on the opposite face of the moon, we cannot decide."
|
|
|
|
"Besides," added Barbicane, "even to the most piercing eye a man
|
|
cannot be distinguished farther than three and a half miles off;
|
|
so that, if there are any Selenites, they can see our projectile,
|
|
but we cannot see them."
|
|
|
|
Toward four in the morning, at the height of the fiftieth
|
|
parallel, the distance was reduced to 300 miles. To the left
|
|
ran a line of mountains capriciously shaped, lying in the
|
|
full light. To the right, on the contrary, lay a black hollow
|
|
resembling a vast well, unfathomable and gloomy, drilled into
|
|
the lunar soil.
|
|
|
|
This hole was the "Black Lake"; it was Pluto, a deep circle
|
|
which can be conveniently studied from the earth, between the
|
|
last quarter and the new moon, when the shadows fall from west
|
|
to east.
|
|
|
|
This black color is rarely met with on the surface of
|
|
the satellite. As yet it has only been recognized in the depths
|
|
of the circle of Endymion, to the east of the "Cold Sea," in the
|
|
northern hemisphere, and at the bottom of Grimaldi's circle, on
|
|
the equator, toward the eastern border of the orb.
|
|
|
|
Pluto is an annular mountain, situated in 51@ north latitude,
|
|
and 9@ east longitude. Its circuit is forty-seven miles long
|
|
and thirty-two broad.
|
|
|
|
Barbicane regretted that they were not passing directly above
|
|
this vast opening. There was an abyss to fathom, perhaps some
|
|
mysterious phenomenon to surprise; but the projectile's course
|
|
could not be altered. They must rigidly submit. They could not
|
|
guide a balloon, still less a projectile, when once enclosed
|
|
within its walls. Toward five in the morning the northern
|
|
limits of the "Sea of Rains" was at length passed. The mounts
|
|
of Condamine and Fontenelle remained-- one on the right, the
|
|
other on the left. That part of the disc beginning with 60@ was
|
|
becoming quite mountainous. The glasses brought them to within
|
|
two miles, less than that separating the summit of Mont Blanc
|
|
from the level of the sea. The whole region was bristling with
|
|
spikes and circles. Toward the 60@ Philolaus stood predominant
|
|
at a height of 5,550 feet with its elliptical crater, and seen
|
|
from this distance, the disc showed a very fantastical appearance.
|
|
Landscapes were presented to the eye under very different
|
|
conditions from those on the earth, and also very inferior to them.
|
|
|
|
The moon having no atmosphere, the consequences arising from
|
|
the absence of this gaseous envelope have already been shown.
|
|
No twilight on her surface; night following day and day following
|
|
night with the suddenness of a lamp which is extinguished or
|
|
lighted amid profound darkness-- no transition from cold to
|
|
heat, the temperature falling in an instant from boiling point
|
|
to the cold of space.
|
|
|
|
Another consequence of this want of air is that absolute
|
|
darkness reigns where the sun's rays do not penetrate.
|
|
That which on earth is called diffusion of light, that luminous
|
|
matter which the air holds in suspension, which creates the
|
|
twilight and the daybreak, which produces the _umbrae_ and
|
|
_penumbrae_, and all the magic of _chiaro-oscuro_, does not
|
|
exist on the moon. Hence the harshness of contrasts, which
|
|
only admit of two colors, black and white. If a Selenite
|
|
were to shade his eyes from the sun's rays, the sky would seem
|
|
absolutely black, and the stars would shine to him as on the
|
|
darkest night. Judge of the impression produced on Barbicane
|
|
and his three friends by this strange scene! Their eyes
|
|
were confused. They could no longer grasp the respective
|
|
distances of the different plains. A lunar landscape without
|
|
the softening of the phenomena of _chiaro-oscuro_ could not be
|
|
rendered by an earthly landscape painter; it would be spots of
|
|
ink on a white page-- nothing more.
|
|
|
|
This aspect was not altered even when the projectile, at the
|
|
height of 80@, was only separated from the moon by a distance
|
|
of fifty miles; nor even when, at five in the morning, it
|
|
passed at less than twenty-five miles from the mountain of
|
|
Gioja, a distance reduced by the glasses to a quarter of a mile.
|
|
It seemed as if the moon might be touched by the hand!
|
|
It seemed impossible that, before long, the projectile would
|
|
not strike her, if only at the north pole, the brilliant arch
|
|
of which was so distinctly visible on the black sky.
|
|
|
|
Michel Ardan wanted to open one of the scuttles and throw
|
|
himself on to the moon's surface! A very useless attempt; for
|
|
if the projectile could not attain any point whatever of the
|
|
satellite, Michel, carried along by its motion, could not attain
|
|
it either.
|
|
|
|
At that moment, at six o'clock, the lunar pole appeared. The disc
|
|
only presented to the travelers' gaze one half brilliantly lit up,
|
|
while the other disappeared in the darkness. Suddenly the
|
|
projectile passed the line of demarcation between intense light
|
|
and absolute darkness, and was plunged in profound night!
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XIV
|
|
|
|
|
|
THE NIGHT OF THREE HUNDRED AND FIFTY-FOUR HOURS AND A HALF
|
|
|
|
At the moment when this phenomenon took place so rapidly, the
|
|
projectile was skirting the moon's north pole at less than
|
|
twenty-five miles distance. Some seconds had sufficed to plunge
|
|
it into the absolute darkness of space. The transition was so
|
|
sudden, without shade, without gradation of light, without
|
|
attenuation of the luminous waves, that the orb seemed to have
|
|
been extinguished by a powerful blow.
|
|
|
|
"Melted, disappeared!" Michel Ardan exclaimed, aghast.
|
|
|
|
Indeed, there was neither reflection nor shadow. Nothing more
|
|
was to be seen of that disc, formerly so dazzling. The darkness
|
|
was complete. and rendered even more so by the rays from the stars.
|
|
It was "that blackness" in which the lunar nights are insteeped,
|
|
which last three hundred and fifty-four hours and a half at each
|
|
point of the disc, a long night resulting from the equality of
|
|
the translatory and rotary movements of the moon. The projectile,
|
|
immerged in the conical shadow of the satellite, experienced the
|
|
action of the solar rays no more than any of its invisible points.
|
|
|
|
In the interior, the obscurity was complete. They could not see
|
|
each other. Hence the necessity of dispelling the darkness.
|
|
However desirous Barbicane might be to husband the gas, the
|
|
reserve of which was small, he was obliged to ask from it a
|
|
fictitious light, an expensive brilliancy which the sun then refused.
|
|
|
|
"Devil take the radiant orb!" exclaimed Michel Ardan, "which
|
|
forces us to expend gas, instead of giving us his rays gratuitously."
|
|
|
|
"Do not let us accuse the sun," said Nicholl, "it is not his
|
|
fault, but that of the moon, which has come and placed herself
|
|
like a screen between us and it."
|
|
|
|
"It is the sun!" continued Michel.
|
|
|
|
"It is the moon!" retorted Nicholl.
|
|
|
|
An idle dispute, which Barbicane put an end to by saying:
|
|
|
|
"My friends, it is neither the fault of the sun nor of the moon;
|
|
it is the fault of the _projectile_, which, instead of rigidly
|
|
following its course, has awkwardly missed it. To be more just,
|
|
it is the fault of that unfortunate meteor which has so
|
|
deplorably altered our first direction."
|
|
|
|
"Well," replied Michel Ardan, "as the matter is settled, let us
|
|
have breakfast. After a whole night of watching it is fair to
|
|
build ourselves up a little."
|
|
|
|
This proposal meeting with no contradiction, Michel prepared the
|
|
repast in a few minutes. But they ate for eating's sake, they
|
|
drank without toasts, without hurrahs. The bold travelers being
|
|
borne away into gloomy space, without their accustomed
|
|
_cortege_ of rays, felt a vague uneasiness in their hearts.
|
|
The "strange" shadow so dear to Victor Hugo's pen bound them on
|
|
all sides. But they talked over the interminable night of three
|
|
hundred and fifty-four hours and a half, nearly fifteen days,
|
|
which the law of physics has imposed on the inhabitants of the moon.
|
|
|
|
Barbicane gave his friends some explanation of the causes and
|
|
the consequences of this curious phenomenon.
|
|
|
|
"Curious indeed," said they; "for, if each hemisphere of the
|
|
moon is deprived of solar light for fifteen days, that above
|
|
which we now float does not even enjoy during its long night any
|
|
view of the earth so beautifully lit up. In a word she has no
|
|
moon (applying this designation to our globe) but on one side of
|
|
her disc. Now if this were the case with the earth-- if, for
|
|
example, Europe never saw the moon, and she was only visible at
|
|
the antipodes, imagine to yourself the astonishment of a
|
|
European on arriving in Australia."
|
|
|
|
"They would make the voyage for nothing but to see the moon!"
|
|
replied Michel.
|
|
|
|
"Very well!" continued Barbicane, "that astonishment is reserved
|
|
for the Selenites who inhabit the face of the moon opposite to
|
|
the earth, a face which is ever invisible to our countrymen of
|
|
the terrestrial globe."
|
|
|
|
"And which we should have seen," added Nicholl, "if we had arrived
|
|
here when the moon was new, that is to say fifteen days later."
|
|
|
|
"I will add, to make amends," continued Barbicane, "that the
|
|
inhabitants of the visible face are singularly favored by nature,
|
|
to the detriment of their brethren on the invisible face.
|
|
The latter, as you see, have dark nights of 354 hours, without
|
|
one single ray to break the darkness. The other, on the contrary,
|
|
when the sun which has given its light for fifteen days sinks
|
|
below the horizon, see a splendid orb rise on the opposite horizon.
|
|
It is the earth, which is thirteen times greater than the
|
|
diminutive moon that we know-- the earth which developes itself
|
|
at a diameter of two degrees, and which sheds a light thirteen
|
|
times greater than that qualified by atmospheric strata-- the
|
|
earth which only disappears at the moment when the sun reappears
|
|
in its turn!"
|
|
|
|
"Nicely worded!" said Michel, "slightly academical perhaps."
|
|
|
|
"It follows, then," continued Barbicane, without knitting his
|
|
brows, "that the visible face of the disc must be very agreeable
|
|
to inhabit, since it always looks on either the sun when the
|
|
moon is full, or on the earth when the moon is new."
|
|
|
|
"But," said Nicholl, "that advantage must be well compensated by
|
|
the insupportable heat which the light brings with it."
|
|
|
|
"The inconvenience, in that respect, is the same for the two
|
|
faces, for the earth's light is evidently deprived of heat.
|
|
But the invisible face is still more searched by the heat than
|
|
the visible face. I say that for _you_, Nicholl, because Michel
|
|
will probably not understand."
|
|
|
|
"Thank you," said Michel.
|
|
|
|
"Indeed," continued Barbicane, "when the invisible face receives
|
|
at the same time light and heat from the sun, it is because the
|
|
moon is new; that is to say, she is situated between the sun and
|
|
the earth. It follows, then, considering the position which she
|
|
occupies in opposition when full, that she is nearer to the sun
|
|
by twice her distance from the earth; and that distance may be
|
|
estimated at the two-hundredth part of that which separates the
|
|
sun from the earth, or in round numbers 400,000 miles. So that
|
|
invisible face is so much nearer to the sun when she receives
|
|
its rays."
|
|
|
|
"Quite right," replied Nicholl.
|
|
|
|
"On the contrary," continued Barbicane.
|
|
|
|
"One moment," said Michel, interrupting his grave companion.
|
|
|
|
"What do you want?"
|
|
|
|
"I ask to be allowed to continue the explanation."
|
|
|
|
"And why?"
|
|
|
|
"To prove that I understand."
|
|
|
|
"Get along with you," said Barbicane, smiling.
|
|
|
|
"On the contrary," said Michel, imitating the tone and gestures
|
|
of the president, "on the contrary, when the visible face of the
|
|
moon is lit by the sun, it is because the moon is full, that is
|
|
to say, opposite the sun with regard to the earth. The distance
|
|
separating it from the radiant orb is then increased in round
|
|
numbers to 400,000 miles, and the heat which she receives must
|
|
be a little less."
|
|
|
|
"Very well said!" exclaimed Barbicane. "Do you know, Michel,
|
|
that, for an amateur, you are intelligent."
|
|
|
|
"Yes," replied Michel coolly, "we are all so on the Boulevard
|
|
des Italiens."
|
|
|
|
Barbicane gravely grasped the hand of his amiable companion, and
|
|
continued to enumerate the advantages reserved for the inhabitants
|
|
of the visible face.
|
|
|
|
Among others, he mentioned eclipses of the sun, which only take
|
|
place on this side of the lunar disc; since, in order that they
|
|
may take place, it is necessary for the moon to be _in
|
|
opposition_. These eclipses, caused by the interposition of the
|
|
earth between the moon and the sun, can last _two hours_; during
|
|
which time, by reason of the rays refracted by its atmosphere,
|
|
the terrestrial globe can appear as nothing but a black point
|
|
upon the sun.
|
|
|
|
"So," said Nicholl, "there is a hemisphere, that invisible
|
|
hemisphere which is very ill supplied, very ill treated,
|
|
by nature."
|
|
|
|
"Never mind," replied Michel; "if we ever become Selenites, we
|
|
will inhabit the visible face. I like the light."
|
|
|
|
"Unless, by any chance," answered Nicholl, "the atmosphere should
|
|
be condensed on the other side, as certain astronomers pretend."
|
|
|
|
"That would be a consideration," said Michel.
|
|
|
|
Breakfast over, the observers returned to their post. They tried
|
|
to see through the darkened scuttles by extinguishing all light
|
|
in the projectile; but not a luminous spark made its way through
|
|
the darkness.
|
|
|
|
One inexplicable fact preoccupied Barbicane. Why, having passed
|
|
within such a short distance of the moon--about twenty-five
|
|
miles only-- why the projectile had not fallen? If its speed
|
|
had been enormous, he could have understood that the fall would
|
|
not have taken place; but, with a relatively moderate speed,
|
|
that resistance to the moon's attraction could not be explained.
|
|
Was the projectile under some foreign influence? Did some kind
|
|
of body retain it in the ether? It was quite evident that it
|
|
could never reach any point of the moon. Whither was it going?
|
|
Was it going farther from, or nearing, the disc? Was it being
|
|
borne in that profound darkness through the infinity of space?
|
|
How could they learn, how calculate, in the midst of this night?
|
|
All these questions made Barbicane uneasy, but he could not
|
|
solve them.
|
|
|
|
Certainly, the invisible orb was _there_, perhaps only some few
|
|
miles off; but neither he nor his companions could see it.
|
|
If there was any noise on its surface, they could not hear it.
|
|
Air, that medium of sound, was wanting to transmit the groanings
|
|
of that moon which the Arabic legends call "a man already half
|
|
granite, and still breathing."
|
|
|
|
One must allow that that was enough to aggravate the most
|
|
patient observers. It was just that unknown hemisphere which
|
|
was stealing from their sight. That face which fifteen days
|
|
sooner, or fifteen days later, had been, or would be, splendidly
|
|
illuminated by the solar rays, was then being lost in utter darkness.
|
|
In fifteen days where would the projectile be? Who could say?
|
|
Where would the chances of conflicting attractions have drawn
|
|
it to? The disappointment of the travelers in the midst of this
|
|
utter darkness may be imagined. All observation of the lunar
|
|
disc was impossible. The constellations alone claimed all their
|
|
attention; and we must allow that the astronomers Faye, Charconac,
|
|
and Secchi, never found themselves in circumstances so favorable
|
|
for their observation.
|
|
|
|
Indeed, nothing could equal the splendor of this starry world,
|
|
bathed in limpid ether. Its diamonds set in the heavenly vault
|
|
sparkled magnificently. The eye took in the firmament from the
|
|
Southern Cross to the North Star, those two constellations which
|
|
in 12,000 years, by reason of the succession of equinoxes, will
|
|
resign their part of the polar stars, the one to Canopus in the
|
|
southern hemisphere, the other to Wega in the northern.
|
|
Imagination loses itself in this sublime Infinity, amid which
|
|
the projectile was gravitating, like a new star created by the
|
|
hand of man. From a natural cause, these constellations shone
|
|
with a soft luster; they did not twinkle, for there was no
|
|
atmosphere which, by the intervention of its layers unequally
|
|
dense and of different degrees of humidity, produces
|
|
this scintillation. These stars were soft eyes, looking out
|
|
into the dark night, amid the silence of absolute space.
|
|
|
|
Long did the travelers stand mute, watching the constellated
|
|
firmament, upon which the moon, like a vast screen, made an
|
|
enormous black hole. But at length a painful sensation drew
|
|
them from their watchings. This was an intense cold, which soon
|
|
covered the inside of the glass of the scuttles with a thick
|
|
coating of ice. The sun was no longer warming the projectile
|
|
with its direct rays, and thus it was losing the heat stored up
|
|
in its walls by degrees. This heat was rapidly evaporating into
|
|
space by radiation, and a considerably lower temperature was
|
|
the result. The humidity of the interior was changed into ice
|
|
upon contact with the glass, preventing all observation.
|
|
|
|
Nicholl consulted the thermometer, and saw that it had fallen to
|
|
seventeen degrees (Centigrade) below zero. [3] So that, in spite
|
|
of the many reasons for economizing, Barbicane, after having
|
|
begged light from the gas, was also obliged to beg for heat.
|
|
The projectile's low temperature was no longer endurable.
|
|
Its tenants would have been frozen to death.
|
|
|
|
[3] 1@ Fahrenheit.
|
|
|
|
"Well!" observed Michel, "we cannot reasonably complain of the
|
|
monotony of our journey! What variety we have had, at least
|
|
in temperature. Now we are blinded with light and saturated with
|
|
heat, like the Indians of the Pampas! now plunged into profound
|
|
darkness, amid the cold, like the Esquimaux of the north pole.
|
|
No, indeed! we have no right to complain; nature does wonders in
|
|
our honor."
|
|
|
|
"But," asked Nicholl, "what is the temperature outside?"
|
|
|
|
"Exactly that of the planetary space," replied Barbicane.
|
|
|
|
"Then," continued Michel Ardan, "would not this be the time to
|
|
make the experiment which we dared not attempt when we were
|
|
drowned in the sun's rays?
|
|
|
|
"It is now or never," replied Barbicane, "for we are in a good
|
|
position to verify the temperature of space, and see if Fourier
|
|
or Pouillet's calculations are exact."
|
|
|
|
"In any case it is cold," said Michel. "See! the steam of the
|
|
interior is condensing on the glasses of the scuttles. If the fall
|
|
continues, the vapor of our breath will fall in snow around us."
|
|
|
|
"Let us prepare a thermometer," said Barbicane.
|
|
|
|
We may imagine that an ordinary thermometer would afford no
|
|
result under the circumstances in which this instrument was to
|
|
be exposed. The mercury would have been frozen in its ball,
|
|
as below 42@ Fahrenheit below zero it is no longer liquid.
|
|
But Barbicane had furnished himself with a spirit thermometer
|
|
on Wafferdin's system, which gives the minima of excessively
|
|
low temperatures.
|
|
|
|
Before beginning the experiment, this instrument was compared
|
|
with an ordinary one, and then Barbicane prepared to use it.
|
|
|
|
"How shall we set about it?" asked Nicholl.
|
|
|
|
"Nothing is easier," replied Michel Ardan, who was never at a loss.
|
|
"We open the scuttle rapidly; throw out the instrument; it follows
|
|
the projectile with exemplary docility; and a quarter of an hour
|
|
after, draw it in."
|
|
|
|
"With the hand?" asked Barbicane.
|
|
|
|
"With the hand," replied Michel.
|
|
|
|
"Well, then, my friend, do not expose yourself," answered
|
|
Barbicane, "for the hand that you draw in again will be nothing
|
|
but a stump frozen and deformed by the frightful cold."
|
|
|
|
"Really!"
|
|
|
|
"You will feel as if you had had a terrible burn, like that of
|
|
iron at a white heat; for whether the heat leaves our bodies
|
|
briskly or enters briskly, it is exactly the same thing.
|
|
Besides, I am not at all certain that the objects we have thrown
|
|
out are still following us."
|
|
|
|
"Why not?" asked Nicholl.
|
|
|
|
"Because, if we are passing through an atmosphere of the
|
|
slightest density, these objects will be retarded. Again, the
|
|
darkness prevents our seeing if they still float around us.
|
|
But in order not to expose ourselves to the loss of our
|
|
thermometer, we will fasten it, and we can then more easily
|
|
pull it back again."
|
|
|
|
Barbicane's advice was followed. Through the scuttle rapidly
|
|
opened, Nicholl threw out the instrument, which was held by a
|
|
short cord, so that it might be more easily drawn up. The scuttle
|
|
had not been opened more than a second, but that second had sufficed
|
|
to let in a most intense cold.
|
|
|
|
"The devil!" exclaimed Michel Ardan, "it is cold enough to
|
|
freeze a white bear."
|
|
|
|
Barbicane waited until half an hour had elapsed, which was more
|
|
than time enough to allow the instrument to fall to the level of
|
|
the surrounding temperature. Then it was rapidly pulled in.
|
|
|
|
Barbicane calculated the quantity of spirits of wine overflowed
|
|
into the little vial soldered to the lower part of the
|
|
instrument, and said:
|
|
|
|
"A hundred and forty degrees Centigrade [4] below zero!"
|
|
|
|
[4] 218 degrees Fahrenheit below zero.
|
|
|
|
M. Pouillet was right and Fourier wrong. That was the undoubted
|
|
temperature of the starry space. Such is, perhaps, that of the
|
|
lunar continents, when the orb of night has lost by radiation
|
|
all the heat which fifteen days of sun have poured into her.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XV
|
|
|
|
|
|
HYPERBOLA OR PARABOLA
|
|
|
|
|
|
We may, perhaps, be astonished to find Barbicane and his
|
|
companions so little occupied with the future reserved for them
|
|
in their metal prison which was bearing them through the
|
|
infinity of space. Instead of asking where they were going,
|
|
they passed their time making experiments, as if they had been
|
|
quietly installed in their own study.
|
|
|
|
We might answer that men so strong-minded were above such
|
|
anxieties-- that they did not trouble themselves about such
|
|
trifles-- and that they had something else to do than to
|
|
occupy their minds with the future.
|
|
|
|
The truth was that they were not masters of their projectile;
|
|
they could neither check its course, nor alter its direction.
|
|
|
|
A sailor can change the head of his ship as he pleases; an
|
|
aeronaut can give a vertical motion to his balloon. They, on
|
|
the contrary, had no power over their vehicle. Every maneuver
|
|
was forbidden. Hence the inclination to let things alone, or as
|
|
the sailors say, "let her run."
|
|
|
|
Where did they find themselves at this moment, at eight o'clock in
|
|
the morning of the day called upon the earth the 6th of December?
|
|
Very certainly in the neighborhood of the moon, and even near
|
|
enough for her to look to them like an enormous black screen upon
|
|
the firmament. As to the distance which separated them, it was
|
|
impossible to estimate it. The projectile, held by some
|
|
unaccountable force, had been within four miles of grazing the
|
|
satellite's north pole.
|
|
|
|
But since entering the cone of shadow these last two hours, had
|
|
the distance increased or diminished? Every point of mark was
|
|
wanting by which to estimate both the direction and the speed of
|
|
the projectile.
|
|
|
|
Perhaps it was rapidly leaving the disc, so that it would soon
|
|
quit the pure shadow. Perhaps, again, on the other hand, it
|
|
might be nearing it so much that in a short time it might strike
|
|
some high point on the invisible hemisphere, which would doubtlessly
|
|
have ended the journey much to the detriment of the travelers.
|
|
|
|
A discussion arose on this subject, and Michel Ardan, always
|
|
ready with an explanation, gave it as his opinion that the
|
|
projectile, held by the lunar attraction, would end by falling
|
|
on the surface of the terrestrial globe like an aerolite.
|
|
|
|
"First of all, my friend," answered Barbicane, "every aerolite
|
|
does not fall to the earth; it is only a small proportion which
|
|
do so; and if we had passed into an aerolite, it does not necessarily
|
|
follow that we should ever reach the surface of the moon."
|
|
|
|
"But how if we get near enough?" replied Michel.
|
|
|
|
"Pure mistake," replied Barbicane. "Have you not seen shooting
|
|
stars rush through the sky by thousands at certain seasons?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes."
|
|
|
|
"Well, these stars, or rather corpuscles, only shine when they
|
|
are heated by gliding over the atmospheric layers. Now, if
|
|
they enter the atmosphere, they pass at least within forty
|
|
miles of the earth, but they seldom fall upon it. The same with
|
|
our projectile. It may approach very near to the moon, and not
|
|
yet fall upon it."
|
|
|
|
"But then," asked Michel, "I shall be curious to know how our
|
|
erring vehicle will act in space?"
|
|
|
|
"I see but two hypotheses," replied Barbicane, after some
|
|
moments' reflection.
|
|
|
|
"What are they?"
|
|
|
|
"The projectile has the choice between two mathematical curves,
|
|
and it will follow one or the other according to the speed with
|
|
which it is animated, and which at this moment I cannot estimate."
|
|
|
|
"Yes," said Nicholl, "it will follow either a parabola or
|
|
a hyperbola."
|
|
|
|
"Just so," replied Barbicane. "With a certain speed it will
|
|
assume the parabola, and with a greater the hyperbola."
|
|
|
|
"I like those grand words," exclaimed Michel Ardan; "one knows
|
|
directly what they mean. And pray what is your parabola, if
|
|
you please?"
|
|
|
|
"My friend," answered the captain, "the parabola is a curve of
|
|
the second order, the result of the section of a cone
|
|
intersected by a plane parallel to one of the sides."
|
|
|
|
"Ah! ah!" said Michel, in a satisfied tone.
|
|
|
|
"It is very nearly," continued Nicholl, "the course described by
|
|
a bomb launched from a mortar."
|
|
|
|
"Perfect! And the hyperbola?"
|
|
|
|
"The hyperbola, Michel, is a curve of the second order, produced
|
|
by the intersection of a conic surface and a plane parallel to
|
|
its axis, and constitutes two branches separated one from the other,
|
|
both tending indefinitely in the two directions."
|
|
|
|
"Is it possible!" exclaimed Michel Ardan in a serious tone, as
|
|
if they had told him of some serious event. "What I particularly
|
|
like in your definition of the hyperbola (I was going to say
|
|
hyperblague) is that it is still more obscure than the word you
|
|
pretend to define."
|
|
|
|
Nicholl and Barbicane cared little for Michel Ardan's fun.
|
|
They were deep in a scientific discussion. What curve would
|
|
the projectile follow? was their hobby. One maintained the
|
|
hyperbola, the other the parabola. They gave each other reasons
|
|
bristling with _x_. Their arguments were couched in language
|
|
which made Michel jump. The discussion was hot, and neither
|
|
would give up his chosen curve to his adversary.
|
|
|
|
This scientific dispute lasted so long that it made Michel
|
|
very impatient.
|
|
|
|
"Now, gentlemen cosines, will you cease to throw parabolas and
|
|
hyperbolas at each other's heads? I want to understand the only
|
|
interesting question in the whole affair. We shall follow one
|
|
or the other of these curves? Good. But where will they lead
|
|
us to?"
|
|
|
|
"Nowhere," replied Nicholl.
|
|
|
|
"How, nowhere?"
|
|
|
|
"Evidently," said Barbicane, "they are open curves, which may be
|
|
prolonged indefinitely."
|
|
|
|
"Ah, savants!" cried Michel; "and what are either the one or the
|
|
other to us from the moment we know that they equally lead us
|
|
into infinite space?"
|
|
|
|
Barbicane and Nicholl could not forbear smiling. They had just
|
|
been creating "art for art's sake." Never had so idle a question
|
|
been raised at such an inopportune moment. The sinister truth
|
|
remained that, whether hyperbolically or parabolically borne away,
|
|
the projectile would never again meet either the earth or the moon.
|
|
|
|
What would become of these bold travelers in the immediate future?
|
|
If they did not die of hunger, if they did not die of thirst,
|
|
in some days, when the gas failed, they would die from want of air,
|
|
unless the cold had killed them first. Still, important as it was
|
|
to economize the gas, the excessive lowness of the surrounding
|
|
temperature obliged them to consume a certain quantity.
|
|
Strictly speaking, they could do without its _light_, but not
|
|
without its _heat_. Fortunately the caloric generated by Reiset's
|
|
and Regnaut's apparatus raised the temperature of the interior
|
|
of the projectile a little, and without much expenditure they
|
|
were able to keep it bearable.
|
|
|
|
But observations had now become very difficult. the dampness of
|
|
the projectile was condensed on the windows and congealed immediately.
|
|
This cloudiness had to be dispersed continually. In any case
|
|
they might hope to be able to discover some phenomena of the
|
|
highest interest.
|
|
|
|
But up to this time the disc remained dumb and dark. It did not
|
|
answer the multiplicity of questions put by these ardent minds;
|
|
a matter which drew this reflection from Michel, apparently a
|
|
just one:
|
|
|
|
"If ever we begin this journey over again, we shall do well to
|
|
choose the time when the moon is at the full."
|
|
|
|
"Certainly," said Nicholl, "that circumstance will be more favorable.
|
|
I allow that the moon, immersed in the sun's rays, will not be
|
|
visible during the transit, but instead we should see the earth,
|
|
which would be full. And what is more, if we were drawn round the
|
|
moon, as at this moment, we should at least have the advantage of
|
|
seeing the invisible part of her disc magnificently lit."
|
|
|
|
"Well said, Nicholl," replied Michel Ardan. "What do you
|
|
think, Barbicane?"
|
|
|
|
"I think this," answered the grave president: "If ever we begin
|
|
this journey again, we shall start at the same time and under
|
|
the same conditions. Suppose we had attained our end, would it
|
|
not have been better to have found continents in broad daylight
|
|
than a country plunged in utter darkness? Would not our first
|
|
installation have been made under better circumstances?
|
|
Yes, evidently. As to the invisible side, we could have visited
|
|
it in our exploring expeditions on the lunar globe. So that the
|
|
time of the full moon was well chosen. But we ought to have
|
|
arrived at the end; and in order to have so arrived, we ought
|
|
to have suffered no deviation on the road."
|
|
|
|
"I have nothing to say to that," answered Michel Ardan.
|
|
"Here is, however, a good opportunity lost of observing the
|
|
other side of the moon."
|
|
|
|
But the projectile was now describing in the shadow that
|
|
incalculable course which no sight-mark would allow them
|
|
to ascertain. Had its direction been altered, either by the
|
|
influence of the lunar attraction, or by the action of some
|
|
unknown star? Barbicane could not say. But a change had taken
|
|
place in the relative position of the vehicle; and Barbicane
|
|
verified it about four in the morning.
|
|
|
|
The change consisted in this, that the base of the projectile
|
|
had turned toward the moon's surface, and was so held by a
|
|
perpendicular passing through its axis. The attraction, that is
|
|
to say the weight, had brought about this alteration. The heaviest
|
|
part of the projectile inclined toward the invisible disc as if it
|
|
would fall upon it.
|
|
|
|
Was it falling? Were the travelers attaining that much desired end?
|
|
No. And the observation of a sign-point, quite inexplicable in
|
|
itself, showed Barbicane that his projectile was not nearing the
|
|
moon, and that it had shifted by following an almost concentric curve.
|
|
|
|
This point of mark was a luminous brightness, which Nicholl
|
|
sighted suddenly, on the limit of the horizon formed by the
|
|
black disc. This point could not be confounded with a star.
|
|
It was a reddish incandescence which increased by degrees, a
|
|
decided proof that the projectile was shifting toward it and
|
|
not falling normally on the surface of the moon.
|
|
|
|
"A volcano! it is a volcano in action!" cried Nicholl; "a
|
|
disemboweling of the interior fires of the moon! That world is
|
|
not quite extinguished."
|
|
|
|
"Yes, an eruption," replied Barbicane, who was carefully
|
|
studying the phenomenon through his night glass. "What should
|
|
it be, if not a volcano?"
|
|
|
|
"But, then," said Michel Ardan, "in order to maintain that
|
|
combustion, there must be air. So the atmosphere does surround
|
|
that part of the moon."
|
|
|
|
"Perhaps so," replied Barbicane, "but not necessarily.
|
|
|
|
The volcano, by the decomposition of certain substances, can
|
|
provide its own oxygen, and thus throw flames into space. It seems
|
|
to me that the deflagration, by the intense brilliancy of the
|
|
substances in combustion, is produced in pure oxygen. We must
|
|
not be in a hurry to proclaim the existence of a lunar atmosphere."
|
|
|
|
The fiery mountain must have been situated about the 45@ south
|
|
latitude on the invisible part of the disc; but, to Barbicane's
|
|
great displeasure, the curve which the projectile was describing
|
|
was taking it far from the point indicated by the eruption.
|
|
Thus he could not determine its nature exactly. Half an hour
|
|
after being sighted, this luminous point had disappeared behind
|
|
the dark horizon; but the verification of this phenomenon was
|
|
of considerable consequence in their selenographic studies.
|
|
It proved that all heat had not yet disappeared from the bowels
|
|
of this globe; and where heat exists, who can affirm that the
|
|
vegetable kingdom, nay, even the animal kingdom itself, has not
|
|
up to this time resisted all destructive influences? The existence
|
|
of this volcano in eruption, unmistakably seen by these earthly
|
|
savants, would doubtless give rise to many theories favorable
|
|
to the grave question of the habitability of the moon.
|
|
|
|
Barbicane allowed himself to be carried away by these reflections.
|
|
He forgot himself in a deep reverie in which the mysterious
|
|
destiny of the lunar world was uppermost. He was seeking to
|
|
combine together the facts observed up to that time, when a new
|
|
incident recalled him briskly to reality. This incident was more
|
|
than a cosmical phenomenon; it was a threatened danger, the
|
|
consequence of which might be disastrous in the extreme.
|
|
|
|
Suddenly, in the midst of the ether, in the profound darkness, an
|
|
enormous mass appeared. It was like a moon, but an incandescent
|
|
moon whose brilliancy was all the more intolerable as it cut
|
|
sharply on the frightful darkness of space. This mass, of a
|
|
circular form, threw a light which filled the projectile.
|
|
The forms of Barbicane, Nicholl, and Michel Ardan, bathed in
|
|
its white sheets, assumed that livid spectral appearance which
|
|
physicians produce with the fictitious light of alcohol
|
|
impregnated with salt.
|
|
|
|
"By Jove!" cried Michel Ardan, "we are hideous. What is that
|
|
ill-conditioned moon?"
|
|
|
|
"A meteor," replied Barbicane.
|
|
|
|
"A meteor burning in space?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes."
|
|
|
|
This shooting globe suddenly appearing in shadow at a distance
|
|
of at most 200 miles, ought, according to Barbicane, to have a
|
|
diameter of 2,000 yards. It advanced at a speed of about one
|
|
mile and a half per second. It cut the projectile's path and
|
|
must reach it in some minutes. As it approached it grew to
|
|
enormous proportions.
|
|
|
|
Imagine, if possible, the situation of the travelers! It is
|
|
impossible to describe it. In spite of their courage, their
|
|
_sang-froid_, their carelessness of danger, they were mute,
|
|
motionless with stiffened limbs, a prey to frightful terror.
|
|
Their projectile, the course of which they could not alter, was
|
|
rushing straight on this ignited mass, more intense than the
|
|
open mouth of an oven. It seemed as though they were being
|
|
precipitated toward an abyss of fire.
|
|
|
|
Barbicane had seized the hands of his two companions, and all
|
|
three looked through their half-open eyelids upon that asteroid
|
|
heated to a white heat. If thought was not destroyed within
|
|
them, if their brains still worked amid all this awe, they must
|
|
have given themselves up for lost.
|
|
|
|
Two minutes after the sudden appearance of the meteor (to them
|
|
two centuries of anguish) the projectile seemed almost about to
|
|
strike it, when the globe of fire burst like a bomb, but without
|
|
making any noise in that void where sound, which is but the
|
|
agitation of the layers of air, could not be generated.
|
|
|
|
Nicholl uttered a cry, and he and his companions rushed to
|
|
the scuttle. What a sight! What pen can describe it?
|
|
What palette is rich enough in colors to reproduce so magnificent
|
|
a spectacle?
|
|
|
|
It was like the opening of a crater, like the scattering of an
|
|
immense conflagration. Thousands of luminous fragments lit up
|
|
and irradiated space with their fires. Every size, every color,
|
|
was there intermingled. There were rays of yellow and pale
|
|
yellow, red, green, gray-- a crown of fireworks of all colors.
|
|
Of the enormous and much-dreaded globe there remained nothing
|
|
but these fragments carried in all directions, now become
|
|
asteroids in their turn, some flaming like a sword, some
|
|
surrounded by a whitish cloud, and others leaving behind them
|
|
trains of brilliant cosmical dust.
|
|
|
|
These incandescent blocks crossed and struck each other,
|
|
scattering still smaller fragments, some of which struck
|
|
the projectile. Its left scuttle was even cracked by a
|
|
violent shock. It seemed to be floating amid a hail of
|
|
howitzer shells, the smallest of which might destroy
|
|
it instantly.
|
|
|
|
The light which saturated the ether was so wonderfully intense,
|
|
that Michel, drawing Barbicane and Nicholl to his window,
|
|
exclaimed, "The invisible moon, visible at last!"
|
|
|
|
And through a luminous emanation, which lasted some seconds, the
|
|
whole three caught a glimpse of that mysterious disc which the eye
|
|
of man now saw for the first time. What could they distinguish
|
|
at a distance which they could not estimate? Some lengthened
|
|
bands along the disc, real clouds formed in the midst of a very
|
|
confined atmosphere, from which emerged not only all the mountains,
|
|
but also projections of less importance; its circles, its yawning
|
|
craters, as capriciously placed as on the visible surface.
|
|
Then immense spaces, no longer arid plains, but real seas, oceans,
|
|
widely distributed, reflecting on their liquid surface all the
|
|
dazzling magic of the fires of space; and, lastly, on the surface
|
|
of the continents, large dark masses, looking like immense forests
|
|
under the rapid illumination of a brilliance.
|
|
|
|
Was it an illusion, a mistake, an optical illusion? Could they
|
|
give a scientific assent to an observation so superficially obtained?
|
|
Dared they pronounce upon the question of its habitability after
|
|
so slight a glimpse of the invisible disc?
|
|
|
|
But the lightnings in space subsided by degrees; its accidental
|
|
brilliancy died away; the asteroids dispersed in different
|
|
directions and were extinguished in the distance.
|
|
|
|
The ether returned to its accustomed darkness; the stars, eclipsed
|
|
for a moment, again twinkled in the firmament, and the disc, so
|
|
hastily discerned, was again buried in impenetrable night.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XVI
|
|
|
|
|
|
THE SOUTHERN HEMISPHERE
|
|
|
|
|
|
The projectile had just escaped a terrible danger, and a very
|
|
unforseen one. Who would have thought of such an encounter
|
|
with meteors? These erring bodies might create serious perils
|
|
for the travelers. They were to them so many sandbanks upon
|
|
that sea of ether which, less fortunate than sailors, they could
|
|
not escape. But did these adventurers complain of space? No, not
|
|
since nature had given them the splendid sight of a cosmical
|
|
meteor bursting from expansion, since this inimitable firework,
|
|
which no Ruggieri could imitate, had lit up for some seconds the
|
|
invisible glory of the moon. In that flash, continents, seas,
|
|
and forests had become visible to them. Did an atmosphere,
|
|
then, bring to this unknown face its life-giving atoms?
|
|
Questions still insoluble, and forever closed against
|
|
human curiousity!
|
|
|
|
It was then half-past three in the afternoon. The projectile
|
|
was following its curvilinear direction round the moon. Had its
|
|
course again been altered by the meteor? It was to be feared so.
|
|
But the projectile must describe a curve unalterably determined
|
|
by the laws of mechanical reasoning. Barbicane was inclined to
|
|
believe that this curve would be rather a parabola than a hyperbola.
|
|
But admitting the parabola, the projectile must quickly have
|
|
passed through the cone of shadow projected into space opposite
|
|
the sun. This cone, indeed, is very narrow, the angular diameter
|
|
of the moon being so little when compared with the diameter of
|
|
the orb of day; and up to this time the projectile had been
|
|
floating in this deep shadow. Whatever had been its speed
|
|
(and it could not have been insignificant), its period of
|
|
occultation continued. That was evident, but perhaps that would
|
|
not have been the case in a supposedly rigidly parabolical
|
|
trajectory-- a new problem which tormented Barbicane's brain,
|
|
imprisoned as he was in a circle of unknowns which he could
|
|
not unravel.
|
|
|
|
Neither of the travelers thought of taking an instant's repose.
|
|
Each one watched for an unexpected fact, which might throw some
|
|
new light on their uranographic studies. About five o'clock,
|
|
Michel Ardan distributed, under the name of dinner, some pieces
|
|
of bread and cold meat, which were quickly swallowed without
|
|
either of them abandoning their scuttle, the glass of which was
|
|
incessantly encrusted by the condensation of vapor.
|
|
|
|
About forty-five minutes past five in the evening, Nicholl,
|
|
armed with his glass, sighted toward the southern border of the
|
|
moon, and in the direction followed by the projectile, some
|
|
bright points cut upon the dark shield of the sky. They looked
|
|
like a succession of sharp points lengthened into a tremulous line.
|
|
They were very bright. Such appeared the terminal line of the
|
|
moon when in one of her octants.
|
|
|
|
They could not be mistaken. It was no longer a simple meteor.
|
|
This luminous ridge had neither color nor motion. Nor was it a
|
|
volcano in eruption. And Barbicane did not hesitate to
|
|
pronounce upon it.
|
|
|
|
"The sun!" he exclaimed.
|
|
|
|
"What! the sun?" answered Nicholl and Michel Ardan.
|
|
|
|
"Yes, my friends, it is the radiant orb itself lighting up the
|
|
summit of the mountains situated on the southern borders of
|
|
the moon. We are evidently nearing the south pole."
|
|
|
|
"After having passed the north pole," replied Michel. "We have
|
|
made the circuit of our satellite, then?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, my good Michel."
|
|
|
|
"Then, no more hyperbolas, no more parabolas, no more open
|
|
curves to fear?"
|
|
|
|
"No, but a closed curve."
|
|
|
|
"Which is called----"
|
|
|
|
"An ellipse. Instead of losing itself in interplanetary space,
|
|
it is probable that the projectile will describe an elliptical
|
|
orbit around the moon."
|
|
|
|
"Indeed!"
|
|
|
|
"And that it will become _her_ satellite."
|
|
|
|
"Moon of the moon!" cried Michel Ardan.
|
|
|
|
"Only, I would have you observe, my worthy friend," replied
|
|
Barbicane, "that we are none the less lost for that."
|
|
|
|
"Yes, in another manner, and much more pleasantly," answered the
|
|
careless Frenchman with his most amiable smile.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XVII
|
|
|
|
|
|
TYCHO
|
|
|
|
|
|
At six in the evening the projectile passed the south pole at
|
|
less than forty miles off, a distance equal to that already
|
|
reached at the north pole. The elliptical curve was being
|
|
rigidly carried out.
|
|
|
|
At this moment the travelers once more entered the blessed rays
|
|
of the sun. They saw once more those stars which move slowly
|
|
from east to west. The radiant orb was saluted by a triple hurrah.
|
|
With its light it also sent heat, which soon pierced the metal walls.
|
|
The glass resumed its accustomed appearance. The layers of ice
|
|
melted as if by enchantment; and immediately, for economy's sake,
|
|
the gas was put out, the air apparatus alone consuming its
|
|
usual quantity.
|
|
|
|
"Ah!" said Nicholl, "these rays of heat are good. With what
|
|
impatience must the Selenites wait the reappearance of the orb
|
|
of day."
|
|
|
|
"Yes," replied Michel Ardan, "imbibing as it were the brilliant
|
|
ether, light and heat, all life is contained in them."
|
|
|
|
At this moment the bottom of the projectile deviated somewhat
|
|
from the lunar surface, in order to follow the slightly
|
|
lengthened elliptical orbit. From this point, had the earth
|
|
been at the full, Barbicane and his companions could have
|
|
seen it, but immersed in the sun's irradiation she was
|
|
quite invisible. Another spectacle attracted their attention,
|
|
that of the southern part of the moon, brought by the glasses
|
|
to within 450 yards. They did not again leave the scuttles,
|
|
and noted every detail of this fantastical continent.
|
|
|
|
Mounts Doerful and Leibnitz formed two separate groups very near
|
|
the south pole. The first group extended from the pole to the
|
|
eighty-fourth parallel, on the eastern part of the orb; the
|
|
second occupied the eastern border, extending from the 65@ of
|
|
latitude to the pole.
|
|
|
|
On their capriciously formed ridge appeared dazzling sheets, as
|
|
mentioned by Pere Secchi. With more certainty than the
|
|
illustrious Roman astronomer, Barbicane was enabled to recognize
|
|
their nature.
|
|
|
|
"They are snow," he exclaimed.
|
|
|
|
"Snow?" repeated Nicholl.
|
|
|
|
"Yes, Nicholl, snow; the surface of which is deeply frozen.
|
|
See how they reflect the luminous rays. Cooled lava would never
|
|
give out such intense reflection. There must then be water,
|
|
there must be air on the moon. As little as you please, but the
|
|
fact can no longer be contested." No, it could not be. And if
|
|
ever Barbicane should see the earth again, his notes will bear
|
|
witness to this great fact in his selenographic observations.
|
|
|
|
These mountains of Doerful and Leibnitz rose in the midst of
|
|
plains of a medium extent, which were bounded by an indefinite
|
|
succession of circles and annular ramparts. These two chains
|
|
are the only ones met with in this region of circles.
|
|
Comparatively but slightly marked, they throw up here and there
|
|
some sharp points, the highest summit of which attains an
|
|
altitude of 24,600 feet.
|
|
|
|
But the projectile was high above all this landscape, and the
|
|
projections disappeared in the intense brilliancy of the disc.
|
|
And to the eyes of the travelers there reappeared that original
|
|
aspect of the lunar landscapes, raw in tone, without gradation
|
|
of colors, and without degrees of shadow, roughly black and
|
|
white, from the want of diffusion of light.
|
|
|
|
But the sight of this desolate world did not fail to captivate
|
|
them by its very strangeness. They were moving over this region
|
|
as if they had been borne on the breath of some storm, watching
|
|
heights defile under their feet, piercing the cavities with their
|
|
eyes, going down into the rifts, climbing the ramparts, sounding
|
|
these mysterious holes, and leveling all cracks. But no trace
|
|
of vegetation, no appearance of cities; nothing but stratification,
|
|
beds of lava, overflowings polished like immense mirrors,
|
|
reflecting the sun's rays with overpowering brilliancy.
|
|
Nothing belonging to a _living_ world-- everything to a dead
|
|
world, where avalanches, rolling from the summits of the mountains,
|
|
would disperse noiselessly at the bottom of the abyss, retaining
|
|
the motion, but wanting the sound. In any case it was the image
|
|
of death, without its being possible even to say that life had ever
|
|
existed there.
|
|
|
|
Michel Ardan, however, thought he recognized a heap of ruins,
|
|
to which he drew Barbicane's attention. It was about the 80th
|
|
parallel, in 30@ longitude. This heap of stones, rather
|
|
regularly placed, represented a vast fortress, overlooking a
|
|
long rift, which in former days had served as a bed to the
|
|
rivers of prehistorical times. Not far from that, rose to a
|
|
height of 17,400 feet the annular mountain of Short, equal to
|
|
the Asiatic Caucasus. Michel Ardan, with his accustomed ardor,
|
|
maintained "the evidences" of his fortress. Beneath it he
|
|
discerned the dismantled ramparts of a town; here the still
|
|
intact arch of a portico, there two or three columns lying under
|
|
their base; farther on, a succession of arches which must have
|
|
supported the conduit of an aqueduct; in another part the sunken
|
|
pillars of a gigantic bridge, run into the thickest parts of
|
|
the rift. He distinguished all this, but with so much imagination
|
|
in his glance, and through glasses so fantastical, that we must
|
|
mistrust his observation. But who could affirm, who would dare
|
|
to say, that the amiable fellow did not really see that which
|
|
his two companions would not see?
|
|
|
|
Moments were too precious to be sacrificed in idle discussion.
|
|
The selenite city, whether imaginary or not, had already
|
|
disappeared afar off. The distance of the projectile from the
|
|
lunar disc was on the increase, and the details of the soil were
|
|
being lost in a confused jumble. The reliefs, the circles,
|
|
the craters, and the plains alone remained, and still showed
|
|
their boundary lines distinctly. At this moment, to the left,
|
|
lay extended one of the finest circles of lunar orography,
|
|
one of the curiosities of this continent. It was Newton,
|
|
which Barbicane recognized without trouble, by referring to
|
|
the _Mappa Selenographica_.
|
|
|
|
Newton is situated in exactly 77@ south latitude, and 16@
|
|
east longitude. It forms an annular crater, the ramparts of
|
|
which, rising to a height of 21,300 feet, seemed to be impassable.
|
|
|
|
Barbicane made his companions observe that the height of this
|
|
mountain above the surrounding plain was far from equaling the
|
|
depth of its crater. This enormous hole was beyond all
|
|
measurement, and formed a gloomy abyss, the bottom of which the
|
|
sun's rays could never reach. There, according to Humboldt,
|
|
reigns utter darkness, which the light of the sun and the earth
|
|
cannot break. Mythologists could well have made it the mouth of hell.
|
|
|
|
"Newton," said Barbicane, "is the most perfect type of these
|
|
annular mountains, of which the earth possesses no sample.
|
|
They prove that the moon's formation, by means of cooling, is
|
|
due to violent causes; for while, under the pressure of internal
|
|
fires the reliefs rise to considerable height, the depths withdraw
|
|
far below the lunar level."
|
|
|
|
"I do not dispute the fact," replied Michel Ardan.
|
|
|
|
Some minutes after passing Newton, the projectile directly
|
|
overlooked the annular mountains of Moret. It skirted at some
|
|
distance the summits of Blancanus, and at about half-past seven
|
|
in the evening reached the circle of Clavius.
|
|
|
|
This circle, one of the most remarkable of the disc, is situated
|
|
in 58@ south latitude, and 15@ east longitude. Its height is
|
|
estimated at 22,950 feet. The travelers, at a distance of
|
|
twenty-four miles (reduced to four by their glasses) could
|
|
admire this vast crater in its entirety.
|
|
|
|
"Terrestrial volcanoes," said Barbicane, "are but mole-hills
|
|
compared with those of the moon. Measuring the old craters
|
|
formed by the first eruptions of Vesuvius and Etna, we find them
|
|
little more than three miles in breadth. In France the circle
|
|
of Cantal measures six miles across; at Ceyland the circle of
|
|
the island is forty miles, which is considered the largest on
|
|
the globe. What are these diameters against that of Clavius,
|
|
which we overlook at this moment?"
|
|
|
|
"What is its breadth?" asked Nicholl.
|
|
|
|
"It is 150 miles," replied Barbicane. "This circle is certainly
|
|
the most important on the moon, but many others measure 150,
|
|
100, or 75 miles."
|
|
|
|
"Ah! my friends," exclaimed Michel, "can you picture to
|
|
yourselves what this now peaceful orb of night must have been
|
|
when its craters, filled with thunderings, vomited at the same
|
|
time smoke and tongues of flame. What a wonderful spectacle
|
|
then, and now what decay! This moon is nothing more than a thin
|
|
carcase of fireworks, whose squibs, rockets, serpents, and suns,
|
|
after a superb brilliancy, have left but sadly broken cases.
|
|
Who can say the cause, the reason, the motive force of
|
|
these cataclysms?"
|
|
|
|
Barbicane was not listening to Michel Ardan; he was
|
|
contemplating these ramparts of Clavius, formed by large
|
|
mountains spread over several miles. At the bottom of the
|
|
immense cavity burrowed hundreds of small extinguished craters,
|
|
riddling the soil like a colander, and overlooked by a peak
|
|
15,000 feet high.
|
|
|
|
Around the plain appeared desolate. Nothing so arid as these
|
|
reliefs, nothing so sad as these ruins of mountains, and (if we
|
|
may so express ourselves) these fragments of peaks and mountains
|
|
which strewed the soil. The satellite seemed to have burst at
|
|
this spot.
|
|
|
|
The projectile was still advancing, and this movement did
|
|
not subside. Circles, craters, and uprooted mountains succeeded
|
|
each other incessantly. No more plains; no more seas. A never
|
|
ending Switzerland and Norway. And lastly, in the canter of
|
|
this region of crevasses, the most splendid mountain on the
|
|
lunar disc, the dazzling Tycho, in which posterity will ever
|
|
preserve the name of the illustrious Danish astronomer.
|
|
|
|
In observing the full moon in a cloudless sky no one has failed
|
|
to remark this brilliant point of the southern hemisphere.
|
|
Michel Ardan used every metaphor that his imagination could
|
|
supply to designate it by. To him this Tycho was a focus of
|
|
light, a center of irradiation, a crater vomiting rays. It was
|
|
the tire of a brilliant wheel, an _asteria_ enclosing the disc
|
|
with its silver tentacles, an enormous eye filled with flames,
|
|
a glory carved for Pluto's head, a star launched by the
|
|
Creator's hand, and crushed against the face of the moon!
|
|
|
|
Tycho forms such a concentration of light that the inhabitants
|
|
of the earth can see it without glasses, though at a distance
|
|
of 240,000 miles! Imagine, then, its intensity to the eye of
|
|
observers placed at a distance of only fifty miles! Seen through
|
|
this pure ether, its brilliancy was so intolerable that Barbicane
|
|
and his friends were obliged to blacken their glasses with the gas
|
|
smoke before they could bear the splendor. Then silent, scarcely
|
|
uttering an interjection of admiration, they gazed, they contemplated.
|
|
All their feelings, all their impressions, were concentrated in that
|
|
look, as under any violent emotion all life is concentrated at the heart.
|
|
|
|
Tycho belongs to the system of radiating mountains, like
|
|
Aristarchus and Copernicus; but it is of all the most complete
|
|
and decided, showing unquestionably the frightful volcanic
|
|
action to which the formation of the moon is due. Tycho is
|
|
situated in 43@ south latitude, and 12@ east longitude. Its center
|
|
is occupied by a crater fifty miles broad. It assumes a slightly
|
|
elliptical form, and is surrounded by an enclosure of annular
|
|
ramparts, which on the east and west overlook the outer plain from
|
|
a height of 15,000 feet. It is a group of Mont Blancs, placed
|
|
round one common center and crowned by radiating beams.
|
|
|
|
What this incomparable mountain really is, with all the
|
|
projections converging toward it, and the interior excrescences
|
|
of its crater, photography itself could never represent.
|
|
Indeed, it is during the full moon that Tycho is seen in all
|
|
its splendor. Then all shadows disappear, the foreshortening
|
|
of perspective disappears, and all proofs become white-- a
|
|
disagreeable fact: for this strange region would have been
|
|
marvelous if reproduced with photographic exactness. It is
|
|
but a group of hollows, craters, circles, a network of crests;
|
|
then, as far as the eye could see, a whole volcanic network
|
|
cast upon this encrusted soil. One can then understand that
|
|
the bubbles of this central eruption have kept their first form.
|
|
Crystallized by cooling, they have stereotyped that aspect
|
|
which the moon formerly presented when under the Plutonian forces.
|
|
|
|
The distance which separated the travelers from the annular
|
|
summits of Tycho was not so great but that they could catch
|
|
the principal details. Even on the causeway forming the
|
|
fortifications of Tycho, the mountains hanging on to the
|
|
interior and exterior sloping flanks rose in stories like
|
|
gigantic terraces. They appeared to be higher by 300 or 400
|
|
feet to the west than to the east. No system of terrestrial
|
|
encampment could equal these natural fortifications. A town
|
|
built at the bottom of this circular cavity would have been
|
|
utterly inaccessible.
|
|
|
|
Inaccessible and wonderfully extended over this soil covered
|
|
with picturesque projections! Indeed, nature had not left the
|
|
bottom of this crater flat and empty. It possessed its own
|
|
peculiar orography, a mountainous system, making it a world
|
|
in itself. The travelers could distinguish clearly cones,
|
|
central hills, remarkable positions of the soil, naturally
|
|
placed to receive the _chefs-d'oeuvre_ of Selenite architecture.
|
|
There was marked out the place for a temple, here the ground of a
|
|
forum, on this spot the plan of a palace, in another the plateau
|
|
for a citadel; the whole overlooked by a central mountain of
|
|
1,500 feet. A vast circle, in which ancient Rome could have
|
|
been held in its entirety ten times over.
|
|
|
|
"Ah!" exclaimed Michel Ardan, enthusiastic at the sight; "what
|
|
a grand town might be constructed within that ring of mountains!
|
|
A quiet city, a peaceful refuge, beyond all human misery. How calm
|
|
and isolated those misanthropes, those haters of humanity might
|
|
live there, and all who have a distaste for social life!"
|
|
|
|
"All! It would be too small for them," replied Barbicane simply.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XVIII
|
|
|
|
|
|
GRAVE QUESTIONS
|
|
|
|
|
|
But the projectile had passed the _enceinte_ of Tycho, and
|
|
Barbicane and his two companions watched with scrupulous
|
|
attention the brilliant rays which the celebrated mountain shed
|
|
so curiously over the horizon.
|
|
|
|
What was this radiant glory? What geological phenomenon had
|
|
designed these ardent beams? This question occupied Barbicane's mind.
|
|
|
|
Under his eyes ran in all directions luminous furrows, raised at
|
|
the edges and concave in the center, some twelve miles, others
|
|
thirty miles broad. These brilliant trains extended in some
|
|
places to within 600 miles of Tycho, and seemed to cover,
|
|
particularly toward the east, the northeast and the north, the
|
|
half of the southern hemisphere. One of these jets extended as
|
|
far as the circle of Neander, situated on the 40th meridian.
|
|
Another, by a slight curve, furrowed the "Sea of Nectar," breaking
|
|
against the chain of Pyrenees, after a circuit of 800 miles.
|
|
Others, toward the west, covered the "Sea of Clouds" and
|
|
the "Sea of Humors" with a luminous network. What was the
|
|
origin of these sparkling rays, which shone on the plains as
|
|
well as on the reliefs, at whatever height they might be?
|
|
All started from a common center, the crater of Tycho.
|
|
They sprang from him. Herschel attributed their brilliancy to
|
|
currents of lava congealed by the cold; an opinion, however,
|
|
which has not been generally adopted. Other astronomers have
|
|
seen in these inexplicable rays a kind of moraines, rows of
|
|
erratic blocks, which had been thrown up at the period of
|
|
Tycho's formation.
|
|
|
|
"And why not?" asked Nicholl of Barbicane, who was relating and
|
|
rejecting these different opinions.
|
|
|
|
"Because the regularity of these luminous lines, and the
|
|
violence necessary to carry volcanic matter to such distances,
|
|
is inexplicable."
|
|
|
|
"Eh! by Jove!" replied Michel Ardan, "it seems easy enough to me
|
|
to explain the origin of these rays."
|
|
|
|
"Indeed?" said Barbicane.
|
|
|
|
"Indeed," continued Michel. "It is enough to say that it is a
|
|
vast star, similar to that produced by a ball or a stone thrown
|
|
at a square of glass!"
|
|
|
|
"Well!" replied Barbicane, smiling. "And what hand would be
|
|
powerful enough to throw a ball to give such a shock as that?"
|
|
|
|
"The hand is not necessary," answered Nicholl, not at all
|
|
confounded; "and as to the stone, let us suppose it to be a comet."
|
|
|
|
"Ah! those much-abused comets!" exclaimed Barbicane. "My brave
|
|
Michel, your explanation is not bad; but your comet is useless.
|
|
The shock which produced that rent must have some from the
|
|
inside of the star. A violent contraction of the lunar crust,
|
|
while cooling, might suffice to imprint this gigantic star."
|
|
|
|
"A contraction! something like a lunar stomach-ache." said
|
|
Michel Ardan.
|
|
|
|
"Besides," added Barbicane, "this opinion is that of an English
|
|
savant, Nasmyth, and it seems to me to sufficiently explain the
|
|
radiation of these mountains."
|
|
|
|
"That Nasmyth was no fool!" replied Michel.
|
|
|
|
Long did the travelers, whom such a sight could never weary,
|
|
admire the splendors of Tycho. Their projectile, saturated with
|
|
luminous gleams in the double irradiation of sun and moon, must
|
|
have appeared like an incandescent globe. They had passed
|
|
suddenly from excessive cold to intense heat. Nature was thus
|
|
preparing them to become Selenites. Become Selenites! That idea
|
|
brought up once more the question of the habitability of the moon.
|
|
After what they had seen, could the travelers solve it? Would they
|
|
decide for or against it? Michel Ardan persuaded his two friends
|
|
to form an opinion, and asked them directly if they thought that
|
|
men and animals were represented in the lunar world.
|
|
|
|
"I think that we can answer," said Barbicane; "but according to
|
|
my idea the question ought not to be put in that form. I ask it
|
|
to be put differently."
|
|
|
|
"Put it your own way," replied Michel.
|
|
|
|
"Here it is," continued Barbicane. "The problem is a double one,
|
|
and requires a double solution. Is the moon _habitable_? Has the
|
|
moon ever been _inhabitable_?"
|
|
|
|
"Good!" replied Nicholl. "First let us see whether the moon
|
|
is habitable."
|
|
|
|
"To tell the truth, I know nothing about it," answered Michel.
|
|
|
|
"And I answer in the negative," continued Barbicane. "In her
|
|
actual state, with her surrounding atmosphere certainly very
|
|
much reduced, her seas for the most part dried up, her
|
|
insufficient supply of water restricted, vegetation, sudden
|
|
alternations of cold and heat, her days and nights of 354
|
|
hours-- the moon does not seem habitable to me, nor does she
|
|
seem propitious to animal development, nor sufficient for the
|
|
wants of existence as we understand it."
|
|
|
|
"Agreed," replied Nicholl. "But is not the moon habitable for
|
|
creatures differently organized from ourselves?"
|
|
|
|
"That question is more difficult to answer, but I will try; and
|
|
I ask Nicholl if _motion_ appears to him to be a necessary
|
|
result of _life_, whatever be its organization?"
|
|
|
|
"Without a doubt!" answered Nicholl.
|
|
|
|
"Then, my worthy companion, I would answer that we have observed
|
|
the lunar continent at a distance of 500 yards at most, and that
|
|
nothing seemed to us to move on the moon's surface. The presence
|
|
of any kind of life would have been betrayed by its attendant marks,
|
|
such as divers buildings, and even by ruins. And what have
|
|
we seen? Everywhere and always the geological works of nature,
|
|
never the work of man. If, then, there exist representatives
|
|
of the animal kingdom on the moon, they must have fled to those
|
|
unfathomable cavities which the eye cannot reach; which I cannot
|
|
admit, for they must have left traces of their passage on those
|
|
plains which the atmosphere must cover, however slightly raised
|
|
it may be. These traces are nowhere visible. There remains but
|
|
one hypothesis, that of a living race to which motion, which is
|
|
life, is foreign."
|
|
|
|
"One might as well say, living creatures which do not live,"
|
|
replied Michel.
|
|
|
|
"Just so," said Barbicane, "which for us has no meaning."
|
|
|
|
"Then we may form our opinion?" said Michel.
|
|
|
|
"Yes," replied Nicholl.
|
|
|
|
"Very well," continued Michel Ardan, "the Scientific Commission
|
|
assembled in the projectile of the Gun Club, after having
|
|
founded their argument on facts recently observed, decide
|
|
unanimously upon the question of the habitability of the moon--
|
|
`_No!_ the moon is not habitable.'"
|
|
|
|
This decision was consigned by President Barbicane to his
|
|
notebook, where the process of the sitting of the 6th of
|
|
December may be seen.
|
|
|
|
"Now," said Nicholl, "let us attack the second question, an
|
|
indispensable complement of the first. I ask the honorable
|
|
commission, if the moon is not habitable, has she ever been
|
|
inhabited, Citizen Barbicane?"
|
|
|
|
"My friends," replied Barbicane, "I did not undertake this
|
|
journey in order to form an opinion on the past habitability of
|
|
our satellite; but I will add that our personal observations
|
|
only confirm me in this opinion. I believe, indeed I affirm,
|
|
that the moon has been inhabited by a human race organized like
|
|
our own; that she has produced animals anatomically formed like
|
|
the terrestrial animals: but I add that these races, human and
|
|
animal, have had their day, and are now forever extinct!"
|
|
|
|
"Then," asked Michel, "the moon must be older than the earth?"
|
|
|
|
"No!" said Barbicane decidedly, "but a world which has grown old
|
|
quicker, and whose formation and deformation have been more rapid.
|
|
Relatively, the organizing force of matter has been much more
|
|
violent in the interior of the moon than in the interior of the
|
|
terrestrial globe. The actual state of this cracked, twisted,
|
|
and burst disc abundantly proves this. The moon and the earth
|
|
were nothing but gaseous masses originally. These gases have
|
|
passed into a liquid state under different influences, and the
|
|
solid masses have been formed later. But most certainly our
|
|
sphere was still gaseous or liquid, when the moon was solidified
|
|
by cooling, and had become habitable."
|
|
|
|
"I believe it," said Nicholl.
|
|
|
|
"Then," continued Barbicane, "an atmosphere surrounded it, the
|
|
waters contained within this gaseous envelope could not evaporate.
|
|
Under the influence of air, water, light, solar heat, and central
|
|
heat, vegetation took possession of the continents prepared to
|
|
receive it, and certainly life showed itself about this period,
|
|
for nature does not expend herself in vain; and a world so
|
|
wonderfully formed for habitation must necessarily be inhabited."
|
|
|
|
"But," said Nicholl, "many phenomena inherent in our satellite
|
|
might cramp the expansion of the animal and vegetable kingdom.
|
|
For example, its days and nights of 354 hours?"
|
|
|
|
"At the terrestrial poles they last six months," said Michel.
|
|
|
|
"An argument of little value, since the poles are not inhabited."
|
|
|
|
"Let us observe, my friends," continued Barbicane, "that if in
|
|
the actual state of the moon its long nights and long days
|
|
created differences of temperature insupportable to
|
|
organization, it was not so at the historical period of time.
|
|
The atmosphere enveloped the disc with a fluid mantle; vapor
|
|
deposited itself in the shape of clouds; this natural screen
|
|
tempered the ardor of the solar rays, and retained the
|
|
nocturnal radiation. Light, like heat, can diffuse itself in
|
|
the air; hence an equality between the influences which no longer
|
|
exists, now that atmosphere has almost entirely disappeared.
|
|
And now I am going to astonish you."
|
|
|
|
"Astonish us?" said Michel Ardan.
|
|
|
|
"I firmly believe that at the period when the moon was inhabited,
|
|
the nights and days did not last 354 hours!"
|
|
|
|
"And why?" asked Nicholl quickly.
|
|
|
|
"Because most probably then the rotary motion of the moon upon
|
|
her axis was not equal to her revolution, an equality which
|
|
presents each part of her disc during fifteen days to the action
|
|
of the solar rays."
|
|
|
|
"Granted," replied Nicholl, "but why should not these two
|
|
motions have been equal, as they are really so?"
|
|
|
|
"Because that equality has only been determined by
|
|
terrestrial attraction. And who can say that this attraction
|
|
was powerful enough to alter the motion of the moon at that
|
|
period when the earth was still fluid?"
|
|
|
|
"Just so," replied Nicholl; "and who can say that the moon has
|
|
always been a satellite of the earth?"
|
|
|
|
"And who can say," exclaimed Michel Ardan, "that the moon did
|
|
not exist before the earth?"
|
|
|
|
Their imaginations carried them away into an indefinite field
|
|
of hypothesis. Barbicane sought to restrain them.
|
|
|
|
"Those speculations are too high," said he; "problems
|
|
utterly insoluble. Do not let us enter upon them. Let us only
|
|
admit the insufficiency of the primordial attraction; and then
|
|
by the inequality of the two motions of rotation and revolution,
|
|
the days and nights could have succeeded each other on the moon
|
|
as they succeed each other on the earth. Besides, even without
|
|
these conditions, life was possible."
|
|
|
|
"And so," asked Michel Ardan, "humanity has disappeared from
|
|
the moon?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes," replied Barbicane, "after having doubtless remained
|
|
persistently for millions of centuries; by degrees the
|
|
atmosphere becoming rarefied, the disc became uninhabitable, as
|
|
the terrestrial globe will one day become by cooling."
|
|
|
|
"By cooling?"
|
|
|
|
"Certainly," replied Barbicane; "as the internal fires became
|
|
extinguished, and the incandescent matter concentrated itself,
|
|
the lunar crust cooled. By degrees the consequences of these
|
|
phenomena showed themselves in the disappearance of organized
|
|
beings, and by the disappearance of vegetation. Soon the
|
|
atmosphere was rarefied, probably withdrawn by terrestrial
|
|
attraction; then aerial departure of respirable air, and
|
|
disappearance of water by means of evaporation. At this period
|
|
the moon becoming uninhabitable, was no longer inhabited.
|
|
It was a dead world, such as we see it to-day."
|
|
|
|
"And you say that the same fate is in store for the earth?"
|
|
|
|
"Most probably."
|
|
|
|
"But when?"
|
|
|
|
"When the cooling of its crust shall have made it uninhabitable."
|
|
|
|
"And have they calculated the time which our unfortunate sphere
|
|
will take to cool?"
|
|
|
|
"Certainly."
|
|
|
|
"And you know these calculations?"
|
|
|
|
"Perfectly."
|
|
|
|
"But speak, then, my clumsy savant," exclaimed Michel Ardan,
|
|
"for you make me boil with impatience!"
|
|
|
|
"Very well, my good Michel," replied Barbicane quietly; "we know
|
|
what diminution of temperature the earth undergoes in the lapse
|
|
of a century. And according to certain calculations, this mean
|
|
temperature will after a period of 400,000 years, be brought
|
|
down to zero!"
|
|
|
|
"Four hundred thousand years!" exclaimed Michel. "Ah! I
|
|
breathe again. Really I was frightened to hear you; I imagined
|
|
that we had not more than 50,000 years to live."
|
|
|
|
Barbicane and Nicholl could not help laughing at their
|
|
companion's uneasiness. Then Nicholl, who wished to end the
|
|
discussion, put the second question, which had just been
|
|
considered again.
|
|
|
|
"Has the moon been inhabited?" he asked.
|
|
|
|
The answer was unanimously in the affirmative. But during this
|
|
discussion, fruitful in somewhat hazardous theories, the
|
|
projectile was rapidly leaving the moon: the lineaments faded
|
|
away from the travelers' eyes, mountains were confused in the
|
|
distance; and of all the wonderful, strange, and fantastical
|
|
form of the earth's satellite, there soon remained nothing but
|
|
the imperishable remembrance.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XIX
|
|
|
|
|
|
A STRUGGLE AGAINST THE IMPOSSIBLE
|
|
|
|
|
|
For a long time Barbicane and his companions looked silently and
|
|
sadly upon that world which they had only seen from a distance,
|
|
as Moses saw the land of Canaan, and which they were leaving
|
|
without a possibility of ever returning to it. The projectile's
|
|
position with regard to the moon had altered, and the base was
|
|
now turned to the earth.
|
|
|
|
This change, which Barbicane verified, did not fail to surprise them.
|
|
If the projectile was to gravitate round the satellite in an
|
|
elliptical orbit, why was not its heaviest part turned toward it,
|
|
as the moon turns hers to the earth? That was a difficult point.
|
|
|
|
In watching the course of the projectile they could see that on
|
|
leaving the moon it followed a course analogous to that traced
|
|
in approaching her. It was describing a very long ellipse,
|
|
which would most likely extend to the point of equal attraction,
|
|
where the influences of the earth and its satellite are neutralized.
|
|
|
|
Such was the conclusion which Barbicane very justly drew from
|
|
facts already observed, a conviction which his two friends
|
|
shared with him.
|
|
|
|
"And when arrived at this dead point, what will become of us?"
|
|
asked Michel Ardan.
|
|
|
|
"We don't know," replied Barbicane.
|
|
|
|
"But one can draw some hypotheses, I suppose?"
|
|
|
|
"Two," answered Barbicane; "either the projectile's speed will
|
|
be insufficient, and it will remain forever immovable on this
|
|
line of double attraction----"
|
|
|
|
"I prefer the other hypothesis, whatever it may be," interrupted Michel.
|
|
|
|
"Or," continued Barbicane, "its speed will be sufficient, and it
|
|
will continue its elliptical course, to gravitate forever around
|
|
the orb of night."
|
|
|
|
"A revolution not at all consoling," said Michel, "to pass to
|
|
the state of humble servants to a moon whom we are accustomed to
|
|
look upon as our own handmaid. So that is the fate in store for us?"
|
|
|
|
Neither Barbicane nor Nicholl answered.
|
|
|
|
"You do not answer," continued Michel impatiently.
|
|
|
|
"There is nothing to answer," said Nicholl.
|
|
|
|
"Is there nothing to try?"
|
|
|
|
"No," answered Barbicane. "Do you pretend to fight against
|
|
the impossible?"
|
|
|
|
"Why not? Do one Frenchman and two Americans shrink from such
|
|
a word?"
|
|
|
|
"But what would you do?"
|
|
|
|
"Subdue this motion which is bearing us away."
|
|
|
|
"Subdue it?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes," continued Michel, getting animated, "or else alter it,
|
|
and employ it to the accomplishment of our own ends."
|
|
|
|
"And how?"
|
|
|
|
"That is your affair. If artillerymen are not masters of their
|
|
projectile they are not artillerymen. If the projectile is to
|
|
command the gunner, we had better ram the gunner into the gun.
|
|
My faith! fine savants! who do not know what is to become of us
|
|
after inducing me----"
|
|
|
|
"Inducing you!" cried Barbicane and Nicholl. "Inducing you!
|
|
What do you mean by that?"
|
|
|
|
"No recrimination," said Michel. "I do not complain, the trip
|
|
has pleased me, and the projectile agrees with me; but let us do
|
|
all that is humanly possible to do the fall somewhere, even if
|
|
only on the moon."
|
|
|
|
"We ask no better, my worthy Michel," replied Barbicane, "but
|
|
means fail us."
|
|
|
|
"We cannot alter the motion of the projectile?"
|
|
|
|
"No."
|
|
|
|
"Nor diminish its speed?"
|
|
|
|
"No."
|
|
|
|
"Not even by lightening it, as they lighten an overloaded vessel?"
|
|
|
|
"What would you throw out?" said Nicholl. "We have no ballast
|
|
on board; and indeed it seems to me that if lightened it would
|
|
go much quicker."
|
|
|
|
"Slower."
|
|
|
|
"Quicker."
|
|
|
|
"Neither slower nor quicker," said Barbicane, wishing to make
|
|
his two friends agree; "for we float is space, and must no
|
|
longer consider specific weight."
|
|
|
|
"Very well," cried Michel Ardan in a decided voice; "then their
|
|
remains but one thing to do."
|
|
|
|
"What is it?" asked Nicholl.
|
|
|
|
"Breakfast," answered the cool, audacious Frenchman, who always
|
|
brought up this solution at the most difficult juncture.
|
|
|
|
In any case, if this operation had no influence on the
|
|
projectile's course, it could at least be tried without
|
|
inconvenience, and even with success from a stomachic point
|
|
of view. Certainly Michel had none but good ideas.
|
|
|
|
They breakfasted then at two in the morning; the hour mattered little.
|
|
Michel served his usual repast, crowned by a glorious bottle drawn
|
|
from his private cellar. If ideas did not crowd on their brains,
|
|
we must despair of the Chambertin of 1853. The repast finished,
|
|
observation began again. Around the projectile, at an invariable
|
|
distance, were the objects which had been thrown out. Evidently, in
|
|
its translatory motion round the moon, it had not passed through
|
|
any atmosphere, for the specific weight of these different objects
|
|
would have checked their relative speed.
|
|
|
|
On the side of the terrestrial sphere nothing was to be seen.
|
|
The earth was but a day old, having been new the night before at
|
|
twelve; and two days must elapse before its crescent, freed from
|
|
the solar rays, would serve as a clock to the Selenites, as in
|
|
its rotary movement each of its points after twenty-four hours
|
|
repasses the same lunar meridian.
|
|
|
|
On the moon's side the sight was different; the orb shone in all
|
|
her splendor amid innumerable constellations, whose purity could
|
|
not be troubled by her rays. On the disc, the plains were
|
|
already returning to the dark tint which is seen from the earth.
|
|
The other part of the nimbus remained brilliant, and in the midst
|
|
of this general brilliancy Tycho shone prominently like a sun.
|
|
|
|
Barbicane had no means of estimating the projectile's speed, but
|
|
reasoning showed that it must uniformly decrease, according to
|
|
the laws of mechanical reasoning. Having admitted that the
|
|
projectile was describing an orbit around the moon, this orbit
|
|
must necessarily be elliptical; science proves that it must be so.
|
|
No motive body circulating round an attracting body fails in
|
|
this law. Every orbit described in space is elliptical. And why
|
|
should the projectile of the Gun Club escape this natural arrangement?
|
|
In elliptical orbits, the attracting body always occupies one of
|
|
the foci; so that at one moment the satellite is nearer, and at
|
|
another farther from the orb around which it gravitates. When the
|
|
earth is nearest the sun she is in her perihelion; and in her
|
|
aphelion at the farthest point. Speaking of the moon, she is
|
|
nearest to the earth in her perigee, and farthest from it in
|
|
her apogee. To use analogous expressions, with which the
|
|
astronomers' language is enriched, if the projectile remains
|
|
as a satellite of the moon, we must say that it is in its
|
|
"aposelene" at its farthest point, and in its "periselene" at
|
|
its nearest. In the latter case, the projectile would attain
|
|
its maximum of speed; and in the former its minimum. It was
|
|
evidently moving toward its aposelenitical point; and Barbicane
|
|
had reason to think that its speed would decrease up to this
|
|
point, and then increase by degrees as it neared the moon.
|
|
This speed would even become _nil_, if this point joined that of
|
|
equal attraction. Barbicane studied the consequences of these
|
|
different situations, and thinking what inference he could draw
|
|
from them, when he was roughly disturbed by a cry from Michel Ardan.
|
|
|
|
"By Jove!" he exclaimed, "I must admit we are down-right simpletons!"
|
|
|
|
"I do not say we are not," replied Barbicane; "but why?"
|
|
|
|
"Because we have a very simple means of checking this speed
|
|
which is bearing us from the moon, and we do not use it!"
|
|
|
|
"And what is the means?"
|
|
|
|
"To use the recoil contained in our rockets."
|
|
|
|
"Done!" said Nicholl.
|
|
|
|
"We have not used this force yet," said Barbicane, "it is true,
|
|
but we will do so."
|
|
|
|
"When?" asked Michel.
|
|
|
|
"When the time comes. Observe, my friends, that in the position
|
|
occupied by the projectile, an oblique position with regard to
|
|
the lunar disc, our rockets, in slightly altering its direction,
|
|
might turn it from the moon instead of drawing it nearer?"
|
|
|
|
"Just so," replied Michel.
|
|
|
|
"Let us wait, then. By some inexplicable influence, the
|
|
projectile is turning its base toward the earth. It is probable
|
|
that at the point of equal attraction, its conical cap will be
|
|
directed rigidly toward the moon; at that moment we may hope
|
|
that its speed will be _nil_; then will be the moment to act,
|
|
and with the influence of our rockets we may perhaps
|
|
provoke a fall directly on the surface of the lunar disc."
|
|
|
|
"Bravo!" said Michel. "What we did not do, what we could not do
|
|
on our first passage at the dead point, because the projectile
|
|
was then endowed with too great a speed."
|
|
|
|
"Very well reasoned," said Nicholl.
|
|
|
|
"Let us wait patiently," continued Barbicane. "Putting every
|
|
chance on our side, and after having so much despaired, I may
|
|
say I think we shall gain our end."
|
|
|
|
This conclusion was a signal for Michel Ardan's hips and hurrahs.
|
|
And none of the audacious boobies remembered the question that
|
|
they themselves had solved in the negative. No! the moon is not
|
|
inhabited; no! the moon is probably not habitable. And yet they
|
|
were going to try everything to reach her.
|
|
|
|
One single question remained to be solved. At what precise
|
|
moment the projectile would reach the point of equal attraction,
|
|
on which the travelers must play their last card. In order to
|
|
calculate this to within a few seconds, Barbicane had only to
|
|
refer to his notes, and to reckon the different heights taken on
|
|
the lunar parallels. Thus the time necessary to travel over the
|
|
distance between the dead point and the south pole would be equal
|
|
to the distance separating the north pole from the dead point.
|
|
The hours representing the time traveled over were carefully
|
|
noted, and the calculation was easy. Barbicane found that this
|
|
point would be reached at one in the morning on the night of the
|
|
7th-8th of December. So that, if nothing interfered with its
|
|
course, it would reach the given point in twenty-two hours.
|
|
|
|
The rockets had primarily been placed to check the fall of the
|
|
projectile upon the moon, and now they were going to employ them
|
|
for a directly contrary purpose. In any case they were ready,
|
|
and they had only to wait for the moment to set fire to them.
|
|
|
|
"Since there is nothing else to be done," said Nicholl, "I make
|
|
a proposition."
|
|
|
|
"What is it?" asked Barbicane.
|
|
|
|
"I propose to go to sleep."
|
|
|
|
"What a motion!" exclaimed Michel Ardan.
|
|
|
|
"It is forty hours since we closed our eyes," said Nicholl.
|
|
"Some hours of sleep will restore our strength."
|
|
|
|
"Never," interrupted Michel.
|
|
|
|
"Well," continued Nicholl, "every one to his taste; I shall go
|
|
to sleep." And stretching himself on the divan, he soon snored
|
|
like a forty-eight pounder.
|
|
|
|
"That Nicholl has a good deal of sense," said Barbicane;
|
|
"presently I shall follow his example." Some moments after his
|
|
continued bass supported the captain's baritone.
|
|
|
|
"Certainly," said Michel Ardan, finding himself alone, "these
|
|
practical people have sometimes most opportune ideas."
|
|
|
|
And with his long legs stretched out, and his great arms folded
|
|
under his head, Michel slept in his turn.
|
|
|
|
But this sleep could be neither peaceful nor lasting, the minds
|
|
of these three men were too much occupied, and some hours after,
|
|
about seven in the morning, all three were on foot at the same instant.
|
|
|
|
The projectile was still leaving the moon, and turning its
|
|
conical part more and more toward her.
|
|
|
|
An explicable phenomenon, but one which happily served
|
|
Barbicane's ends.
|
|
|
|
Seventeen hours more, and the moment for action would have arrived.
|
|
|
|
The day seemed long. However bold the travelers might be, they
|
|
were greatly impressed by the approach of that moment which
|
|
would decide all-- either precipitate their fall on to the moon,
|
|
or forever chain them in an immutable orbit. They counted the
|
|
hours as they passed too slow for their wish; Barbicane and
|
|
Nicholl were obstinately plunged in their calculations, Michel
|
|
going and coming between the narrow walls, and watching that
|
|
impassive moon with a longing eye.
|
|
|
|
At times recollections of the earth crossed their minds. They saw
|
|
once more their friends of the Gun Club, and the dearest of all,
|
|
J. T. Maston. At that moment, the honorable secretary must be
|
|
filling his post on the Rocky Mountains. If he could see the
|
|
projectile through the glass of his gigantic telescope, what
|
|
would he think? After seeing it disappear behind the moon's
|
|
south pole, he would see them reappear by the north pole!
|
|
They must therefore be a satellite of a satellite! Had J. T.
|
|
Maston given this unexpected news to the world? Was this the
|
|
_denouement_ of this great enterprise?
|
|
|
|
But the day passed without incident. The terrestrial
|
|
midnight arrived. The 8th of December was beginning.
|
|
One hour more, and the point of equal attraction would
|
|
be reached. What speed would then animate the projectile?
|
|
They could not estimate it. But no error could vitiate
|
|
Barbicane's calculations. At one in the morning this speed
|
|
ought to be and would be _nil_.
|
|
|
|
Besides, another phenomenon would mark the projectile's
|
|
stopping-point on the neutral line. At that spot the two
|
|
attractions, lunar and terrestrial, would be annulled.
|
|
Objects would "weigh" no more. This singular fact, which had
|
|
surprised Barbicane and his companions so much in going, would
|
|
be repeated on their return under the very same conditions.
|
|
At this precise moment they must act.
|
|
|
|
Already the projectile's conical top was sensibly turned toward
|
|
the lunar disc, presented in such a way as to utilize the whole
|
|
of the recoil produced by the pressure of the rocket apparatus.
|
|
The chances were in favor of the travelers. If its speed was
|
|
utterly annulled on this dead point, a decided movement toward
|
|
the moon would suffice, however slight, to determine its fall.
|
|
|
|
"Five minutes to one," said Nicholl.
|
|
|
|
"All is ready," replied Michel Ardan, directing a lighted match
|
|
to the flame of the gas.
|
|
|
|
"Wait!" said Barbicane, holding his chronometer in his hand.
|
|
|
|
At that moment weight had no effect. The travelers felt in
|
|
themselves the entire disappearance of it. They were very near
|
|
the neutral point, if they did not touch it.
|
|
|
|
"One o'clock," said Barbicane.
|
|
|
|
Michel Ardan applied the lighted match to a train in
|
|
communication with the rockets. No detonation was heard in
|
|
the inside, for there was no air. But, through the scuttles,
|
|
Barbicane saw a prolonged smoke, the flames of which were
|
|
immediately extinguished.
|
|
|
|
The projectile sustained a certain shock, which was sensibly
|
|
felt in the interior.
|
|
|
|
The three friends looked and listened without speaking, and
|
|
scarcely breathing. One might have heard the beating of their
|
|
hearts amid this perfect silence.
|
|
|
|
"Are we falling?" asked Michel Ardan, at length.
|
|
|
|
"No," said Nicholl, "since the bottom of the projectile is not
|
|
turning to the lunar disc!"
|
|
|
|
At this moment, Barbicane, quitting his scuttle, turned to his
|
|
two companions. He was frightfully pale, his forehead wrinkled,
|
|
and his lips contracted.
|
|
|
|
"We are falling!" said he.
|
|
|
|
"Ah!" cried Michel Ardan, "on to the moon?"
|
|
|
|
"On to the earth!"
|
|
|
|
"The devil!" exclaimed Michel Ardan, adding philosophically,
|
|
"well, when we came into this projectile we were very doubtful
|
|
as to the ease with which we should get out of it!"
|
|
|
|
And now this fearful fall had begun. The speed retained had
|
|
borne the projectile beyond the dead point. The explosion of
|
|
the rockets could not divert its course. This speed in going
|
|
had carried it over the neutral line, and in returning had done
|
|
the same thing. The laws of physics condemned it _to pass
|
|
through every point which it had already gone through_. It was
|
|
a terrible fall, from a height of 160,000 miles, and no springs
|
|
to break it. According to the laws of gunnery, the projectile
|
|
must strike the earth with a speed equal to that with which it
|
|
left the mouth of the Columbiad, a speed of 16,000 yards in the
|
|
last second.
|
|
|
|
But to give some figures of comparison, it has been reckoned
|
|
that an object thrown from the top of the towers of Notre Dame,
|
|
the height of which is only 200 feet, will arrive on the
|
|
pavement at a speed of 240 miles per hour. Here the projectile
|
|
must strike the earth with a speed of 115,200 miles per hour.
|
|
|
|
"We are lost!" said Michel coolly.
|
|
|
|
"Very well! if we die," answered Barbicane, with a sort of
|
|
religious enthusiasm, "the results of our travels will be
|
|
magnificently spread. It is His own secret that God will
|
|
tell us! In the other life the soul will want to know nothing,
|
|
either of machines or engines! It will be identified with
|
|
eternal wisdom!"
|
|
|
|
"In fact," interrupted Michel Ardan, "the whole of the other
|
|
world may well console us for the loss of that inferior orb
|
|
called the moon!"
|
|
|
|
Barbicane crossed his arms on his breast, with a motion of
|
|
sublime resignation, saying at the same time:
|
|
|
|
"The will of heaven be done!"
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XX
|
|
|
|
|
|
THE SOUNDINGS OF THE SUSQUEHANNA
|
|
|
|
|
|
Well, lieutenant, and our soundings?"
|
|
|
|
"I think, sir, that the operation is nearing its completion,"
|
|
replied Lieutenant Bronsfield. "But who would have thought of
|
|
finding such a depth so near in shore, and only 200 miles from
|
|
the American coast?"
|
|
|
|
"Certainly, Bronsfield, there is a great depression," said
|
|
Captain Blomsberry. "In this spot there is a submarine valley
|
|
worn by Humboldt's current, which skirts the coast of America as
|
|
far as the Straits of Magellan."
|
|
|
|
"These great depths," continued the lieutenant, "are not
|
|
favorable for laying telegraphic cables. A level bottom, like
|
|
that supporting the American cable between Valentia and
|
|
Newfoundland, is much better."
|
|
|
|
"I agree with you, Bronsfield. With your permission,
|
|
lieutenant, where are we now?"
|
|
|
|
"Sir, at this moment we have 3,508 fathoms of line out, and the
|
|
ball which draws the sounding lead has not yet touched the
|
|
bottom; for if so, it would have come up of itself."
|
|
|
|
"Brook's apparatus is very ingenious," said Captain Blomsberry;
|
|
"it gives us very exact soundings."
|
|
|
|
"Touch!" cried at this moment one of the men at the forewheel,
|
|
who was superintending the operation.
|
|
|
|
The captain and the lieutenant mounted the quarterdeck.
|
|
|
|
"What depth have we?" asked the captain.
|
|
|
|
"Three thousand six hundred and twenty-seven fathoms," replied
|
|
the lieutenant, entering it in his notebook.
|
|
|
|
"Well, Bronsfield," said the captain, "I will take down
|
|
the result. Now haul in the sounding line. It will be the
|
|
work of some hours. In that time the engineer can light the
|
|
furnaces, and we shall be ready to start as soon as you
|
|
have finished. It is ten o'clock, and with your permission,
|
|
lieutenant, I will turn in."
|
|
|
|
"Do so, sir; do so!" replied the lieutenant obligingly.
|
|
|
|
The captain of the Susquehanna, as brave a man as need be, and
|
|
the humble servant of his officers, returned to his cabin, took
|
|
a brandy-grog, which earned for the steward no end of praise,
|
|
and turned in, not without having complimented his servant upon
|
|
his making beds, and slept a peaceful sleep.
|
|
|
|
It was then ten at night. The eleventh day of the month of
|
|
December was drawing to a close in a magnificent night.
|
|
|
|
The Susquehanna, a corvette of 500 horse-power, of the United
|
|
States navy, was occupied in taking soundings in the Pacific
|
|
Ocean about 200 miles off the American coast, following that
|
|
long peninsula which stretches down the coast of Mexico.
|
|
|
|
The wind had dropped by degrees. There was no disturbance in
|
|
the air. The pennant hung motionless from the maintop-gallant-
|
|
mast truck.
|
|
|
|
Captain Jonathan Blomsberry (cousin-german of Colonel
|
|
Blomsberry, one of the most ardent supporters of the Gun Club,
|
|
who had married an aunt of the captain and daughter of an
|
|
honorable Kentucky merchant)-- Captain Blomsberry could not have
|
|
wished for finer weather in which to bring to a close his
|
|
delicate operations of sounding. His corvette had not even felt
|
|
the great tempest, which by sweeping away the groups of clouds
|
|
on the Rocky Mountains, had allowed them to observe the course
|
|
of the famous projectile.
|
|
|
|
Everything went well, and with all the fervor of a Presbyterian,
|
|
he did not forget to thank heaven for it. The series of
|
|
soundings taken by the Susquehanna, had for its aim the finding
|
|
of a favorable spot for the laying of a submarine cable to
|
|
connect the Hawaiian Islands with the coast of America.
|
|
|
|
It was a great undertaking, due to the instigation of a
|
|
powerful company. Its managing director, the intelligent Cyrus
|
|
Field, purposed even covering all the islands of Oceanica with
|
|
a vast electrical network, an immense enterprise, and one worthy
|
|
of American genius.
|
|
|
|
To the corvette Susquehanna had been confided the first
|
|
operations of sounding. It was on the night of the 11th-12th of
|
|
December, she was in exactly 27@ 7' north latitude, and 41@ 37'
|
|
west longitude, on the meridian of Washington.
|
|
|
|
The moon, then in her last quarter, was beginning to rise above
|
|
the horizon.
|
|
|
|
After the departure of Captain Blomsberry, the lieutenant and
|
|
some officers were standing together on the poop. On the
|
|
appearance of the moon, their thoughts turned to that orb which
|
|
the eyes of a whole hemisphere were contemplating. The best
|
|
naval glasses could not have discovered the projectile wandering
|
|
around its hemisphere, and yet all were pointed toward that
|
|
brilliant disc which millions of eyes were looking at at the
|
|
same moment.
|
|
|
|
"They have been gone ten days," said Lieutenant Bronsfield
|
|
at last. "What has become of them?"
|
|
|
|
"They have arrived, lieutenant," exclaimed a young midshipman,
|
|
"and they are doing what all travelers do when they arrive in a
|
|
new country, taking a walk!"
|
|
|
|
"Oh! I am sure of that, if you tell me so, my young friend,"
|
|
said Lieutenant Bronsfield, smiling.
|
|
|
|
"But," continued another officer, "their arrival cannot
|
|
be doubted. The projectile was to reach the moon when full
|
|
on the 5th at midnight. We are now at the 11th of December, which
|
|
makes six days. And in six times twenty-four hours, without
|
|
darkness, one would have time to settle comfortably. I fancy I
|
|
see my brave countrymen encamped at the bottom of some valley,
|
|
on the borders of a Selenite stream, near a projectile half-buried
|
|
by its fall amid volcanic rubbish, Captain Nicholl beginning his
|
|
leveling operations, President Barbicane writing out his notes,
|
|
and Michel Ardan embalming the lunar solitudes with the perfume
|
|
of his----"
|
|
|
|
"Yes! it must be so, it is so!" exclaimed the young midshipman,
|
|
worked up to a pitch of enthusiasm by this ideal description of
|
|
his superior officer.
|
|
|
|
"I should like to believe it," replied the lieutenant, who was
|
|
quite unmoved. "Unfortunately direct news from the lunar world
|
|
is still wanting."
|
|
|
|
"Beg pardon, lieutenant," said the midshipman, "but cannot
|
|
President Barbicane write?"
|
|
|
|
A burst of laughter greeted this answer.
|
|
|
|
"No letters!" continued the young man quickly. "The postal
|
|
administration has something to see to there."
|
|
|
|
"Might it not be the telegraphic service that is at fault?"
|
|
asked one of the officers ironically.
|
|
|
|
"Not necessarily," replied the midshipman, not at all confused.
|
|
"But it is very easy to set up a graphic communication with
|
|
the earth."
|
|
|
|
"And how?"
|
|
|
|
"By means of the telescope at Long's Peak. You know it brings
|
|
the moon to within four miles of the Rocky Mountains, and that
|
|
it shows objects on its surface of only nine feet in diameter.
|
|
Very well; let our industrious friends construct a giant
|
|
alphabet; let them write words three fathoms long, and sentences
|
|
three miles long, and then they can send us news of themselves."
|
|
|
|
The young midshipman, who had a certain amount of imagination,
|
|
was loudly applauded; Lieutenant Bronsfield allowing that the
|
|
idea was possible, but observing that if by these means they
|
|
could receive news from the lunar world they could not send any
|
|
from the terrestrial, unless the Selenites had instruments fit
|
|
for taking distant observations at their disposal.
|
|
|
|
"Evidently," said one of the officers; "but what has become of
|
|
the travelers? what they have done, what they have seen, that
|
|
above all must interest us. Besides, if the experiment has
|
|
succeeded (which I do not doubt), they will try it again.
|
|
The Columbiad is still sunk in the soil of Florida. It is now
|
|
only a question of powder and shot; and every time the moon is
|
|
at her zenith a cargo of visitors may be sent to her."
|
|
|
|
"It is clear," replied Lieutenant Bronsfield, "that J. T. Maston
|
|
will one day join his friends."
|
|
|
|
"If he will have me," cried the midshipman, "I am ready!"
|
|
|
|
"Oh! volunteers will not be wanting," answered Bronsfield; "and
|
|
if it were allowed, half of the earth's inhabitants would
|
|
emigrate to the moon!"
|
|
|
|
This conversation between the officers of the Susquehanna was
|
|
kept up until nearly one in the morning. We cannot say what
|
|
blundering systems were broached, what inconsistent theories
|
|
advanced by these bold spirits. Since Barbicane's attempt,
|
|
nothing seemed impossible to the Americans. They had already
|
|
designed an expedition, not only of savants, but of a whole
|
|
colony toward the Selenite borders, and a complete army,
|
|
consisting of infantry, artillery, and cavalry, to conquer the
|
|
lunar world.
|
|
|
|
At one in the morning, the hauling in of the sounding-line was
|
|
not yet completed; 1,670 fathoms were still out, which would
|
|
entail some hours' work. According to the commander's orders,
|
|
the fires had been lighted, and steam was being got up.
|
|
The Susquehanna could have started that very instant.
|
|
|
|
At that moment (it was seventeen minutes past one in the
|
|
morning) Lieutenant Bronsfield was preparing to leave the watch
|
|
and return to his cabin, when his attention was attracted by a
|
|
distant hissing noise. His comrades and himself first thought
|
|
that this hissing was caused by the letting off of steam; but
|
|
lifting their heads, they found that the noise was produced in
|
|
the highest regions of the air. They had not time to question
|
|
each other before the hissing became frightfully intense, and
|
|
suddenly there appeared to their dazzled eyes an enormous
|
|
meteor, ignited by the rapidity of its course and its friction
|
|
through the atmospheric strata.
|
|
|
|
This fiery mass grew larger to their eyes, and fell, with
|
|
the noise of thunder, upon the bowsprit, which it smashed close
|
|
to the stem, and buried itself in the waves with a deafening roar!
|
|
|
|
A few feet nearer, and the Susquehanna would have foundered with
|
|
all on board!
|
|
|
|
At this instant Captain Blomsberry appeared, half-dressed, and
|
|
rushing on to the forecastle-deck, whither all the officers had
|
|
hurried, exclaimed, "With your permission, gentlemen, what
|
|
has happened?"
|
|
|
|
And the midshipman, making himself as it were the echo of the
|
|
body, cried, "Commander, it is `they' come back again!"
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XXI
|
|
|
|
|
|
J. T. MASTON RECALLED
|
|
|
|
|
|
"It is `they' come back again!" the young midshipman had said,
|
|
and every one had understood him. No one doubted but that the
|
|
meteor was the projectile of the Gun Club. As to the travelers
|
|
which it enclosed, opinions were divided regarding their fate.
|
|
|
|
"They are dead!" said one.
|
|
|
|
"They are alive!" said another; "the crater is deep, and the
|
|
shock was deadened."
|
|
|
|
"But they must have wanted air," continued a third speaker;
|
|
"they must have died of suffocation."
|
|
|
|
"Burned!" replied a fourth; "the projectile was nothing but an
|
|
incandescent mass as it crossed the atmosphere."
|
|
|
|
"What does it matter!" they exclaimed unanimously; "living or
|
|
dead, we must pull them out!"
|
|
|
|
But Captain Blomsberry had assembled his officers, and "with
|
|
their permission," was holding a council. They must decide upon
|
|
something to be done immediately. The more hasty ones were for
|
|
fishing up the projectile. A difficult operation, though not an
|
|
impossible one. But the corvette had no proper machinery, which
|
|
must be both fixed and powerful; so it was resolved that they
|
|
should put in at the nearest port, and give information to the
|
|
Gun Club of the projectile's fall.
|
|
|
|
This determination was unanimous. The choice of the port had
|
|
to be discussed. The neighboring coast had no anchorage on
|
|
27@ latitude. Higher up, above the peninsula of Monterey, stands
|
|
the important town from which it takes its name; but, seated on
|
|
the borders of a perfect desert, it was not connected with the
|
|
interior by a network of telegraphic wires, and electricity
|
|
alone could spread these important news fast enough.
|
|
|
|
Some degrees above opened the bay of San Francisco. Through the
|
|
capital of the gold country communication would be easy with the
|
|
heart of the Union. And in less than two days the Susquehanna,
|
|
by putting on high pressure, could arrive in that port. She must
|
|
therefore start at once.
|
|
|
|
The fires were made up; they could set off immediately.
|
|
Two thousand fathoms of line were still out, which Captain
|
|
Blomsberry, not wishing to lose precious time in hauling in,
|
|
resolved to cut.
|
|
|
|
"we will fasten the end to a buoy," said he, "and that buoy will
|
|
show us the exact spot where the projectile fell."
|
|
|
|
"Besides," replied Lieutenant Bronsfield, "we have our situation
|
|
exact-- 27@ 7' north latitude and 41@ 37' west longitude."
|
|
|
|
"Well, Mr. Bronsfield," replied the captain, "now, with your
|
|
permission, we will have the line cut."
|
|
|
|
A strong buoy, strengthened by a couple of spars, was thrown
|
|
into the ocean. The end of the rope was carefully lashed to it;
|
|
and, left solely to the rise and fall of the billows, the buoy
|
|
would not sensibly deviate from the spot.
|
|
|
|
At this moment the engineer sent to inform the captain that
|
|
steam was up and they could start, for which agreeable
|
|
communication the captain thanked him. The course was then
|
|
given north-northeast, and the corvette, wearing, steered at
|
|
full steam direct for San Francisco. It was three in the morning.
|
|
|
|
Four hundred and fifty miles to cross; it was nothing for a good
|
|
vessel like the Susquehanna. In thirty-six hours she had covered
|
|
that distance; and on the 14th of December, at twenty-seven
|
|
minutes past one at night, she entered the bay of San Francisco.
|
|
|
|
At the sight of a ship of the national navy arriving at full speed,
|
|
with her bowsprit broken, public curiosity was greatly roused.
|
|
A dense crowd soon assembled on the quay, waiting for them
|
|
to disembark.
|
|
|
|
After casting anchor, Captain Blomsberry and Lieutenant
|
|
Bronsfield entered an eight-pared cutter, which soon brought
|
|
them to land.
|
|
|
|
They jumped on to the quay.
|
|
|
|
"The telegraph?" they asked, without answering one of the
|
|
thousand questions addressed to them.
|
|
|
|
The officer of the port conducted them to the telegraph office
|
|
through a concourse of spectators. Blomsberry and Bronsfield
|
|
entered, while the crowd crushed each other at the door.
|
|
|
|
Some minutes later a fourfold telegram was sent out--the first
|
|
to the Naval Secretary at Washington; the second to the
|
|
vice-president of the Gun Club, Baltimore; the third to the Hon.
|
|
J. T. Maston, Long's Peak, Rocky Mountains; and the fourth to
|
|
the sub-director of the Cambridge Observatory, Massachusetts.
|
|
|
|
It was worded as follows:
|
|
|
|
|
|
In 20@ 7' north latitude, and 41@ 37' west longitude, on the
|
|
12th of December, at seventeen minutes past one in the morning,
|
|
the projectile of the Columbiad fell into the Pacific.
|
|
Send instructions.-- BLOMSBERRY, Commander Susquehanna.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Five minutes afterward the whole town of San Francisco learned
|
|
the news. Before six in the evening the different States of the
|
|
Union had heard the great catastrophe; and after midnight, by
|
|
the cable, the whole of Europe knew the result of the great
|
|
American experiment. We will not attempt to picture the effect
|
|
produced on the entire world by that unexpected denouement.
|
|
|
|
On receipt of the telegram the Naval Secretary telegraphed to
|
|
the Susquehanna to wait in the bay of San Francisco without
|
|
extinguishing her fires. Day and night she must be ready
|
|
to put to sea.
|
|
|
|
The Cambridge observatory called a special meeting; and, with
|
|
that composure which distinguishes learned bodies in general,
|
|
peacefully discussed the scientific bearings of the question.
|
|
At the Gun Club there was an explosion. All the gunners
|
|
were assembled. Vice-President the Hon. Wilcome was in the
|
|
act of reading the premature dispatch, in which J. T. Maston
|
|
and Belfast announced that the projectile had just been seen in
|
|
the gigantic reflector of Long's Peak, and also that it was held
|
|
by lunar attraction, and was playing the part of under satellite
|
|
to the lunar world.
|
|
|
|
We know the truth on that point.
|
|
|
|
But on the arrival of Blomsberry's dispatch, so decidely
|
|
contradicting J. T. Maston's telegram, two parties were formed
|
|
in the bosom of the Gun Club. On one side were those who
|
|
admitted the fall of the projectile, and consequently the return
|
|
of the travelers; on the other, those who believed in the
|
|
observations of Long's Peak, concluded that the commander of the
|
|
Susquehanna had made a mistake. To the latter the pretended
|
|
projectile was nothing but a meteor! nothing but a meteor, a
|
|
shooting globe, which in its fall had smashed the bows of
|
|
the corvette. It was difficult to answer this argument, for
|
|
the speed with which it was animated must have made observation
|
|
very difficult. The commander of the Susquehanna and her
|
|
officers might have made a mistake in all good faith; one argument
|
|
however, was in their favor, namely, that if the projectile had
|
|
fallen on the earth, its place of meeting with the terrestrial
|
|
globe could only take place on this 27@ north latitude, and
|
|
(taking into consideration the time that had elapsed, and the
|
|
rotary motion of the earth) between the 41@ and the 42@ of
|
|
west longitude. In any case, it was decided in the Gun Club
|
|
that Blomsberry brothers, Bilsby, and Major Elphinstone should
|
|
go straight to San Francisco, and consult as to the means of
|
|
raising the projectile from the depths of the ocean.
|
|
|
|
These devoted men set off at once; and the railroad, which will
|
|
soon cross the whole of Central America, took them as far as St.
|
|
Louis, where the swift mail-coaches awaited them. Almost at the
|
|
same moment in which the Secretary of Marine, the vice-president
|
|
of the Gun Club, and the sub-director of the Observatory received
|
|
the dispatch from San Francisco, the Honorable J. T. Maston was
|
|
undergoing the greatest excitement he had ever experienced in his
|
|
life, an excitement which even the bursting of his pet gun, which
|
|
had more than once nearly cost him his life, had not caused him.
|
|
We may remember that the secretary of the Gun Club had started
|
|
soon after the projectile (and almost as quickly) for the station
|
|
on Long's Peak, in the Rocky Mountains, J. Belfast, director of the
|
|
Cambridge Observatory, accompanying him. Arrived there, the two
|
|
friends had installed themselves at once, never quitting the
|
|
summit of their enormous telescope. We know that this gigantic
|
|
instrument had been set up according to the reflecting system,
|
|
called by the English "front view." This arrangement subjected
|
|
all objects to but one reflection, making the view consequently
|
|
much clearer; the result was that, when they were taking
|
|
observation, J. T. Maston and Belfast were placed in the _upper_
|
|
part of the instrument and not in the lower, which they reached
|
|
by a circular staircase, a masterpiece of lightness, while below
|
|
them opened a metal well terminated by the metallic mirror,
|
|
which measured two hundred and eighty feet in depth.
|
|
|
|
It was on a narrow platform placed above the telescope that the
|
|
two savants passed their existence, execrating the day which hid
|
|
the moon from their eyes, and the clouds which obstinately
|
|
veiled her during the night.
|
|
|
|
What, then, was their delight when, after some days of waiting,
|
|
on the night of the 5th of December, they saw the vehicle which
|
|
was bearing their friends into space! To this delight succeeded
|
|
a great deception, when, trusting to a cursory observation, they
|
|
launched their first telegram to the world, erroneously
|
|
affirming that the projectile had become a satellite of the
|
|
moon, gravitating in an immutable orbit.
|
|
|
|
From that moment it had never shown itself to their eyes-- a
|
|
disappearance all the more easily explained, as it was then
|
|
passing behind the moon's invisible disc; but when it was time
|
|
for it to reappear on the visible disc, one may imagine the
|
|
impatience of the fuming J. T. Maston and his not less
|
|
impatient companion. Each minute of the night they thought
|
|
they saw the projectile once more, and they did not see it.
|
|
Hence constant discussions and violent disputes between them,
|
|
Belfast affirming that the projectile could not be seen, J. T.
|
|
Maston maintaining that "it had put his eyes out."
|
|
|
|
"It is the projectile!" repeated J. T. Maston.
|
|
|
|
"No," answered Belfast; "it is an avalanche detached from a
|
|
lunar mountain."
|
|
|
|
"Well, we shall see it to-morrow."
|
|
|
|
"No, we shall not see it any more. It is carried into space."
|
|
|
|
"Yes!"
|
|
|
|
"No!"
|
|
|
|
And at these moments, when contradictions rained like hail, the
|
|
well-known irritability of the secretary of the Gun Club
|
|
constituted a permanent danger for the Honorable Belfast.
|
|
The existence of these two together would soon have become
|
|
impossible; but an unforseen event cut short their
|
|
everlasting discussions.
|
|
|
|
During the night, from the 14th to the 15th of December, the two
|
|
irreconcilable friends were busy observing the lunar disc, J. T.
|
|
Maston abusing the learned Belfast as usual, who was by his
|
|
side; the secretary of the Gun Club maintaining for the
|
|
thousandth time that he had just seen the projectile, and adding
|
|
that he could see Michel Ardan's face looking through one of the
|
|
scuttles, at the same time enforcing his argument by a series of
|
|
gestures which his formidable hook rendered very unpleasant.
|
|
|
|
At this moment Belfast's servant appeared on the platform (it
|
|
was ten at night) and gave him a dispatch. It was the commander
|
|
of the Susquehanna's telegram.
|
|
|
|
Belfast tore the envelope and read, and uttered a cry.
|
|
|
|
"What!" said J. T. Maston.
|
|
|
|
"The projectile!"
|
|
|
|
"Well!"
|
|
|
|
"Has fallen to the earth!"
|
|
|
|
Another cry, this time a perfect howl, answered him. He turned
|
|
toward J. T. Maston. The unfortunate man, imprudently leaning
|
|
over the metal tube, had disappeared in the immense telescope.
|
|
A fall of two hundred and eighty feet! Belfast, dismayed,
|
|
rushed to the orifice of the reflector.
|
|
|
|
He breathed. J. T. Maston, caught by his metal hook, was
|
|
holding on by one of the rings which bound the telescope
|
|
together, uttering fearful cries.
|
|
|
|
Belfast called. Help was brought, tackle was let down, and they
|
|
hoisted up, not without some trouble, the imprudent secretary of
|
|
the Gun Club.
|
|
|
|
He reappeared at the upper orifice without hurt.
|
|
|
|
"Ah!" said he, "if I had broken the mirror?"
|
|
|
|
"You would have paid for it," replied Belfast severely.
|
|
|
|
"And that cursed projectile has fallen?" asked J. T. Maston.
|
|
|
|
"Into the Pacific!"
|
|
|
|
"Let us go!"
|
|
|
|
A quarter of an hour after the two savants were descending the
|
|
declivity of the Rocky Mountains; and two days after, at the
|
|
same time as their friends of the Gun Club, they arrived at San
|
|
Francisco, having killed five horses on the road.
|
|
|
|
Elphinstone, the brothers Blomsberry, and Bilsby rushed toward
|
|
them on their arrival.
|
|
|
|
"What shall we do?" they exclaimed.
|
|
|
|
"Fish up the projectile," replied J. T. Maston, "and the sooner
|
|
the better."
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XXII
|
|
|
|
|
|
RECOVERED FROM THE SEA
|
|
|
|
|
|
The spot where the projectile sank under the waves was exactly
|
|
known; but the machinery to grasp it and bring it to the surface
|
|
of the ocean was still wanting. It must first be invented,
|
|
then made. American engineers could not be troubled with
|
|
such trifles. The grappling-irons once fixed, by their help
|
|
they were sure to raise it in spite of its weight, which was
|
|
lessened by the density of the liquid in which it was plunged.
|
|
|
|
But fishing-up the projectile was not the only thing to be thought of.
|
|
They must act promptly in the interest of the travelers. No one
|
|
doubted that they were still living.
|
|
|
|
"Yes," repeated J. T. Maston incessantly, whose confidence
|
|
gained over everybody, "our friends are clever people, and they
|
|
cannot have fallen like simpletons. They are alive, quite alive;
|
|
but we must make haste if we wish to find them so. Food and
|
|
water do not trouble me; they have enough for a long while.
|
|
But air, air, that is what they will soon want; so quick, quick!"
|
|
|
|
And they did go quick. They fitted up the Susquehanna for her
|
|
new destination. Her powerful machinery was brought to bear
|
|
upon the hauling-chains. The aluminum projectile only weighed
|
|
19,250 pounds, a weight very inferior to that of the transatlantic
|
|
cable which had been drawn up under similar conditions. The only
|
|
difficulty was in fishing up a cylindro-conical projectile, the
|
|
walls of which were so smooth as to offer no hold for the hooks.
|
|
On that account Engineer Murchison hastened to San Francisco,
|
|
and had some enormous grappling-irons fixed on an automatic
|
|
system, which would never let the projectile go if it once
|
|
succeeded in seizing it in its powerful claws. Diving-dresses
|
|
were also prepared, which through this impervious covering allowed
|
|
the divers to observe the bottom of the sea. He also had put on
|
|
board an apparatus of compressed air very cleverly designed.
|
|
There were perfect chambers pierced with scuttles, which, with
|
|
water let into certain compartments, could draw it down into
|
|
great depths. These apparatuses were at San Francisco, where
|
|
they had been used in the construction of a submarine breakwater;
|
|
and very fortunately it was so, for there was no time to
|
|
construct any. But in spite of the perfection of the machinery,
|
|
in spite of the ingenuity of the savants entrusted with the use
|
|
of them, the success of the operation was far from being certain.
|
|
How great were the chances against them, the projectile being
|
|
20,000 feet under the water! And if even it was brought to the
|
|
surface, how would the travelers have borne the terrible shock
|
|
which 20,000 feet of water had perhaps not sufficiently broken?
|
|
At any rate they must act quickly. J. T. Maston hurried the
|
|
workmen day and night. He was ready to don the diving-dress
|
|
himself, or try the air apparatus, in order to reconnoiter the
|
|
situation of his courageous friends.
|
|
|
|
But in spite of all the diligence displayed in preparing the
|
|
different engines, in spite of the considerable sum placed at
|
|
the disposal of the Gun Club by the Government of the Union,
|
|
five long days (five centuries!) elapsed before the preparations
|
|
were complete. During this time public opinion was excited to
|
|
the highest pitch. Telegrams were exchanged incessantly
|
|
throughout the entire world by means of wires and electric cables.
|
|
The saving of Barbicane, Nicholl, and Michel Ardan was an
|
|
international affair. Every one who had subscribed to the Gun
|
|
Club was directly interested in the welfare of the travelers.
|
|
|
|
At length the hauling-chains, the air-chambers, and the
|
|
automatic grappling-irons were put on board. J. T. Maston,
|
|
Engineer Murchison, and the delegates of the Gun Club, were
|
|
already in their cabins. They had but to start, which they did
|
|
on the 21st of December, at eight o'clock at night, the corvette
|
|
meeting with a beautiful sea, a northeasterly wind, and rather
|
|
sharp cold. The whole population of San Francisco was gathered
|
|
on the quay, greatly excited but silent, reserving their hurrahs
|
|
for the return. Steam was fully up, and the screw of the
|
|
Susquehanna carried them briskly out of the bay.
|
|
|
|
It is needless to relate the conversations on board between
|
|
the officers, sailors, and passengers. All these men had but
|
|
one thought. All these hearts beat under the same emotion.
|
|
While they were hastening to help them, what were Barbicane and
|
|
his companions doing? What had become of them? Were they able to
|
|
attempt any bold maneuver to regain their liberty? None could say.
|
|
The truth is that every attempt must have failed! Immersed nearly
|
|
four miles under the ocean, this metal prison defied every effort
|
|
of its prisoners.
|
|
|
|
On the 23rd inst., at eight in the morning, after a rapid
|
|
passage, the Susquehanna was due at the fatal spot. They must
|
|
wait till twelve to take the reckoning exactly. The buoy
|
|
to which the sounding line had been lashed had not yet
|
|
been recognized.
|
|
|
|
At twelve, Captain Blomsberry, assisted by his officers who
|
|
superintended the observations, took the reckoning in the
|
|
presence of the delegates of the Gun Club. Then there was a
|
|
moment of anxiety. Her position decided, the Susquehanna was
|
|
found to be some minutes westward of the spot where the
|
|
projectile had disappeared beneath the waves.
|
|
|
|
The ship's course was then changed so as to reach this exact point.
|
|
|
|
At forty-seven minutes past twelve they reached the buoy; it was
|
|
in perfect condition, and must have shifted but little.
|
|
|
|
"At last!" exclaimed J. T. Maston.
|
|
|
|
"Shall we begin?" asked Captain Blomsberry.
|
|
|
|
"Without losing a second."
|
|
|
|
Every precaution was taken to keep the corvette almost
|
|
completely motionless. Before trying to seize the projectile,
|
|
Engineer Murchison wanted to find its exact position at the
|
|
bottom of the ocean. The submarine apparatus destined for this
|
|
expedition was supplied with air. The working of these engines
|
|
was not without danger, for at 20,000 feet below the surface of
|
|
the water, and under such great pressure, they were exposed to
|
|
fracture, the consequences of which would be dreadful.
|
|
|
|
J. T. Maston, the brothers Blomsberry, and Engineer Murchison,
|
|
without heeding these dangers, took their places in the
|
|
air-chamber. The commander, posted on his bridge, superintended
|
|
the operation, ready to stop or haul in the chains on the
|
|
slightest signal. The screw had been shipped, and the whole
|
|
power of the machinery collected on the capstan would have
|
|
quickly drawn the apparatus on board. The descent began at
|
|
twenty-five minutes past one at night, and the chamber,
|
|
drawn under by the reservoirs full of water, disappeared
|
|
from the surface of the ocean.
|
|
|
|
The emotion of the officers and sailors on board was now
|
|
divided between the prisoners in the projectile and the
|
|
prisoners in the submarine apparatus. As to the latter, they
|
|
forgot themselves, and, glued to the windows of the scuttles,
|
|
attentively watched the liquid mass through which they were passing.
|
|
|
|
The descent was rapid. At seventeen minutes past two, J. T.
|
|
Maston and his companions had reached the bottom of the Pacific;
|
|
but they saw nothing but an arid desert, no longer animated by
|
|
either fauna or flora. By the light of their lamps, furnished
|
|
with powerful reflectors, they could see the dark beds of the
|
|
ocean for a considerable extent of view, but the projectile was
|
|
nowhere to be seen.
|
|
|
|
The impatience of these bold divers cannot be described, and
|
|
having an electrical communication with the corvette, they made
|
|
a signal already agreed upon, and for the space of a mile the
|
|
Susquehanna moved their chamber along some yards above the bottom.
|
|
|
|
Thus they explored the whole submarine plain, deceived at every
|
|
turn by optical illusions which almost broke their hearts.
|
|
Here a rock, there a projection from the ground, seemed to be
|
|
the much-sought-for projectile; but their mistake was soon
|
|
discovered, and then they were in despair.
|
|
|
|
"But where are they? where are they?" cried J. T. Maston. And the
|
|
poor man called loudly upon Nicholl, Barbicane, and Michel Ardan,
|
|
as if his unfortunate friends could either hear or answer him
|
|
through such an impenetrable medium! The search continued under
|
|
these conditions until the vitiated air compelled the divers to ascend.
|
|
|
|
The hauling in began about six in the evening, and was not ended
|
|
before midnight.
|
|
|
|
"To-morrow," said J. T. Maston, as he set foot on the bridge of
|
|
the corvette.
|
|
|
|
"Yes," answered Captain Blomsberry.
|
|
|
|
"And on another spot?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes."
|
|
|
|
J. T. Maston did not doubt of their final success, but his
|
|
companions, no longer upheld by the excitement of the first
|
|
hours, understood all the difficulty of the enterprise.
|
|
What seemed easy at San Francisco, seemed here in the wide
|
|
ocean almost impossible. The chances of success diminished in
|
|
rapid proportion; and it was from chance alone that the meeting
|
|
with the projectile might be expected.
|
|
|
|
The next day, the 24th, in spite of the fatigue of the previous
|
|
day, the operation was renewed. The corvette advanced some
|
|
minutes to westward, and the apparatus, provided with air, bore
|
|
the same explorers to the depths of the ocean.
|
|
|
|
The whole day passed in fruitless research; the bed of the sea
|
|
was a desert. The 25th brought no other result, nor the 26th.
|
|
|
|
It was disheartening. They thought of those unfortunates shut
|
|
up in the projectile for twenty-six days. Perhaps at that
|
|
moment they were experiencing the first approach of suffocation;
|
|
that is, if they had escaped the dangers of their fall. The air
|
|
was spent, and doubtless with the air all their _morale_.
|
|
|
|
"The air, possibly," answered J. T. Maston resolutely, "but
|
|
their _morale_ never!"
|
|
|
|
On the 28th, after two more days of search, all hope was gone.
|
|
This projectile was but an atom in the immensity of the ocean.
|
|
They must give up all idea of finding it.
|
|
|
|
But J. T. Maston would not hear of going away. He would not
|
|
abandon the place without at least discovering the tomb of
|
|
his friends. But Commander Blomsberry could no longer persist,
|
|
and in spite of the exclamations of the worthy secretary, was
|
|
obliged to give the order to sail.
|
|
|
|
On the 29th of December, at nine A.M., the Susquehanna, heading
|
|
northeast, resumed her course to the bay of San Francisco.
|
|
|
|
It was ten in the morning; the corvette was under half-steam, as
|
|
it was regretting to leave the spot where the catastrophe had
|
|
taken place, when a sailor, perched on the main-top-gallant
|
|
crosstrees, watching the sea, cried suddenly:
|
|
|
|
"A buoy on the lee bow!"
|
|
|
|
The officers looked in the direction indicated, and by the help
|
|
of their glasses saw that the object signalled had the
|
|
appearance of one of those buoys which are used to mark the
|
|
passages of bays or rivers. But, singularly to say, a flag
|
|
floating on the wind surmounted its cone, which emerged five
|
|
or six feet out of water. This buoy shone under the rays
|
|
of the sun as if it had been made of plates of silver.
|
|
Commander Blomsberry, J. T. Maston, and the delegates of the Gun
|
|
Club were mounted on the bridge, examining this object straying
|
|
at random on the waves.
|
|
|
|
All looked with feverish anxiety, but in silence. None dared
|
|
give expression to the thoughts which came to the minds of all.
|
|
|
|
The corvette approached to within two cables' lengths of the object.
|
|
|
|
A shudder ran through the whole crew. That flag was the
|
|
American flag!
|
|
|
|
At this moment a perfect howling was heard; it was the brave J.
|
|
T. Maston who had just fallen all in a heap. Forgetting on the
|
|
one hand that his right arm had been replaced by an iron hook,
|
|
and on the other that a simple gutta-percha cap covered his
|
|
brain-box, he had given himself a formidable blow.
|
|
|
|
They hurried toward him, picked him up, restored him to life.
|
|
And what were his first words?
|
|
|
|
"Ah! trebly brutes! quadruply idiots! quintuply boobies that we are!"
|
|
|
|
"What is it?" exclaimed everyone around him.
|
|
|
|
"What is it?"
|
|
|
|
"Come, speak!"
|
|
|
|
"It is, simpletons," howled the terrible secretary, "it is that
|
|
the projectile only weighs 19,250 pounds!"
|
|
|
|
"Well?"
|
|
|
|
"And that it displaces twenty-eight tons, or in other words
|
|
56,000 pounds, and that consequently _it floats_!"
|
|
|
|
Ah! what stress the worthy man had laid on the verb "float!"
|
|
And it was true! All, yes! all these savants had forgotten
|
|
this fundamental law, namely, that on account of its specific
|
|
lightness, the projectile, after having been drawn by its fall
|
|
to the greatest depths of the ocean, must naturally return to
|
|
the surface. And now it was floating quietly at the mercy of
|
|
the waves.
|
|
|
|
The boats were put to sea. J. T. Maston and his friends had
|
|
rushed into them! Excitement was at its height! Every heart
|
|
beat loudly while they advanced to the projectile. What did
|
|
it contain? Living or dead?
|
|
|
|
Living, yes! living, at least unless death had struck
|
|
Barbicane and his two friends since they had hoisted the flag.
|
|
Profound silence reigned on the boats. All were breathless.
|
|
Eyes no longer saw. One of the scuttles of the projectile was open.
|
|
Some pieces of glass remained in the frame, showing that it had
|
|
been broken. This scuttle was actually five feet above the water.
|
|
|
|
A boat came alongside, that of J. T. Maston, and J. T. Maston
|
|
rushed to the broken window.
|
|
|
|
At that moment they heard a clear and merry voice, the voice of
|
|
Michel Ardan, exclaiming in an accent of triumph:
|
|
|
|
"White all, Barbicane, white all!"
|
|
|
|
Barbicane, Michel Ardan, and Nicholl were playing at dominoes!
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XXIII
|
|
|
|
|
|
THE END
|
|
|
|
|
|
We may remember the intense sympathy which had accompanied the
|
|
travelers on their departure. If at the beginning of the
|
|
enterprise they had excited such emotion both in the old and
|
|
new world, with what enthusiasm would they be received on
|
|
their return! The millions of spectators which had beset
|
|
the peninsula of Florida, would they not rush to meet these
|
|
sublime adventurers? Those legions of strangers, hurrying from
|
|
all parts of the globe toward the American shores, would they
|
|
leave the Union without having seen Barbicane, Nicholl, and
|
|
Michel Ardan? No! and the ardent passion of the public was
|
|
bound to respond worthily to the greatness of the enterprise.
|
|
Human creatures who had left the terrestrial sphere, and returned
|
|
after this strange voyage into celestial space, could not fail
|
|
to be received as the prophet Elias would be if he came back
|
|
to earth. To see them first, and then to hear them, such was
|
|
the universal longing.
|
|
|
|
Barbicane, Michel Ardan, Nicholl, and the delegates of the Gun
|
|
Club, returning without delay to Baltimore, were received with
|
|
indescribable enthusiasm. The notes of President Barbicane's
|
|
voyage were ready to be given to the public. The New York
|
|
_Herald_ bought the manuscript at a price not yet known, but
|
|
which must have been very high. Indeed, during the publication
|
|
of "A Journey to the Moon," the sale of this paper amounted to
|
|
five millions of copies. Three days after the return of
|
|
the travelers to the earth, the slightest detail of their
|
|
expedition was known. There remained nothing more but to see
|
|
the heroes of this superhuman enterprise.
|
|
|
|
The expedition of Barbicane and his friends round the moon had
|
|
enabled them to correct the many admitted theories regarding the
|
|
terrestrial satellite. These savants had observed _de visu_,
|
|
and under particular circumstances. They knew what systems
|
|
should be rejected, what retained with regard to the formation
|
|
of that orb, its origin, its habitability. Its past, present,
|
|
and future had even given up their last secrets. Who could
|
|
advance objections against conscientious observers, who at less
|
|
than twenty-four miles distance had marked that curious mountain
|
|
of Tycho, the strangest system of lunar orography? How answer
|
|
those savants whose sight had penetrated the abyss of
|
|
Pluto's circle? How contradict those bold ones whom the chances
|
|
of their enterprise had borne over that invisible face of the
|
|
disc, which no human eye until then had ever seen? It was now
|
|
their turn to impose some limit on that selenographic science,
|
|
which had reconstructed the lunar world as Cuvier did the
|
|
skeleton of a fossil, and say, "The moon _was_ this, a habitable
|
|
world, inhabited before the earth. The moon _is_ that, a world
|
|
uninhabitable, and now uninhabited."
|
|
|
|
To celebrate the return of its most illustrious member and his
|
|
two companions, the Gun Club decided upon giving a banquet, but
|
|
a banquet worthy of the conquerors, worthy of the American
|
|
people, and under such conditions that all the inhabitants of
|
|
the Union could directly take part in it.
|
|
|
|
All the head lines of railroads in the States were joined by
|
|
flying rails; and on all the platforms, lined with the same
|
|
flags, and decorated with the same ornaments, were tables laid
|
|
and all served alike. At certain hours, successively
|
|
calculated, marked by electric clocks which beat the seconds at
|
|
the same time, the population were invited to take their places
|
|
at the banquet tables. For four days, from the 5th to the 9th
|
|
of January, the trains were stopped as they are on Sundays on
|
|
the railways of the United States, and every road was open.
|
|
One engine only at full speed, drawing a triumphal carriage, had
|
|
the right of traveling for those four days on the railroads of
|
|
the United States.
|
|
|
|
The engine was manned by a driver and a stoker, and bore, by
|
|
special favor, the Hon. J. T. Maston, secretary of the Gun Club.
|
|
The carriage was reserved for President Barbicane, Colonel
|
|
Nicholl, and Michel Ardan. At the whistle of the driver, amid
|
|
the hurrahs, and all the admiring vociferations of the American
|
|
language, the train left the platform of Baltimore. It traveled
|
|
at a speed of one hundred and sixty miles in the hour. But what
|
|
was this speed compared with that which had carried the three
|
|
heroes from the mouth of the Columbiad?
|
|
|
|
Thus they sped from one town to the other, finding whole
|
|
populations at table on their road, saluting them with the same
|
|
acclamations, lavishing the same bravos! They traveled in this
|
|
way through the east of the Union, Pennsylvania, Connecticut,
|
|
Massachusetts, Vermont, Maine, and New Hampshire; the north and
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west by New York, Ohio, Michigan, and Wisconsin; returning to
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the south by Illinois, Missouri, Arkansas, Texas, and Louisiana;
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they went to the southeast by Alabama and Florida, going up by
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Georgia and the Carolinas, visiting the center by Tennessee,
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Kentucky, Virginia, and Indiana, and, after quitting the
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Washington station, re-entered Baltimore, where for four days
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one would have thought that the United States of America were
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seated at one immense banquet, saluting them simultaneously with
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the same hurrahs! The apotheosis was worthy of these three
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heroes whom fable would have placed in the rank of demigods.
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And now will this attempt, unprecedented in the annals of
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travels, lead to any practical result? Will direct
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communication with the moon ever be established? Will they
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|
ever lay the foundation of a traveling service through the
|
|
solar world? Will they go from one planet to another, from
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|
Jupiter to Mercury, and after awhile from one star to another,
|
|
from the Polar to Sirius? Will this means of locomotion allow
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|
us to visit those suns which swarm in the firmament?
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To such questions no answer can be given. But knowing the bold
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ingenuity of the Anglo-Saxon race, no one would be astonished if
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the Americans seek to make some use of President Barbicane's attempt.
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Thus, some time after the return of the travelers, the public
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|
received with marked favor the announcement of a company,
|
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limited, with a capital of a hundred million of dollars, divided
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into a hundred thousand shares of a thousand dollars each, under
|
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the name of the "National Company of Interstellary Communication."
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|
President, Barbicane; vice-president, Captain Nicholl; secretary,
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J. T. Maston; director of movements, Michel Ardan.
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And as it is part of the American temperament to foresee
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everything in business, even failure, the Honorable Harry
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Trolloppe, judge commissioner, and Francis Drayton, magistrate,
|
|
were nominated beforehand!
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******* Notes:
|
|
Jules Verne's "From the Earth to the Moon" and "A Trip Around It"
|
|
>
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|
>I originally intended to "correct" some of the numbers in the book.
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|
>For example, page 207 has "thirteenth" where "thirtieth" would be
|
|
>more appropriate. Some of the densities and volumes and masses don't
|
|
>match up. The business with the wrong exhaust velocity of the gun
|
|
>is also a bit confusing. The dates and times aren't quite consistent
|
|
>throughout, although they are close enough that Verne must have been
|
|
>working from a time-line. For example, I think he has the time for
|
|
>the fall back to earth exactly matching the time for the trip out.
|
|
>There are also inconsistent spellings, for example "aluminum" and
|
|
>"aluminium". Some of these annoyed me, in the sense of disturbing
|
|
>my reading; since the reader is reading for pleasure, the annoyance
|
|
>should be removed.
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|
|
|
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|
All cases of the British? spelling of aluminium have been changed
|
|
to the American spelling aluminum.
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|
|
|
|
>I decided that the correction project was going to be a lot of trouble,
|
|
>and might be a perversion of the original work. I concentrated instead
|
|
>on producing an accurate rendition of the text. However, if a French
|
|
>speaker can find a French edition, it might be nice to see if the
|
|
>translators introduced errors. The measurements seem to have been
|
|
>converted from metric without regard for significant figures. Occasional
|
|
>conversions are simply omitted, with "feet" inserted for "meters" without
|
|
>fixing the numbers. These might be safely recomputed without doing
|
|
>violence to the spirit of the original work. Whether one should
|
|
>standardize the spelling of "aluminium" I don't know. "Aluminium"
|
|
>has a certain charm. I don't know what American or English usage was
|
|
>at the time. We might consider converting all the temperatures to
|
|
>Fahrenheit. I suggest removing the page numbers, undoing all the
|
|
>hyphenation, and repackaging the lines at a length of (up to) 72
|
|
>characters,
|
|
>with only occasional word breaks.
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|
|
|
|
|
Page #s and a full reformating has been done. Line widow/orphans
|
|
have been painstakingly removed. Hypenated words at the end of lines
|
|
have been eliminated to the best of my judgement.
|
|
|
|
|
|
>I think a table of units should be offered for the reader.
|
|
>myriameter = 10 km
|
|
>fathom = 6 feet; league ~ 3 miles, but don't know French usage in 1865.
|
|
>page 125 has perigee 86,410 leagues (French), or 238,833 miles <mean>
|
|
>Would be nice to know the currency conversions of the day.
|
|
>
|
|
>We may criticize Verne for his errors, but the remarkable thing is
|
|
>how much he got right! I think this was the first engineering proposal
|
|
>for space travel, using physics instead of magic. Verne deserves much
|
|
>of the credit for inspiring the early rocket pioneers, and ultimately
|
|
>today's space program. As "literary" history, I note that Heinlein's
|
|
>"The Man Who Sold the Moon" borrows from it.
|
|
>
|
|
><add conversion table for units. fathom, league, meter, mile, foot, C/F>
|
|
><contact publisher for translator information>
|
|
><is perihelium {sic} a real word? maybe substitute perihelion?>
|
|
|
|
|
|
I have changed the one case of perihelium to the correct perihelion.
|
|
|
|
|
|
><There's an incorrect reference to Nov. 30 in the early part of book 2 to
|
|
>fix> [I read it over and left it there. Close enough for fiction, but I
|
|
am sure they would have missed the moon by a lot.]
|
|
|
|
|
|
Dates were not fixed.
|
|
|
|
|
|
><inconsistent spelling of Palliser, Palisser>
|
|
|
|
|
|
This only occurs twice in the book, so both are left in.
|
|
|
|
|
|
><pyroxyle sometimes with xile>
|
|
|
|
|
|
`yle' ending was accepted by undisputed "majority rule"
|
|
|
|
|
|
><aluminum and aluminium>
|
|
|
|
|
|
The former accepted.
|
|
|
|
|
|
><maybe 18000 instead of 17000 yards/sec?>
|
|
><30th degree of lunar latitude instead of 13th?>
|
|
><there seems to be an inconsistency in the title for book 2>
|
|
|
|
|
|
Numbers, units, dates, times and math errors have NOT been changed.
|
|
|
|
|
|
>Typographic conventions in the book:
|
|
>The book uses ligatures for ff fi fl ffi ffl; I have simply spelled these
|
|
>out.
|
|
>Chapter N is in italics.
|
|
>The chapter titles are in small caps.
|
|
>The first word of each chapter has an oversize capital,
|
|
>and the rest of the word is in small caps. If the first
|
|
>word is two letters or less, the second word is also in
|
|
>small caps.
|
|
>AM and PM are always in small caps, as A.M. or P.M.
|
|
|
|
|
|
All these have been changed to PG standards.
|
|
|
|
|
|
>My typographic conventions:
|
|
>There are a few lines longer than 80 character, usually because I have
|
|
>inserted a {sic phrase} in the line. I am using % as a line-break
|
|
>character
|
|
>in these cases; the % and the following new-line should be deleted.
|
|
>{correction} I have indicated some candidates for correction in braces.
|
|
|
|
|
|
All these were appreciated! and either corrected or ignored.
|
|
|
|
|
|
>_italics_ are marked with underbars
|
|
|
|
|
|
These are left in for the next proofer to turn into CAPS for PG.
|
|
|
|
|
|
>#SMALL CAPS# are enclosed in hash-marks
|
|
>$ae $'e dollar-sign preceeds ligatures and accented characters.
|
|
> The accent follows the $ and precedes the letter. I've tried to get
|
|
> ' and ` (as accents) right.
|
|
> I have used : as an accent marker for umlaut.
|
|
|
|
|
|
All are removed.
|
|
|
|
|
|
>^2 means superscript 2. circumflex also occurs as an accent marker.
|
|
>I've used ` and ' to enclose (recursive) quotes. Ascii has no provision
|
|
>for distinguishable open and close doublequotes.
|
|
>The book uses ligatures for ff fi fl ffi ffl; I have simply spelled these
|
|
>out.
|
|
>-- moderate dash and---- long dash I have added surrounding spaces.
|
|
>I also switched to double space between sentences.
|
|
>@ degree sign
|
|
>L for British Pound.
|
|
|
|
|
|
All these conventions (except the circumflex) have been accepted.
|
|
|
|
|
|
><bold> indicates a different typeface
|
|
|
|
Removed (only one case) and probably a printers error?
|
|
|
|
|
|
><delta> indicates a non-ascii character, here the greek letter delta
|
|
|
|
|
|
Left in.
|
|
|
|
|