home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
Text File | 1994-06-03 | 297.8 KB | 7,067 lines |
-
-
- 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
- west by New York, Ohio, Michigan, and Wisconsin; returning to
- the south by Illinois, Missouri, Arkansas, Texas, and Louisiana;
- they went to the southeast by Alabama and Florida, going up by
- Georgia and the Carolinas, visiting the center by Tennessee,
- Kentucky, Virginia, and Indiana, and, after quitting the
- Washington station, re-entered Baltimore, where for four days
- one would have thought that the United States of America were
- seated at one immense banquet, saluting them simultaneously with
- the same hurrahs! The apotheosis was worthy of these three
- heroes whom fable would have placed in the rank of demigods.
-
- And now will this attempt, unprecedented in the annals of
- travels, lead to any practical result? Will direct
- communication with the moon ever be established? Will they
- ever lay the foundation of a traveling service through the
- solar world? Will they go from one planet to another, from
- Jupiter to Mercury, and after awhile from one star to another,
- from the Polar to Sirius? Will this means of locomotion allow
- us to visit those suns which swarm in the firmament?
-
- To such questions no answer can be given. But knowing the bold
- ingenuity of the Anglo-Saxon race, no one would be astonished if
- the Americans seek to make some use of President Barbicane's attempt.
-
- Thus, some time after the return of the travelers, the public
- received with marked favor the announcement of a company,
- limited, with a capital of a hundred million of dollars, divided
- into a hundred thousand shares of a thousand dollars each, under
- the name of the "National Company of Interstellary Communication."
- President, Barbicane; vice-president, Captain Nicholl; secretary,
- J. T. Maston; director of movements, Michel Ardan.
-
- And as it is part of the American temperament to foresee
- everything in business, even failure, the Honorable Harry
- Trolloppe, judge commissioner, and Francis Drayton, magistrate,
- were nominated beforehand!
-
-
- ******* Notes:
- Jules Verne's "From the Earth to the Moon" and "A Trip Around It"
- >
- >I originally intended to "correct" some of the numbers in the book.
- >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.
-
-
- All cases of the British? spelling of aluminium have been changed
- to the American spelling aluminum.
-
-
- >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.
-
-
- 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.
-
-
-