Five Weeks in a Balloon Jules Verne (novels for students .TXT) đ
- Author: Jules Verne
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âBut then you could see nothing, make no geographical observations, or reconnoitre the face of the country.â
âAh!â replied the doctor, âif I am master of my balloonâ âif I can ascend and descend at will, I shall stop when I please, especially when too violent currents of air threaten to carry me out of my way with them.â
âAnd you will encounter such,â said Captain Bennet. âThere are tornadoes that sweep at the rate of more than two hundred and forty miles per hour.â
âYou see, then, that with such speed as that, we could cross Africa in twelve hours. One would rise at Zanzibar, and go to bed at St. Louis!â
âBut,â rejoined the officer, âcould any balloon withstand the wear and tear of such velocity?â
âIt has happened before,â replied Ferguson.
âAnd the balloon withstood it?â
âPerfectly well. It was at the time of the coronation of Napoleon, in 1804. The aeronaut, Garnerin, sent up a balloon at Paris, about eleven oâclock in the evening. It bore the following inscription, in letters of gold: Paris, 25 Frimaire; year XIII; Coronation of the Emperor Napoleon by his Holiness, Pius VII. On the next morning, the inhabitants of Rome saw the same balloon soaring above the Vatican, whence it crossed the Campagna, and finally fluttered down into the lake of Bracciano. So you see, gentlemen, that a balloon can resist such velocities.â
âA balloonâ âthat might be; but a man?â insinuated Kennedy.
âYes, a man, too!â âfor the balloon is always motionless with reference to the air that surrounds it. What moves is the mass of the atmosphere itself: for instance, one may light a taper in the car, and the flame will not even waver. An aeronaut in Garnerinâs balloon would not have suffered in the least from the speed. But then I have no occasion to attempt such velocity; and if I can anchor to some tree, or some favorable inequality of the ground, at night, I shall not fail to do so. Besides, we take provision for two months with us, after all; and there is nothing to prevent our skilful huntsman here from furnishing game in abundance when we come to alight.â
âAh! Mr. Kennedy,â said a young midshipman, with envious eyes, âwhat splendid shots youâll have!â
âWithout counting,â said another, âthat youâll have the glory as well as the sport!â
âGentlemen,â replied the hunter, stammering with confusion, âI greatlyâ âappreciateâ âyour complimentsâ âbut theyâ âdonâtâ âbelong to me.â
âYou!â exclaimed everybody, âdonât you intend to go?â
âI am not going!â
âYou wonât accompany Dr. Ferguson?â
âNot only shall I not accompany him, but I am here so as to be present at the last moment to prevent his going.â
Every eye was now turned to the doctor.
âNever mind him!â said the latter, calmly. âThis is a matter that we canât argue with him. At heart he knows perfectly well that he is going.â
âBy Saint Andrew!â said Kennedy, âI swearâ ââ
âSwear to nothing, friend Dick; you have been ganged and weighedâ âyou and your powder, your guns, and your bullets; so donât let us say anything more about it.â
And, in fact, from that day until the arrival at Zanzibar, Dick never opened his mouth. He talked neither about that nor about anything else. He kept absolutely silent.
IXThey double the Capeâ âThe forecastleâ âA course of cosmography by Professor Joeâ âConcerning the method of guiding balloonsâ âHow to seek out atmospheric currentsâ âEureka.
The Resolute plunged along rapidly toward the Cape of Good Hope, the weather continuing fine, although the sea ran heavier.
On the 30th of March, twenty-seven days after the departure from London, the Table Mountain loomed up on the horizon. Cape City lying at the foot of an amphitheatre of hills, could be distinguished through the shipâs glasses, and soon the Resolute cast anchor in the port. But the captain touched there only to replenish his coal bunkers, and that was but a dayâs job. On the morrow, he steered away to the southâard, so as to double the southernmost point of Africa, and enter the Mozambique Channel.
This was not Joeâs first sea-voyage, and so, for his part, he soon found himself at home on board; everybody liked him for his frankness and good-humor. A considerable share of his masterâs renown was reflected upon him. He was listened to as an oracle, and he made no more mistakes than the next one.
So, while the doctor was pursuing his descriptive course of lecturing in the officersâ mess, Joe reigned supreme on the forecastle, holding forth in his own peculiar manner, and making history to suit himselfâ âa style of procedure pursued, by the way, by the greatest historians of all ages and nations.
The topic of discourse was, naturally, the aerial voyage. Joe had experienced some trouble in getting the rebellious spirits to believe in it; but, once accepted by them, nothing connected with it was any longer an impossibility to the imaginations of the seamen stimulated by Joeâs harangues.
Our dazzling narrator persuaded his hearers that, after this trip, many others still more wonderful would be undertaken. In fact, it was to be but the first of a long series of superhuman expeditions.
âYou see, my friends, when a man has had a taste of that kind of travelling, he canât get along afterward with any other; so, on our next expedition, instead of going off to one side, weâll go right ahead, going up, too, all the time.â
âHumph! then youâll go to the moon!â said one of the crowd, with a stare of amazement.
âTo the moon!â exclaimed Joe, âTo the moon! pooh! thatâs too common. Every body might go to the moon, that way. Besides, thereâs no water there, and you have to carry such a lot of
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