<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<H3 align=center>Topsy Turvy by Jules Verne</h3>
<P class=normal><b>[Redactor’s Note:</b> <i>Topsy Turvy</i> (Number <b>V035</b>
in the T&M numerical listing of Verne’s works) is a translation of <i>Sans
dessus dessous</i> (1889) . This anonymous translation was first published by J.
G. Ogilvie (New York, 1890). We meet our old friends Barbicane and J.T. Maston
from “Earth to the Moon” who now give us their own approach to the topic of
“global warming”. Although they are searching for coal and not oil, readers will
find that the auction of the Arctic energy reserves has a definite 21st century
ring. We are indebted to Mr. Mark Eccles of Columbia, MD for loaning his rare
and disintegrating copy of this 1890 work.The text was reprinted in an Ace
paperback (D-434) in the late 1950’s with the title “The Purchase of the North
Pole”. There is another edition published by Sampson & Low (U.K.,1890) also
entitled “The Purchase of the North Pole”. The Ogilvie book is more faithful to
the structure of the french—the S&L has 20 chapters instead of 21 and omits
part of 21, but the sense may be sometimes incorrect—the last sentence of 20
reads “But now, after having read the article and being <i>unable</i> to
understand it without any help, he began to feel sorry and feel better” where
the word <i>able</i> might be supposed. Both editions leave out some parts of
sentences and paragraphs, the Ogilvie probably worse in this regard. There is
one equation in the book which is represented as a graphic. A Table of Contents
has been added for user convenience. This text contains 42,000 words.
(NMW)<b>]</b></p>
<hr>
<br/><br/>
<DIV align=center><br/><br/>
<h2>“TOPSY-TURVY”</h2>
<p>BY</p>
<p><BIG><b>JULES VERNE</b></BIG></p>
<p><i>Author of “Around the World in Eighty Days,”<br/>“Twenty Thousand Leagues
under the Sea,”<br/>Etc., Etc.</i></p>
<HR width="15%">
<br/><br/>
<p><i>Copyright, 1890 by J.G.Ogilvie</i></p>
<HR width="15%">
<br/><br/>
<p> </p>
<p>NEW YORK<br/>SEASIDE PUBLISHING COMPANY<br/>142-144 Worth Street</p>
</DIV>
<hr>
<br/><br/>
<DIV align=center>
<h4><b>TABLE OF CONTENTS</b></h4>
<table cellSpacing=1 cellPadding=3 width=530 border=1>
<tbody>
<tr>
<td width="25%">
<P class=normal>CHAPTER I</p>
</td>
<td width="75%">
<P class=normal>IN WHICH THE NORTH POLAR PRACTICAL ASSOCIATION RUSHES A
DOCUMENT ACROSS TWO WORLDS</p>
</td></tr>
<tr>
<td>
<P class=normal>CHAPTER II</p>
</td>
<td>
<P class=normal>IN WHICH THE DELEGATES FROM ENGLAND, HOLLAND, SWEDEN,
DENMARK AND RUSSIA ARE PRESENTED TO THE READER</p>
</td></tr>
<tr>
<td>
<P class=normal>CHAPTER III</p>
</td>
<td>
<P class=normal>IN WHICH THE ARCTIC REGIONS ARE SOLD AT AUCTION TO THE
HIGHEST BIDDER</p>
</td></tr>
<tr>
<td>
<P class=normal>CHAPTER IV</p>
</td>
<td>
<P class=normal>IN WHICH OLD ACQUAINTANCES APPEAR TO OUR NEW READERS, AND
IN WHICH A WONDERFUL MAN IS DESCRIBED</p>
</td></tr>
<tr>
<td>
<P class=normal>CHAPTER V</p>
</td>
<td>
<P class=normal>IN WHICH THE POSSIBILITY THAT COAL MINES SURROUND THE
NORTH POLE IS CONSIDERED</p>
</td></tr>
<tr>
<td>
<P class=normal>CHAPTER VI</p>
</td>
<td>
<P class=normal>IN WHICH A TELEPHONE COMMUNICATION BETWEEN MRS SCORBITT
AND J. T. MASTON IS INTERRUPTED</p>
</td></tr>
<tr>
<td>
<P class=normal>CHAPTER VII</p>
</td>
<td>
<P class=normal>IN WHICH PRESIDENT BARBICANE SAYS NO MORE THAN SUITS HIS
PURPOSE</p>
</td></tr>
<tr>
<td>
<P class=normal>CHAPTER VIII</p>
</td>
<td>
<P class=normal>YES, JUST LIKE JUPITER</p>
</td></tr>
<tr>
<td>
<P class=normal>CHAPTER IX</p>
</td>
<td>
<P class=normal>IN WHICH APPEARS THE FRENCH GENTLEMAN TO WHOM WE REFERRED
AT THE BEGINNING OF THIS TRUTHFUL STORY</p>
</td></tr>
<tr>
<td>
<P class=normal>CHAPTER X</p>
</td>
<td>
<P class=normal>IN WHICH A LITTLE UNEASINESS BEGINS TO SHOW
ITSELF</p>
</td></tr>
<tr>
<td>
<P class=normal>CHAPTER XI</p>
</td>
<td>
<P class=normal>WHAT WAS FOUND IN THE NOTEBOOK OF J. T. MASTON AND WHAT IT
NO LONGER CONTAINED</p>
</td></tr>
<tr>
<td>
<P class=normal>CHAPTER XII</p>
</td>
<td>
<P class=normal>IN WHICH J. T. MASTON HEROICALLY CONTINUES TO BE
SILENT</p>
</td></tr>
<tr>
<td>
<P class=normal>CHAPTER XIII</p>
</td>
<td>
<P class=normal>AT THE CLOSE OF WHICH JT MASTON UTTERS AN
EPIGRAM</p>
</td></tr>
<tr>
<td>
<P class=normal>CHAPTER XIV</p>
</td>
<td>
<P class=normal>VERY SHORT, BUT IN WHICH "X" TAKES A GEOGRAPHICAL
VALUE</p>
</td></tr>
<tr>
<td>
<P class=normal>CHAPTER XV</p>
</td>
<td>
<P class=normal>WHICH CONTAINS A FEW INTERESTING DETAILS FOR THE
INHABITANTS OF THE EARTHLY SPHERE</p>
</td></tr>
<tr>
<td>
<P class=normal>CHAPTER XVI</p>
</td>
<td>
<P class=normal>IN WHICH A CROWD OF DISSATISFIED PEOPLE BREAK INTO THE
CELL OF J. T. MASTON</p>
</td></tr>
<tr>
<td>
<P class=normal>CHAPTER XVII</p>
</td>
<td>
<P class=normal>WHAT HAD BEEN DONE AT KILIMANJARO DURING EIGHT MONTH OF
THIS MEMORABLE YEAR</p>
</td></tr>
<tr>
<td>
<P class=normal>CHAPTER XVIII</p>
</td>
<td>
<P class=normal>IN WHICH THE POPULATION OF WAMASAI ASSEMBLE TO HEAR
PRESIDENT BARBICANE SAY “FIRE” TO CAPT NICHOLL</p>
</td></tr>
<tr>
<td>
<P class=normal>CHAPTER XIX</p>
</td>
<td>
<P class=normal>IN WHICH J. T. MASTON REGRETS THAT THE CROWD DID NOT LYNCH
HIM WHEN HE WAS IN PRISON</p>
</td></tr>
<tr>
<td>
<P class=normal>CHAPTER XX</p>
</td>
<td>
<P class=normal>IN WHICH THIS STORY, AS TRUTHFUL AS IT IS IMPROBABLE, IS
FINISHED</p>
</td></tr>
<tr>
<td>
<P class=normal>CHAPTER XXI</p>
</td>
<td>
<P class=normal>VERY SHORT, SINCE ENOUGH HAS BEEN SAID TO MAKE THE WORLD'S
POPULATION FEEL PERFECTLY SURE AGAIN</p>
</td></tr></tbody></table></DIV><br/><br/>
<hr>
<br/><br/>
<h4><b>TOPSY TURVY</b></h4>
<h4>CHAPTER I.<br/><br/>IN WHICH THE NORTH POLAR PRACTICAL ASSOCIATION RUSHES A
DOCUMENT ACROSS TWO WORLDS</h4>
<p>“Then Mr Maston, you pretend that a woman has never been able to make
mathematical or experimental-science progress?”</p>
<p>“To my extreme regret, I am obliged to, Mrs. Scorbitt,” answered J.T.
Maston.</p>
<p>“That there have been some very remarkable women in mathematics, especially
in Russia, I fully and willingly agree with you. But, with her cerebral
conformation, she cannot become an Archimedes, much less a Newton.”</p>
<p>“Oh, Mr. Maston, allow me to protest in the name of my sex.”</p>
<p>“A sex, Mrs. Scorbitt, much too charming to give itself up to the higher
studies.”</p>
<p>“Well then, according to your opinion, no woman seeing an apple fall could
have discovered the law of universal gravitation, so that it would have made her
the most illustrious scientific person of the seventeenth century?”</p>
<p>“In seeing an apple fall, Mrs. Scorbitt, a woman would have but the single
idea—to eat it—for example, our mother Eve.”</p>
<p>“Pshaw, I see very well that you deny us all aptitude for high
speculations.”</p>
<p>“All aptitude? No, Mrs. Scorbitt, and in the meanwhile I would like to prove
to you that since there are inhabitants on earth, and consequently women, there
has not one feminine brain been found yet to which we owe any discoveries like
those of Aristotle, Euclid, Kepler, Laplace, etc.”</p>
<p>“Is this a reason? And does the past always prove the future?”</p>
<p>“Well, a person who has done nothing in a thousand years, without a doubt,
never will do anything.”</p>
<p>“I see now that I have to take our part, Mr. Maston, and that we are not
worth much.”</p>
<p>“In regard to being worth something”—began Mr. Maston, with as much
politeness as he could command.</p>
<p>But Mrs. Evangelina Scorbitt, who was perfectly willing to be satisfied,
answered promptly: “Each one has his or her lot in this world. You may remain
the extraordinary calculator which you are, give yourself up entirely to the
immense work to which your friends and yourself will devote their existence. I
will be the woman in the case and bring to it my pecuniary assistance.”</p>
<p>“And we will owe you an eternal gratitude,” answered Mr. Maston.</p>
<p>Mrs. Evangelina Scorbitt blushed deliciously, for she felt, according to
report, a singular sympathy for J.T. Maston. Besides, is not the heart of a
woman an unfathomable gulf?</p>
<p>It was really an immense undertaking to which this rich American widow had
resolved to devote large sums of money.</p>
<p>The scheme and its expected results, briefly outlined, were as follows:</p>
<p>The Arctic regions, accurately expressed, include according to Maltebrun,
Roclus, Saint-Martin and other high authorities on geography:</p>
<p>1st. The northern Devon, including the ice-covered islands of Baffin’s Sea
and Lancaster Sound.</p>
<p>2d. The northern Georgia, made up of banks and numerous islands, such as the
islands of Sabine, Byam-Martin, Griffith, Cornwallis, and Bathurst.</p>
<p>3d. The archipelago of Baffin-Parry, including different parts of the
circumpolar continent, embracing Cumberland, Southampton, James-Sommerset,
Boothia-Felix, Melville, and other parts nearly unknown. Of this great area,
crossed by the 78th parallel, there are over 1,400,000 square miles of land and
over 700,000 square miles of water.</p>
<p>Within this area intrepid modern discoverers have advanced to the 84th-degree
of latitude, reaching seacoasts lost behind the high chain of icebergs which may
be called the Arctic Highlands, given names to capes, to mountains, to gulfs, to
bays, etc. But beyond this 84th degree is mystery. It is the terra incognita of
the chart-makers, and nobody knows as yet whether behind is hidden land or water
for a distance of 6 degrees over impassable heaps of ice to the North Pole.</p>
<p>It was in the year 189- that the Government of the United States conceived
the idea of putting the as yet undiscovered countries around the North Pole up
at auction sale, and an American society had just been formed with the plan of
purchasing this Arctic area and has asked the concession.</p>
<p>For several years, it is true, the Conference at Berlin had formulated a
special plan for the guidance of such of the great powers as might wish to
appropriate rights under the claim of colonization or the opening of commercial
markets. This code was not acceptable to all, and the Polar region had remained
without inhabitants. As that which belongs to none belongs to every one, the new
Society did not wish merely to occupy it, but to purchase it outright, and so
avoid further claims.</p>
<p>There never is in the United States any project so bold as not to find people
to regard it as practical and back it with large amounts of money. This was well
shown a few years ago when the Gun Club of Baltimore tried to send a projectile
to the moon, hoping to obtain a direct communication with our satellite. Was it
not enterprising Americans who furnished funds for this undertaking? Large
amounts were necessary for this interesting trial and were promptly found. And,
had it been realized, would we not have to thank the members of that club who
had dared to take the risk of this super-human experience?</p>
<p>Should a Lesseps propose to dig a channel across Europe to Asia, from the
banks of the Atlantic to the waters of China; should a well-sinker offer to bore
from the curb-stones to reach the beds of molten silicates, to bring a supply to
your fireplaces; should an enterprising electrician want to unite the scattered
currents over the surface of the globe into one inexhaustible spring of heat and
light; should a bold engineer conceive the idea of putting the excess of Summer
temperature into large reservoirs for use during the Winter in our then frigid
zones; should an anonymous society be founded to do any of a hundred different
similar things, there would be found Americans ready to head the subscription
lists and a regular stream of dollars would pour into the company safes as
freely as the rivers of America flow into the ocean.</p>
<p>It is natural to expect that opinions were very varied when the news spread
that the Arctic region was going to be sold at auction for the benefit of the
highest and final bidder, particularly when no public subscription list was
started in view of this purchase, as the capital had all been secured
beforehand.</p>
<p>To use the Arctic region? Why, such an idea could “only be found in the brain
of a fool,” was the general verdict.</p>
<p>Nothing, however, was more serious than this project. A prospectus was sent
to the papers of the two continents, to the European publications, to the
African, Oceanic, Asiatic, and at the same time to the American journals. The
American newspaper announcement read as follows:</p>
<BLOCKQUOTE>To the Inhabitants of the Globe:</BLOCKQUOTE>
<BLOCKQUOTE>“The Arctic region situated within the eighty-fourth degree could
not heretofore have been sold at auction for the very excellent reason that it
had not been discovered as yet.</BLOCKQUOTE>
<BLOCKQUOTE>“The extreme points reached by navigators of different countries
are the following:</BLOCKQUOTE>
<BLOCKQUOTE>“82° 45’ , reached by the English explorer, Parry, in July, 1847,
on the twenty-eighth meridian, west, to the north of Spitzberg.</BLOCKQUOTE>
<BLOCKQUOTE>“83° 20’ 28” , reached by Markham, with the English expedition of
Sir John Georges Nares, in May, 1867, on the fiftieth meridian, west, in the
north of Grinnell Land.</BLOCKQUOTE>
<BLOCKQUOTE>“83° 35’ latitude, reached by Lockwood and Brainard, of the
American expedition under Lieut. Greely, in May, 1882, on the forty-second
meridian, west in the north of Nares Land.</BLOCKQUOTE>
<BLOCKQUOTE>“The property extending from the eighty-fourth parallel to the
pole on a surface of six degrees must be considered an undivided domain among
the different states of the globe and not liable to be transformed into
private property through a public auction sale.</BLOCKQUOTE>
<BLOCKQUOTE>“No one is compelled to live in this section, and the United
States, relying on this non-ownership, has resolved to provide for the
settlement and use of the domain. A company has been founded at Baltimore
under the name of the North Polar Practical Association, representing
officially the American Union. This Company intends to purchase the said
country according to the common law, which should then give them an absolute
right of proprietorship to the continent, islands, inlets, waters, rivers,
etc.; in fact, of everything of which the Arctic region is composed. It is
well understood by the law of nations that this title of proprietorship cannot
be touched under any circumstances, no matter what shall happen.</BLOCKQUOTE>
<BLOCKQUOTE>“These conditions having been laid before all the powers, the
Arctic region is to be sold at public auction for the benefit of the highest
and last bidder. The date of the sale is set for the 3d of December of the
current year, in the Auction Hall at Baltimore, Maryland, United States of
America.</BLOCKQUOTE>
<BLOCKQUOTE>“Address for information Mr. W.S. Forster, Temporary Agent for the
North Polar Practical Association, 93 High Street, Baltimore.”</BLOCKQUOTE>
<p>The reader may imagine how this communication was received by the public at
large. Most people considered it as an absurd idea. Some only saw in it a sample
of characteristic American humbug. Others thought that the proposition deserved
to be fairly considered, and they pointed to the fact that the newly-founded
company did not in any way appeal to the public for pecuniary help, but was
willing to do everything with its own capital. It was with its own money that it
wanted to purchase the Arctic region. The promoters did not try to put gold,
silver, and bank-notes into their pockets and keep them for their own benefit.
No, they only asked permission to pay for the land with their own money.</p>
<p>Some people who claimed to know said that the Company could have gone to work
and taken possession of the country without any further ceremony, as it was
their right as first occupants. But that is just where the difficulty came in,
because until this time the Pole seemed to be forbidden ground to any one.
Therefore, in case the United States should give possession of the country, the
Company wanted a regular title to it without trouble about the matter in the
future. It was unjust to blame them in any way, as in such an affair too many
precautions cannot be taken. Besides, the circular had a paragraph which
provided for all future chances. This paragraph was capable of so many
interpretations that the exact meaning of it could not be rendered even by those
who studied it closely. It was stipulated that the right of proprietorship
should not depend upon any chances or changes in the country, no matter whether
these changes were in the position or climate of the country.</p>
<p>What did this phrase mean? How could there ever be any changes in the
geography or meteorology of a country like this one to be sold at auction?
“Evidently,” said some shrewd ones, “there must be something behind it.”</p>
<p>The commentators had free swing and exercised it with a will. One paper in
Philadelphia published the following pleasant notice:</p>
<p>“Undoubtedly the future purchasers of the Arctic region have information that
a hard stone comet will strike this world under such conditions that its blow
will produce geographic and meteorologic changes such as the purchasers of the
Arctic region will profit by.”</p>
<p>The idea of a blow with a hard stone planet was not accepted by serious
people. In any case it was not likely that the would-be purchasers would have
been informed of such a coming event.</p>
<p>“Perhaps,” said a New Orleans newspaper, “the new Company thinks the
precession of the equinox will in time favor the conditions likely to lead to
the utilization of this domain.”</p>
<p>“And why not? Because this movement modifies the direction of the axis of our
spheroid,” observed another correspondent.</p>
<p>“Really,” answered the <i>Scientific Review</i>, of Paris. “As Adhemar has
predicted in his book on the ocean currents, the precession of the equinox,
combined with the movement of the earth’s axis, will be such as to modify in a
long period the average temperature of the different parts of the earth and in
the quantities of ice accumulated around the two poles.”</p>
<p>“This is not certain,” replied the <i>Edinburgh Review</i>, “and, besides,
supposing that this would be the case, is not a lapse of 12,000 years necessary
before Vega becomes our polar star in consequence of this movement and the
situation of the Arctic territory consequently changed in regard to its
climate?”</p>
<p>“Well,” said the Copenhagen <i>Dagblad</i>, “in 12,000 years it will be time
to make preparations, and before that time risk nothing—not even a cent.”</p>
<p>It was possible that the <i>Scientific Review</i> was right with Adhemar. It
was also very probable that the North Polar Practical Association had never
counted on this modification of climate due to the precession of the equinox. In
fact, nobody had clearly discovered what this last paragraph in the circular
meant nor what kind of change it had in view.</p>
<p>Perhaps to know it, it would suffice to write to the Secretary of the new
Society, or particularly its President. But the President was unknown. Unknown
as much as the Secretary and all other members of the Council. It was not even
known where the document came from. It was brought to the offices of the New
York newspapers by a certain William S. Forster, a codfish dealer of Baltimore,
a member of the house of Ardrinell & Co. Everything was so quiet and
mysterious in the matter that the best reporters could not make out what it was
all about. This North Polar Association had been so anonymous that it was
impossible even to give it a definite name.</p>
<p>If, however, the promoters of this speculation persisted in making their
<i>personnel</i> an absolute mystery, their intention was clearly indicated by
the document spread before the public of two worlds.</p>
<p>Really, after all, the question was the purchase of that part of the arctic
regions bounded by the 84th degree, and of which the North Pole was the central
point. Nothing very exact concerning this region was known. The modern
discoverers who had been nearest to this parallel were Parry, Markham, Lockwood
and Brainard. In regard to the other navigators of the northern seas they
stopped far short of the above-mentioned point—such as Payez, in 1874, to 82°
15’ north of the land of Francis Joseph, of New Zemble; Leout, in 1870, to
72°74’ above Siberia; De Long in the <i>Jeanette</i> expedition, in 1879, to 78°
45’ around the islands which bear his name. Others went around New Siberia and
Greenland to the end of the Cape Bismarck, but had not passed the 76th, 77th, or
78th degree of latitude. The North Polar Practical Association wanted then a
country which had never been touched before by mankind or discoverers, and which
was absolutely uninhabited.</p>
<p>The length of this portion of the globe surrounded by the 84th degree,
extending from the 84th to the 90th, making six degrees, which at sixty miles
each make a radius of 360 miles and a diameter of 720 miles. The circumference
therefore is, 2,260 miles and the surface 407 [square] miles. This is about the
tenth part of the whole of Europe. A very desirable slice of land indeed. The
document, as we have seen, also stated that these regions were not yet known
geographically, belonged to no one and therefore belonged to everyone. But it
could be foreseen that the adjoining States at least would consider these
regions as the prolongation of their own possession towards the north and would
consequently claim the right of ownership. Their pretensions would have more
justice than those of discoverers who operated upon the whole of the Arctic
countries and made explorations only for the glory of their own nation. The
Federal Government represented in the new Society intended to make their rights
valuable and to indemnify them for the price of their purchase. However it was
the partisans of the North Polar Practical Association did not announce; the
proprietorship was clear, and nobody being compelled to live there could object
to the auction sale of this vast domain.</p>
<p>The countries whose rights were absolutely established as much as those of
any countries could be were six in number—America, England, Russia, Denmark,
Sweden-Norway and Holland.</p>
<p>Other countries could claim discoveries made by their mariners and their
travellers.</p>
<p>France could interfere because some of her children had taken part in the
expeditions sent out to conquer the territories around the pole.</p>
<p>Among the others the courageous Bellot, who died in 1853, in the islands of
Beechey, during the Phoenix Expedition sent in search of Sir John Franklin. Nor
must one forget Dr. Octave Pavy, who died in 1884, near Cape Sabine, while the
Greely Mission was at Fort Conger. And the expedition which, in 1838-39, had
gone to the Sea of Spitzberg with Charles Marmier, Bravais and his courageous
companions, would it not be unfair to forget them. But despite all this France
did not care to interfere in this commercial rather than scientific matter, and
she abandoned all her rights for a share of the polar pie. The same of Germany.
It had sent since 1671 the Hamburg expedition of Frederic Martens to the
Spitsbergen, and in 1869 and ‘70 the expeditions of the <i>Germania</i> and of
the <i>Hansa</i>, commanded by Koldervey and Hegeman, which went as far as Cape
Bismarck by going along the coast of Greenland. But even if they had made so
many brilliant discoveries they did not care to add a piece of the polar empire
to that of Germany. The same was true with Austria, which was already possessor
of the land of Francis Joseph, situated north of Siberia.</p>
<p>In regard to Italy having no right to interfere, she did not interfere at
all; which is as strange as it is true. Then, also, there were the Esquimaux,
which are at home in those places, and the inhabitants of Greenland, of
Labrador, of Baffin’s Archipelago and of the Aleutian Islands, situated between
Asia and America, and also the tribe of Tchouktchis, who inhabited the old
Russian Alaska and who became Americans in 1867. These people, in reality the
real aborigines, had nothing at all to say about the matter. And how could these
poor wretches have said anything, as they did not even have any sum of money, no
matter how small, with which to pay for the land which the North Polar Practical
Association was going to buy. Perhaps they could have paid a small sum by giving
skins, teeth or oil, and yet the land belonged to them more than to any others,
as they were the first occupants of this domain which was going to be sold on
auction. But the Esquimaux, the Tchouktchis, the Samoyedes were not consulted at
all. So runs the world.</p>
<h4>CHAPTER II.<br/><br/>IN WHICH THE DELEGATES FROM ENGLAND, HOLLAND, SWEDEN,
DENMARK AND RUSSIA ARE PRESENTED TO THE READER.</h4>
<p>One thing was evident to the whole world at once, namely, that if the new
association should succeed in buying the Arctic regions, those regions would
become absolutely the property of America or rather of the United States, a
country which was always trying to acquire something. This was not a pleasing
prospect to rival governments, but nevertheless, as has been said, the different
States of Europe and of Asia not neighboring to these regions, refused to take
part in the proposed auction sale so long as its results seemed so problematical
to them. Only the powers whose property touched the eighty-fourth degree
resolved to make their rights valuable by the attendance of official delegates.
That was all. They did not care to buy even at a relatively moderate price land
the possession of which was only a possibility. In this as in all cases
insatiable England gave orders to its financial agents to make an imposing
showing. The cession of the polar countries did not threaten any European
trouble nor any international complication. Herr von Bismarck, the grand Iron
Chancellor, who was yet living, did not even knit his heavy brow. There remained
only England, Denmark, Sweden, Norway, Holland and Russia to be present and make
their bids to the Commissioner of Baltimore, against those of the United
States.</p>
<p>It was a difficult matter to fix prices for this polar earth cap, the
business value of which was at least very problematic. Their main reason for
presenting themselves at the sale was that some advantage might accrue to them.
Sweden and Norway, proprietors of the North Cape, situated beyond the
seventy-second parallel, did not conceal the fact that they thought they had
certain rights of proprietorship on these vast lands which extended to
Spitsbergen, and from there to the North Pole. Denmark said that it had already
in its possession islands and fiords on the line of the polar circle where their
colonies had been founded, such as Disko Island, in the Davis Channel; the
settlements of Holstein, of Proven, of Godhaven, of Uppernavik, in the Baffin
Sea, and on the west coast of Greenland. Besides, did not the famous navigator,
Behring (of Danish origin, although he was then in the service of Russia), in
the year 1728 pass over the channel which afterwards carried his name before he
started again, thirteen years later, and died miserably with thirty of his men
on a little island, which also carries his distinguished name.</p>
<p>In the year 1619 did not the navigator, Jean Munk, explore the east coast of
Greenland and discover several points formerly totally unknown? Therefore,
Denmark had, she thought, undisputable rights to be proprietor of these
regions.</p>
<p>In regard to Holland, there were her sailors Barentz and Heemskerk, who had
visited the Spitsbergen and the New Zealand about the end of the sixteenth
century. It was by one of her children too, Jean Mayen, through whose courageous
campaign against the north the island which carries his name came in their
possession. It is situated below the 72d degree of latitude. Therefore Holland
thought her past had given her rights of possession. In regard to Russia, with
Alexis Tschirikof, having Behring under his command; with Paulutski, whose
expedition advanced in 1751 beyond the limits of the ice-pack; with Capt. Martin
Spangberg, and Lieut. William Walton, who dared to go into these unknown parts
in 1739, she had taken a notable part in the search across the gulf which
separates Asia and America.</p>
<p>Furthermore, the position of the Siberian territories, extending over 120
degrees to the extreme limits of Kamchatka, the length of the Asiatic coast,
where the Samoyedes, Yakoutes, Tchuoktchis, and other conquered people lived,
did Russia not rule half of the Northern Ocean? And then, on the 75th parallel
to within less than nine hundred miles from the pole, did she not possess the
islands of the new Siberia, the Archipelago of Liatkow, discovered in the
beginning of the eighteenth century? And finally, since 1764, before the
English, before the Americans, before the Swedes, did not the navigator
Tschitschagoff search a passage in the North to shorten the route between the
two continents? However, notwithstanding this, it seemed that the Americans were
more anxious to become possessors of this particularly inaccessible point of the
globe than anyone else.</p>
<p>They had often tried to obtain it by devoting themselves to the search of Sir
John Franklin, with Grinnel, with Kane, with Hayes, with Greely, with De Long,
and other courageous navigators. They could also plead the geographical
situation of their country, which develops itself below the polar circle from
the Behring Sea to Hudson’s Bay. And were not all these countries, all these
islands—Wollaston, Prince Albert, Victoria, King William, Melville, Cockburne,
Banks, Baffin, not counting the thousand small pieces of the archipelago—like a
leaf spreading to the 90th degree? And then supposing that the North Pole should
be attached by an uninterrupted line of territory to one of the large continents
of the globe, would it not be more to America than to Asia or Europe? Therefore,
nothing was more natural than the proposition to purchase this region by the
Federal Government for the benefit of an American society.</p>
<p>If any power had undisputable modern rights to possess the polar domain it
was certainly the United States of America. It must also be considered that the
United Kingdom of Great Britain, which possessed Canada and British Columbia,
numerous sailors of which had distinguished themselves in these Arctic
countries, urged very good reasons for annexing this part of the globe to their
vast empire. And its journals discussed the matter at great length. “Yes,
without a doubt,” answered the great English geographer, Kliptringan, in an
article in a London newspaper, which made a great sensation; “yes, the Danes,
the Hollanders, the Russians, and the Americans, can be proud of their rights.”
As for England, she did not wish to let this country escape her. Did not the
northern part of the continent already belong to them? Have not these lands,
these islands which composed them, been discovered and conquered by English
discoverers since Willoughby, who visited Spitsbergen and New Zealand in 1739,
to McClure, whose vessel made in 1853 the passage of the northwest? And then
were not Frobisher, Davis, Hall, Weymouth, Hudson, Baffin, Cook, Ross, Parry,
Bechey, Belcher, Franklin, Mulgrave, Scoresby, MacClinton, Kennedy, Nares,
Collinson, Archer, all of Anglo-Saxon origin? And what country could make a more
just claim on the portion of these Arctic regions that that which these
navigators had been able to acquire? “Well,” said a California journal, “let us
put the matter on its real point, and as there is a question of
<i>amour-propre</i> between the United States and England, let us ask, If the
English Markham of the Nares expedition had gone 83 degrees 20 minutes of
latitude and the Americans, Lockwood and Brainard, of the Greely expedition,
went to 83 degrees 35 minutes, to whom then does the honor belong of having come
nearest to the North Pole?”</p>
<p>Such were the demands and explanations, but one could see that the struggle
would only be active between American dollars and English pounds sterling.
However, according to the proposition made by the North Polar Practical
Association all countries had to be consulted and given a chance at the auction.
The sale was announced to take place Dec. 3, at Baltimore. The sum realized by
the sale was to be divided among the States which were unsuccessful bidders, and
they were to accept it as indemnity and renounce all their rights in the Arctic
regions for the future.</p>
<p>The delegates, furnished with their letters of credit, left London. The
Hague, Stockholm, Copenhagen, and St. Petersburg, and arrived three weeks before
the day fixed for the auction sale.</p>
<p>Up to this time America had only been represented by Mr. W.S. Forster, of the
North Polar Practical Association.</p>
<p>The delegates of the European powers who had been chosen were included in the
following list:</p>
<p>For Holland—Jacques Jansen, formerly Counsellor of the Netherlandish India;
fifty-three years old, stout, short, well formed, small arms, small bent legs,
round and florid face, gray hair; a worthy man, only a little incredulous on the
subject of an undertaking the practical consequences of which he failed to
see.</p>
<p>For Denmark—Eric Baldenak, ex-Sub-Governor of the Greenlandish possessions;
of medium height, a little bent over, large and round head, so short-sighted
that the point of his nose would touch his books; not willing to listen to any
claim denying the rights of his country, which he considered the legitimate
proprietor of the northern region.</p>
<p>For the Swedish-Norwegian peninsula—Jan Harald, Professor of Cosmography in
Christiania; a genuine Northern man, red-faced, beard and hair blond; he
regarded it as an established fact that the Polar region, being only occupied by
the Paleocristic Sea, had absolutely no value. He was, however, not much
interested in the matter and went there only as a duty.</p>
<p>For Russia—Col. Boris Karkof, semi-military man, semi-diplomat; a stiff,
stubby mustache, seeming uncomfortable in his citizen clothes and feeling
absent-mindedly for his sword which he was accustomed to carry; very much
puzzled to know what was hidden in the proposition of the North Polar Practical
Association, and whether it would not be the cause of international
difficulties.</p>
<p>Finally for England—Major Donellan and his secretary, Dean Toodrink. The last
two named represented all the tastes and aspirations of the United Kingdom, its
commercial and industrial instincts, its aptitude to consider, by a law of
nature, the northern regions their own property just as any country which did
not belong to anyone else.</p>
<p>If there ever was an Englishman it was Major Donellan, tall, meagre, bony,
nervous, angular, with a little cough, a head a la Palmerston, on bending
shoulders; legs well formed after his sixty years; indefatigable, a quality he
had well shown when he worked on the frontiers of India. He never laughed in
those days, and perhaps never had. And why should he? Did you ever see a
locomotive or a steam-engine or an elevator laugh? On this point the Major was
very much different from his secretary, Dean Toodrink, a talkative fellow, very
pleasant, with large head, and his hair falling on his forehead, and small eyes.
He became well known on account of his happy manner and his taste for fairy
tales. But, even if he was cheerful, he did not seem any less personally
conceited than Major Donellan when he talked about Great Britain.</p>
<p>These two delegates were probably going to be the most desperate opponents to
the American Society. The North Pole belonged to them; it always belonged to
them. It was to them as if the Lord had given the mission to the English people
to keep up the rotation of the earth around its axis, and as if it was their
duty to prevent it passing into strange hands. It is necessary to observe here
that France did not consider it necessary to send a delegate, but an engineer,
of France, was present at the sale, just for the fun of it. We shall introduce
him later on. The delegates of the Northern European States had arrived in
Baltimore on different steamers, to give it the appearance that they had nothing
at all to do with each other. They were really rivals. Each one of them had in
his pocket the necessary means to fight against the American Society. But they
could not fight with equal force. One could dispose of a sum of money which
amounted to nearly a million, another could pass that amount. And really to
purchase a piece of our globe to reach which seemed an impossibility, this ought
still appear to be dear. In reality the best provided for was the English
delegate, to whose order the Government had opened a very large credit. Thanks
to this credit Major Donellan would not have very hard work to conquer his
adversaries of Sweden, Denmark-Holland, and Russia. In regard to America—well,
that was a different thing. It would be much more difficult to win against the
fusillade of dollars. At least it was very probable that the mysterious society
must have enough money on hand to go on in their work. Therefore, the highest
bidding, which might come to millions, was between America and England.</p>
<p>As soon as the European delegates had landed public opinion became more
excited. The most singular stories were printed in the newspapers. False
theories were established, based on the purchase of the North Pole. What was the
Society going to do with it? And what could they do with it? Nothing; or perhaps
it was all done to corner the iceberg market. There was even a journal in Paris,
the <i>Figaro</i>, which upheld this curious idea. But for this it would be
necessary to pass south of the eighty-fourth parallel.</p>
<p>Be it as it may, however, the delegates who had avoided each other during
their passage over the Atlantic became more and more associated after having
arrived in Baltimore. Here is the reason: Since his arrival each one had tried
to open communications with the North Polar Practical Association separately,
unknown to the other. That which they wished to know were the motives hidden at
the bottom of this affair and what profit the Society hoped to make out of the
sale. Now, until the present time nothing indicated that the Society had opened
an office at Baltimore. No office, no employees. All that could be learned was,
“For information address only William S. Forster, High Street, Baltimore.” And
it did not look as though the honest consignee of codfish knew any more in this
respect than the lowest street porter of the city.</p>
<p>The delegates could, therefore, learn nothing from him. They were accordingly
compelled to rely upon the more or less absurd guesses of the public at large.
Was the secret of the Society going to be kept inpenetrable as long as it did
not make it known itself? This was the question. Without doubt it did not seem
inclined to give any information on the subject until the purchase had been
made. Therefore, it came that the delegates finished by seeing and meeting each
other; they made visits to each other, and finally came in close communication
with each other, perhaps with the idea of making a front against the common
enemy, or, otherwise, the American Company. And so it happened that one evening
they were all together in the Hotel Wolesley, in the suite occupied by Major
Donellan and his secretary, Dean Toodrink, holding a conference. In fact, this
tendency to a common understanding was principally due to the advice of Col.
Boris Karkof, the best diplomat known. At first the conversation was directed to
the commercial and industrial consequences which the Society pretended to gain
by purchase of the Arctic domain. Prof. Jan Harald asked if any one had been
able to gain any information on that point. All finally agreed that they had
tried to get information from Mr. William S. Forster, to whom all letters should
be addressed.</p>
<p>“I have failed,” said Eric Baldenak.</p>
<p>“And I have not succeeded,” added Jacques Jansen.</p>
<p>“In regard to myself,” answered Dean Toodrink, “when I presented myself at
the stores in High Street in the name of Major Donellan I found a large man in
black clothes, wearing a high hat, with a white apron, which was short enough to
show his high boots. When I asked him for information in the matter he informed
me that the South Star had arrived with a full cargo from Newfoundland and that
he was ready to furnish me with a fresh stock of codfish on account of Messrs.
Ardronell & Co.”</p>
<p>“And,” answered the former counsellor of the Dutch Indies, always a little
sceptical, “it would be much better to buy a load of codfish than to throw one’s
money into the ice-water of the North.”</p>
<p>“This is not at all the question,” says Major Donellan, with a short and high
voice. “The question is not the codfish, but the Polar region.”</p>
<p>“Americans ought to stand on their heads,” said Dean Toodrink, laughing at
his own remark. “That will make them catch cold,” finally said Col. Karkof. “The
question is not there,” said Major Donellan. “One thing only is certain, that
for some reason or another America, represented by the N.P.P.A. (remark the word
‘practical’) wants to buy a surface of 407 square miles around the North Pole, a
surface which is actually (remark the word ‘actually’) pierced by the
eighty-fourth degree of latitude.”</p>
<p>“We know it, Major Donellan, and much more,” said Jan Harald. “But what we do
not know is how the said company will make use of those countries or waters, if
they are waters, from a commercial standpoint.”</p>
<p>“This is not the question,” answered for the third time Major Donellan. “A
power wants to purchase with money a large part of the globe which, by its
geographical situation, seems to belong especially to England”—”to Russia,” said
Col. Karkof; “to Holland,” said Jacques Jansen; “to Sweden-Norway,” said Jan
Harald; “to Denmark,” said Eric Baldenak.</p>
<p>The five delegates jumped to their feet, and it seemed as if the Council
would turn to harsh words, when Dean Toodrink tried to interfere the first time.
“Gentlemen,” said he, in a tone of reconciliation, “this is not the question,
following the expression of my chief,” of which he made such frequent use. “As
long as it has been decided that the Northern regions are going to be sold at
auction, they will naturally belong to such representative who will make the
highest bid for same. As long as Sweden, Norway, Russia, Denmark, Holland, and
England have given large credits to their delegates, would it not be best for
these nations to form a syndicate and raise a sum of money against which America
could not make a bid? The delegates looked at each other. It was possible that
Dean Toodrink had found the missing link. A syndicate—at present it is heard
everywhere. Everything is syndicate nowadays, what one drinks, what one eats,
what one reads, what one sleeps on. Nothing is more modern, in politics as well
as business, than a trust. But an objection was started, or rather an
explanation was needed, and Jacques Jansen tried to find out the sentiments of
his colleagues by saying, “and afterwards,” yes, after the purchase of the
region by the syndicate, then what? “But it seems to me that England,” said the
Major in a rough voice, “and Russia,” said the Colonel, with nostrils terribly
dilated, “and Holland,” said the Counsellor; “as God has given Denmark to the
Danish,” observed Eric Baldenak—”Excuse me, there is only one country,”
interrupted Dean Toodrink, “which has been given by our Lord, and that is the
world.” “And why,” said the Swedish delegate? “Did not the poet say</p>
<BLOCKQUOTE>‘Deus nobis haec otia fecit,’ ”</BLOCKQUOTE>
<P class=normal>said this merryman in translating according to his fashion the
close of the sixth verse of the first eclogue of Virgil. All began to laugh
except Major Donellan, who stopped for the second time the discussion which
threatened to finish badly. Then Dean Toodrink said, “Do not quarrel, gentlemen.
What good will it do us? Let us rather form a syndicate.”</p>
<p>“And afterwards?” asked Jan Harald.</p>
<p>“Afterwards,” answered Dean Toodrink, “nothing more simple, gentlemen. After
you shall have bought the polar domain it will remain undivided among us or will
be divided after a regular indemnity to one of the States which have been
purchasers. But our purpose would have already been obtained, which is to save
it from the representative of America.”</p>
<p>This proposition did some good, at least for the present moment. As very soon
the delegates would not fail to fight with each other, and pull each other’s
hair where there was any to pull, it would be at the moment when it was
necessary to elect a final buyer of this immovable region, so much disputed and
so useless.</p>
<p>“In all cases,” cleverly remarked Dean Toodrink, “the United States will be
entirely out of the question.”</p>
<p>“It seems to me very sensible,” said Eric Baldenak.</p>
<p>“Very handy,” said Col. Karkof.</p>
<p>“Right,” said Jan Harald.</p>
<p>“Mean,” said Jacques Jansen.</p>
<p>“Very English,” said Major Donellan.</p>
<p>Each one had given his opinion hoping to convince his colleagues.</p>
<p>“Then, gentlemen, it is perfectly understood that if we form a syndicate the
rights of each State will be absolutely reserved for the future.” ... It is
understood. There was only to be found out what credit the different delegates
had received from their governments. It was supposed that the whole when added
up would represent such an enormous sum that there would not be the least doubt
that the A.P.P.A. [N.P.P.A.] would fail to surpass this amount of money. This
question of funds was met by Dean Toodrink.</p>
<p>Complete silence. Nobody would answer, show your pocketbook. Empty their
pockets into the safes of a syndicate. Make known in advance how much each
country would bid at the sale. No haste was shown. And if there should be a
disagreement in this new-formed syndicate in the future, and circumstances
should compel each one to make his own bids? And should the diplomat Karkof feel
insulted at the trickery of Jacques Jansen, who would be insulted at the
underhand intrigues of Jan Harald, who would refuse to support the high
pretensions of Major Donellan, who, himself, would not stop to embroil each one
of his associates. And now to show their credits—that was showing their play,
when it was necessary to live up to it. There were really two ways only to
answer the proper but indiscreet suggestion of Dean Toodrink. Either to
exaggerate the credits, which would be very embarrassing, because it would then
be the question of the payment, or to diminish them to such a point that they
would be ridiculous and not to the purpose of the scheme. The ex-counsellor had
this idea first, but it must be said to his credit, he did not seriously hold
it. His colleagues, however, followed suit. “Gentlemen,” said Holland, through
its mouthpiece, “I regret, but for the purpose of the Arctic regions I can only
dispose of fifty riechsthaler.” “And I of thirty-five rubles,” said Russia. “And
I of twenty kronors,” said Norway-Sweden. “And I of fifteen cronen,” said
Denmark. “Well,” said Major Donellan, in a tone well befitting the disdainful
attitude so common and natural to the English character, “then it would be
better that you make the purchase, gentlemen, as England can only put up at the
most one shilling and sixpence.” And with this ironical remark the conference of
the delegates of old Europe was at an end.</p>
<h4>CHAPTER III.<br/><br/>IN WHICH THE ARCTIC REGIONS ARE SOLD AT AUCTION TO THE
HIGHEST BIDDER.</h4>
<p>Why was this sale on the 3d of December going to be held in the regular
auction hall, where usually only such objects as furniture, utensils, tools,
instruments, etc., or art pieces, pictures, medals, and antique objects were
sold? Why, so long as it was a piece of realty, was it not sold before a referee
or a court of justice appointed for such sales? And why was the aid of a public
auctioneer necessary when a part of our globe was going to be sold? How could
this piece of the world be compared with any movable object when it was the most
fixed thing on the face of the earth? Really, this seemed to be quite illogical,
but it was not so, since the whole of the Arctic regions was to be sold in such
a way that the contract would be valuable. Did this not indicate that in the
opinion of the N.P.P.A. the immovable object in question contained something
movable?</p>
<p>This singularity puzzled even the most eminently sagacious minds to be found
in the United States. On the other hand, there had been such a sale in the past
already. One portion of our planet had been sold in the auction-rooms with the
help of a public appraiser to the highest public bidder. And this case had
happened in America.</p>
<p>It was some years before, in San Francisco, Cal., an island of the Pacific
Ocean, Spencer Island, was sold to the rich William W. Kolderup, who bid
$500,000 in opposition to J.R. Taskinar, of Stockton. This island had cost
$4,000,000. It is true it was an island which had inhabitants, only a few miles
away from the coast, with forests, water, productive and solid, with fields and
prairies, in condition to be cultivated, and not a vague wild region of water
covered with eternal ice, defended by impenetrable icebergs, which very probably
nobody would ever live in. It was thought, therefore, that the unknown polar
region would never bring so high a price if sold at auction. Nevertheless, on
the day of the sale a great many serious and curious people assembled to learn
the end of the affair.</p>
<p>The sale could hardly fail to be interesting.</p>
<p>Ever since their arrival in Baltimore the European delegates had found
themselves very much gazed at and always surrounded by many people. Of course
they were much interviewed. In view of all this it was only natural that the
public of America should have become very much excited. One manner of expressing
the public excitement, very characteristic of Americans, was to make bets upon
the result, an example which Europe quickly began to follow. Divided as the
American citizens were into those of New England, those of the Middle States,
Western States, and Eastern States, there was only one wish, and that was for
the well-being of their country. But there was still a great deal of
uncertainty. It was neither Russia, nor Sweden, nor Norway, nor Denmark, nor
Holland, the chances of which they dreaded most. But it was England, with its
territorial ambitions, with its only too well-known tendency to swallow
everything, and its world-known Bank of England notes. Large sums of money were
placed on the result. Bets were made on America and Great Britain, the same as
on race-horses, and in almost all cases even money was put up. Some offers were
made of 12 and 13½ to 1 on Denmark, Sweden, Holland and Russia, but none would
take such an offer.</p>
<p>The sale commenced at 12 o’clock.</p>
<p>Since early in the morning all business had been stopped in the street on
account of the large crowd. By telegraph the papers were informed that most of
the bets made by Americans had been taken up by the English, and Dean Toodrink
immediately posted up a notice to that effect in the auction hall. The nearer
the time came the higher grew the excitement. It was reported that the
Government of Great Britain had placed large sums of money at the disposition of
Major Donellan. “At the office of the Admiralty,” observed one of the New York
papers, “the Admirals pushed the sale as much as possible, as they hoped to
figure conspicuously in the expeditions fitted out.” How much truth there was in
these stories no one knew. But the most conservative people in Baltimore thought
that it was hardly possible that the amount of money at the command of the
N.P.P.A. could cover the amount which would be bid by England, and therefore a
very strong pressure was put on the Government of the United States at
Washington to protect the interests of the society. In all this excitement the
new society was represented by the single person, its agent, William S. Forster,
who did not seem to worry at all over all these rumors and seemed quite
confident of success.</p>
<p>As the time for the auction drew near the crowd grew larger. Three hours
before the sale it was impossible to obtain admission to the auction hall. All
the space set apart for the public was so much filled that there was danger that
the building would fall in. There was only a small space left empty, surrounded
by a railing, which had been reserved for the European delegates. They had just
space enough to follow the progress of the sale, and were not even comfortably
seated.</p>
<p>They were Eric Baldenak, Boris Karkof Jacques Jansen, Jan Harald, Major
Donellan and his secretary, Dean Toodrink. They formed a solid group, standing
together like soldiers on a battle-field. And were they not really going to
battle for the possession of the North Pole? On the American side apparently
nobody was represented. Only the codfish dealer was present and his face had an
expression of the most supreme indifference.</p>
<p>He seemed little concerned and appeared to be thinking of his cargo which was
to arrive by the next steamer. Where were the capitalists represented by this
man, who, perhaps, was going to start millions of dollars rolling? This was such
a mystery as to excite public curiosity to the utmost.</p>
<p>No one doubted that Mr. J. T. Maston and Mrs. Evangelina Scorbitt had
something to do with the matter, but what could one guess on? Both were there,
lost in the crowd, without any special place, surrounded by some members of the
Baltimore Gun Club, friends of Mr. Maston. They seemed to be the least
interested spectators in the hall. Mr. William S. Forster even did not seem to
recognize them.</p>
<p>The auctioneer began by saying that contrary to the general rule it was
impossible to show the article about to be sold. He could not pass from hand to
hand the North Pole. Neither could they examine it nor look at it with a
magnifying glass or touch it with their fingers to see whether the plating was
real or only artificial, or whether it was an antique, which it really was, he
said. It was as old as stone, it was as old as the world, since it dated back to
the time the world was made.</p>
<p>If, however, the North Pole was not on the desk of the Public Appraiser, a
large chart, clear in view of all interested persons, indicated with marked
lines the parts which were going to be sold at auction. Seventeen degrees below
the Polar Circle was a red line, clearly seen on the 84th parallel, which marked
the section on the globe put up for sale. It appeared that there was only water
in this region covered with ice of considerable thickness. But this was the risk
of the purchaser. In any case he would not be disappointed in the nature of his
merchandise by any misrepresentation.</p>
<p>At 12 o’clock exactly the public auctioneer entered by a little trap-door cut
in the boards of the floor and took his place before the desk. His crier, Flint,
had already arrived, and was walking up and down as agitated as a bear in a
cage. Both were glad at the prospect, as they thought that the sale would run up
to an enormous sum and put a large and acceptable percentage in their pockets.
Of course the sale would have to be made under the regular, real American rule,
“ready cash.”</p>
<p>The amount of money, no matter how large it would be, must be raised by the
delegates. At this moment a large bell ringing with vigor indicated that the
bidding was going to begin. What a solemn moment! Many hearts quivered in that
neighborhood. A minor riot spread among the crowd outside and reached into the
hall, and Andrew R. Gilmour, the auctioneer, had to wait until quiet was
restored. He got up and looked steadily at his assistants. Then he let his
eyeglasses fall on his breast and said in as quiet a voice as possible:
“Gentlemen, according to the plan of the Federal government, and thanks to the
acquiescence given it by the European powers, we will sell a great fixed mass,
situated around the North Pole, all that is within the limits of the 84th
parallel, continents, waters, bays, islands, icebergs, solid parts or liquid,
whatever they may be.” Then, turning towards the wall, he said “Look at this
chart, which has been outlined according to the latest discoveries. You will see
that the surface of this lot contains 407,000 square miles. Therefore, to make
the sale easier, it has been decided that the bids should be made for each
square mile. Each cent bid, for instance, will be equal to 407,000 cents and
each dollar 407,000 dollars on the total purchase. A little silence, please,
gentlemen.”</p>
<p>This request was not superfluous, because the impatience of the public had
reached such a degree that the voice of a bidder would hardly be heard. After
partial silence had been established, thanks to the industry of the crier,
Flint, who roared like a foghorn, Mr. Gilmour resumed as follows: “Before
beginning I will mention only one condition of the sale. No matter what changes
should happen, either from a geographical or meteorological standpoint, this
region after being sold to the highest bidder is absolutely his own beyond any
dispute, and the other countries have no right of possession whatever as long as
the territory is not outside of the limits of the 84th degree north latitude.”
Again was this singular phrase mentioned at a very important moment. Some
laughed at it, others considered it very seriously. “The bids are open,” said
the public auctioneer in a loud voice, and while his little ivory hammer was
rolling in his hand he added in an undertone: “We have offers at 10 cents the
square mile. Ten cents or the tenth part of a dollar—this would make an amount
of $40,700 for the whole of this immovable property.” Whether the auctioneer had
had such offers or not does not matter, because the bid was covered by Eric
Baldenak in the name of the Danish Government. “Twenty cents,” said he.</p>
<p>“Thirty cents,” said Jan Harald, for Sweden-Norway.</p>
<p>“Forty cents,” said Col. Boris Karkof, for Russia.</p>
<p>This represented already a sum of $162,800 to begin with. The representative
of England had not as yet opened his mouth, not even moved his lips, which were
pressed tightly together. On the other side Wm. S. Forster kept an impenetrable
dumbness. Even at this moment he seemed absorbed in reading a newspaper which
contained the shipping arrivals and the financial reports of the markets each
day.</p>
<p>“Forty cents per square mile,” repeated Flint, in a voice which resembled a
steam whistle, “40 cents.”</p>
<p>The four colleagues of Major Donellan looked at each other. Had they already
exhausted the credit allowed them at the beginning of the bidding? Were they
already compelled to be silent?</p>
<p>“Go on, gentlemen,” said the Auctioneer Gilmour, “40 cents. Who goes higher?
Forty cents; why, the North Pole is worth much more than that, for it is
guaranteed to be made of ice.”</p>
<p>The Danish delegate said 50 cents and the Hollandish delegate promptly outbid
him by 10 cents.</p>
<p>Nobody said a word. This 60 cents represented the respectable amount of
$244,200. The lift given by Holland to the sale started a murmur of
satisfaction. It seemed that the persons who had nothing in their pockets and
nothing to their names were the most interested of all in this contest of
dollars.</p>
<p>At the moment Jacques Jansen made his offer Major Donellan looked at his
secretary, Dean Toodrink, and, with an almost imperceptible negative sign, kept
him silent. Mr. William S. Forster, seeming very much interested in his paper,
made some pencil notes. Mr. J.T. Maston, only replied to the smiles of Mrs.
Evangelina Scorbitt with a nod of the head.</p>
<p>“Hurry up, gentlemen; a little life. Don’t let us linger. This is very weak,
very slow,” said the auctioneer. “Let me see. Nobody says more. Must I knock
down the North Pole at such a price?” and as he spoke his hammer went up and
down just like the cross in a priest’s hands when he wishes to bless his
people.</p>
<p>“Seventy cents,” said Jan Harald, with a voice which trembled a little.</p>
<p>“Eighty,” immediately responded Col. Boris Karkof.</p>
<p>“Hurry up, 80 cents,” said Flint, whose eyes were burning with
excitement.</p>
<p>A gesture of Dean Toodrink made Major Donellan jump up like a spirit. “One
hundred cents,” said he with a short and sharp tone, becoming in one who
represented Great Britain. That one word made England responsible for
$407,000.</p>
<p>The friends of the bidders for the United Kingdom made a great hurrah, which
was repeated like an echo by the outside crowd. The bidders for America looked
at each other with disappointment; $407,000; this was already a very large
figure for such a region as the North Pole; $407,000 for ice, icebergs, and
icefields?</p>
<p>And the man of the N. P. P. A. did not say one word, did not even raise his
head. Would he decide to make at last one overwhelming bid? If he wanted to wait
until the Danish delegates, those of Sweden, Holland, and Russia had exhausted
their credit, it would seem that the proper moment had come. Their faces plainly
showed that before the “100 cents” of Major Donellan, they had decided to quit
the battlefield. “One hundred cents the square mile,” said the auctioneer for
the second time, “One hundred, one hundred, one hundred,” cried out Flint,
making a speaking-trumpet of his half-closed hand. “Nobody goes higher?”
questioned Auctioneer Gilmour. “Is it heard? Is it understood? No regrets
afterwards? We will sell it now.” And he took his position and looking at his
clerk, said: “once, twice”—</p>
<p>“One hundred and ten,” very quietly said William S. Forster, without even
raising his eyes, after having turned the page of his paper.</p>
<p>“Hip, hip, hip,” shouted the crowd who had put most of the money on America
in the bets. Major Donellan was astonished. His long neck turned in all
directions and he shrugged his shoulders, while his lips worked with great
excitement. He tried to crush this American representative with one look, but
without success, but Mr. Forster, cool as a cucumber, did not budge.</p>
<p>“One hundred and forty,” said Major Donellan.</p>
<p>“One hundred and sixty,” said Forster.</p>
<p>“One hundred and eighty,” said the Major, with great excitement.</p>
<p>“One hundred and ninety,” said Forster.</p>
<p>“One hundred and ninety-nine,” roared the delegate of Great Britain. With
this he crossed his arms and seemed to defy the United States of America.</p>
<p>One might have heard a mouse run, or a miller fly, or a worm creep. All
hearts were beating. A life seemed hanging on the lips of Major Donellan. His
head, generally restless, was still now. Dean Toodrink had sat down and was
pulling out his hairs one by one. Auctioneer Gilmour let a few moments run by.
They seemed as long as centuries. The codfish merchant continued reading his
paper and making pencil figures which had evidently nothing at all to do wth
[with] the question. Was he also at the end of his credit? Did he intend to make
a last offer? Did this amount of 199 cents for each square mile or $793,000 for
the whole of the fixture at sale seem to him to have reached the last limit of
absurdity?</p>
<p>“One hundred and ninety-nine cents,” repeated the public auctioneer. “We will
sell it,” and his hammer fell on the table before him. “One hundred and
ninety-nine,” cried the helper. “Sell it! Sell it!” And every one was looking at
the representative of the N.P.P.A.</p>
<p>That surprising gentleman was blowing his nose on a large bandanna
handkerchief, which nearly covered his whole face. Mr. J. T. Maston was looking
at him intently, and so was Mrs. Evangelina Scorbitt. It could easily be seen by
their anxious faces how much they tried to supress their violent emotion. Why
was Forster hesitating to outbid Major Donellan? As for the imperturbable
Forster, he blew his nose a second time, then a third time, with the noise of a
real foghorn. But between the second and third blow he said as quietly as
possible, with a modest and sweet voice. “Two hundred cents!”</p>
<p>A long shudder went through the hall. Then the American backers began to make
such a noise that the very windows trembled. Major Donellan, overwhelmed,
ruined, disappointed, had fallen into a seat by the side of Dean Toodrink, who
himself was not in a much better condition. Two thousand miles at this price
made the enormous sum of $814,000 and it was apparent that the credit of England
did not permit them to overreach it.</p>
<p>“Two hundred cents,” repeated the auctioneer. “Two hundred cents,” said
Flint. “Once, twice,” said the auctioneer. “Does anybody go higher?” Major
Donellan raised himself by a strong effort and looked wistfully at the other
delegates. These only looked back their hope that by his bidding the Arctic
region would escape the American bidder and would become the property of the
European powers. But this was his last effort. The Major opened his mouth,
closed it again, and in his person England sat down on itself. “Hip, hip, hurrah
for the United States,” roared the winners for victorious America. And in one
instant the news of the purchase ran all over Baltimore, and by telegraph all
over the United States, and by cable all over the Old World. Thus it was that
the N.P.P.A. through the agency of William S. Forster, became the proprietor of
the Arctic domain, including everything above the eighty-fourth parallel. The
next day when Mr. Forster went to make his deposit for his purchase the name he
gave was Impey Barbicane and the name of the house was Barbicane & Co.</p>
<h4><b>CHAPTER IV.<br/><br/>IN WHICH OLD ACQUAINTANCES APPEAR TO OUR NEW READERS,
AND IN WHICH A WONDERFUL MAN IS DESCRIBED.</b></h4>
<p>Barbicane & Co. The president of a gunning club. And really what had
gunners to do in such an operation? You will see. Is it necessary to present
formally Impey Barbicane, President of the Gun Club, of Baltimore, and Capt.
Nicholl, and J. T. Maston, and Tom Hunter with the wooden legs, and the lively
Bilsby, and Col. Bloomsberry, and the other associates? No, if these strange
persons were twenty years older than at the time when the attention of the world
was upon them they had always remained the same, always as much incomplete
personally, but equally noisy, equally courageous, equally confusing when it was
a question of some extraordinary adventure. Time did not make an impression on
these gunners; it respected them as it respects cannons no longer in use, but
which decorate museums and arsenals. If the Gun Club had 1,833 members in it
when it was founded, names rather than persons, for most of them had lost an arm
or leg, if 30,575 corresponding members were proud to owe allegiance to the
Club, these figures had not decreased. On the contrary, and even thanks to the
incredible attempt which they had made to establish direct communication between
earth and moon, its celebrity had grown in an enormous proportion. No one can
ever forget the report on this subject which was made by this Club and which
deserves a few words of mention here.</p>
<p>A few years after the civil war certain members of the Gun Club, tired of
their idleness, proposed to send a projectile to the moon by means of a
Columbiad monster. A cannon 900 feet long, nine feet broad at the bore, had been
especially made at Moon City and had then been charged with 400,000 pounds of
gun-cotton.</p>
<p>From this cannon a small cylindro-conical bomb had been flung towards the
stars with a pressure of six millards pounds per square inch. After having made
a grand curve it fell back to the earth only to be swallowed up by the Pacific
Ocean at 27° 7’ of latitude and 41° 37’ of longitude, west. It was in this
region that the frigate, Susquehanna, of the American Navy, had fished it up to
the surface of the ocean, to the great comfort of its occupants. Occupants? Yes,
occupants; for two members of the Gun Club—its President, Impey Barbicane, and
Capt. Nicholl—accompanied by a Frenchman well known for his boldness in such
cases, had been in this flying-machine. All three of them came back well and
healthy from this dangerous trip. But if the two Americans were here ready to
risk any similar thing, the French Michel Ardan was not. On his return to Europe
he brought a fortune with him, although it astonished a good many people, and
now he is planting his own cabbage in his own garden, eating them and even
digesting them, if one can believe the best-informed reporters.</p>
<p>After this discharge of the cannon, Impey Barbicane and Capt. Nicholl had
lived on their reputation in comparative quietness. As they were always anxious
to do another thing like it, they dreamt and tried to find out something else.
Money they had in plenty. Out of five millions and a half which had been raised
for them by subscription they had nearly $200,000 left. This money was raised in
the Old and New Worlds alike. Besides, all they had to do was to exhibit
themselves in their projectile in America and they could always realize large
amounts of money. They had earned all the glory which the most ambitious mortal
would look for. Impey Barbicane and Capt. Nicholl would have been well able to
keep quiet and idle if this very idleness did not torment them. And it was
simply no doubt to do something that they had gone to work and bought this part
of the Arctic region.</p>
<p>But it must not be forgotten that if the purchase cost $800,000 and more,
that it was Mrs. Evangelina Scorbitt who had put the necessary amount into this
affair. Thanks to this generous woman Europe had been conquered by America.
Since their return President Barbicane and Capt. Nicholl had enjoyed a supreme
celebrity. But there was another man who deserved credit in the matter. It is
easy to guess that J.T. Maston was the man of whom we speak, the temporary
Secretary of the Gun Club. Did we not owe to this brilliant calculator all the
mathematical formulae which enabled us to tell the story of the voyage to the
moon? If he did not accompany his two associates on their terrible journey it
was not fear which kept him back. No, indeed, it was only the injuries he had
received during the war. For really it would have made a bad impression on the
inhabitants on the moon to see him in his disabled condition as a representative
of our people, and the moon only our humble satellite. To his extreme regret,
Mr. Maston was compelled to stay at home. Nevertheless he had not been idle.
After having constructed an immense telescope, which was put on the mountain of
Long’s Peak, one of the highest mountains of the Rocky range, he went up there
personally, and after he had received the signal that the cannon-ball had been
fired he did not once leave his post. From his place of observation he essayed
the task of following his friends firing across the vast space. One might
readily believe that his friends would be lost to the world; that it was very
easily possible that this projectile could be compelled by the attraction of the
moon to become a sub-satellite. A deviation which one might call providential
had changed the direction of the projectile, and after having made one trip
around the moon, in place of touching it, it was carried away in a terrible fall
and returned to us with a speed of 576,000 miles a minute to the moment when it
was swallowed up by the ocean. Happy it was that the great liquid mass had
deadened the fall, and that the American frigate Susquehanna was present at the
fall. As soon as the news reached Mr. Maston, the Secretary of the Gun Club, he
rushed with all possible haste from his observation point at Long’s Peak to
begin operations to save his friends. Divers were sent to the place where the
projectile had fallen. And Mr. Maston even did not hesitate to put on a cork
jacket to save and find his friends again. It was unnecessary to go to so much
trouble. The projectile was found floating on the surface of the Pacific Ocean
after having made its beautiful fall. And President Barbicane with Capt. Nicholl
and Michel Ardan were found playing dominoes in their floating prison on the
surface of the ocean.</p>
<p>To return to J.T. Maston, it is proper to say that his part in the affair
deserves a good deal of credit. It is certain that he was not pretty with his
metallic arm. He was not young, fifty-eight years old, at the time we write this
story. But the originality of his character, the vivacity of his intelligence,
the vigor which animated him, the ardor which he had in all such things, had
made him the ideal of Mrs. Evangeline Scorbitt. His brain carefully hidden under
his cover of gutta-percha was yet untouched, and he would still pass as one of
the most remarkable calculators of his age.</p>
<p>Mrs. Evangelina Scorbitt, although the least figuring gave her a headache,
had yet a great liking for mathematicians, even if she had no taste for
mathematics. She considered them a higher and more endowed race of human beings.
Heads where the X, Y, Z were mixed up like nuts in a barrel, brains which played
with signs of algebra, hands which juggled with the integral triples, these were
what she liked.</p>
<p>Yes, these wise people seemed to her worthy of all admiration and support.
She felt herself drawn strongly towards them. And J.T. Maston was exactly that
kind of man and one she adored, and her happiness would be complete if they two
could be made one. This was the end of her mathematics. This did not disturb the
Secretary of the Gun Club, who had never found happiness in unions of this
kind.</p>
<p>Mrs Evangelina Scorbitt was not young any more. She was forty-five years old,
had her hair pasted on her temples, like something which had been dyed and
re-dyed; she had a mouth full of very long teeth, with not one missing; her
waist was without shape, her walk without grace; in short, she had the
appearance of an old maid, although she had been married only a few years before
she became a widow. She was an excellent person withal, and nothing was lacking
in her cup of happiness except one thing, namely, that she wished to make her
appearance in the society of Baltimore as Mrs. J.T. Maston. Her fortune was very
considerable. She was not rich like the Goulds, Mackays, or Vanderbilts, whose
fortunes run into the millions, and who might give alms to the Rothschilds.
Neither did she possess three hundred millions like Mrs. Stewart, eighty
millions like Mrs. Crocker, and two hundred millions like Mrs. Carper. Neither
was she rich like Mrs. Hamersley, Mrs. Hetty Green, Mrs. Mafitt, Mrs. Marshall,
Mrs. Paran Stevens, Mrs. Minturn, and many others. At any rate she had a right
to take a place at that memorable feast at the Fifth Avenue Hotel in New York,
where there were only admitted as guests people who had at least five millions.
In brief, Mrs. Evangelina Scorbitt had four millions of good sound dollars, or
twenty millions of francs, which came to her from John P. Scorbitt, who made his
fortune both in the business of selling dry goods and salt pork. Well, this
fortune this generous widow would have been glad to use for the profit of J. T.
Maston, to whom she would also bring a treasure of tenderness much more
inexhaustible.</p>
<p>Therefore when Mrs. Evangelina Scorbitt had heard of the requirements of Mr.
Maston she had gladly agreed to put a few hundred thousand dollars in the affair
of the N.P.P.A. without having the least idea of what they intended to do with
it. It is true she was convinced that as long as J.T. Maston had something to do
with the affair it could not help being grand, sublime, superhuman, etc.
Thinking of the Secretary was for her future enough. One might think that after
the auction sale, when it was declared that Barbicane & Company would be the
name of the new firm, and it would be presided over by the President of the Gun
Club, she would enjoy Mr. Maston’s whole confidence. Was she not at the same
time the largest stockholder in the affair? So it came about that Mrs.
Evangelina Scorbitt found herself proprietress of this polar region, all beyond
the line of the eighty-fourth parallel. But what would she do with it? Or
rather, what profit would the Society get out of it? This was the question; and
if it interested Mrs. Evangelina Scorbitt from a financial standpoint it
interested the whole world, more on account of the general curiosity about the
whole mystery. This excellent woman, otherwise very discreet, had often tried to
get some information from Mr. Maston on this subject before putting money at the
disposal of the purchasers. Without a doubt there was a grand enterprise, which,
as Jean Jacques said, has never had its like before, and would never have any
imitation, and which would far outshine the reputation made by the Gun Club in
sending a projectile to the moon and trying to get in direct communication with
our satellite. But when she persists with her queries Mr. Maston invariably
replied: “Dear madame, have patience,” And if Mrs. Evangelina Scorbitt had
confidence before, what an immense joy did she feel when the triumph which the
United States of America had won over the combined European powers. “But shall I
not finally know the object?” asked she, smiling at the eminent calculator.</p>
<p>“You will soon know it,” answered Mr. Maston, shaking heartily the hand of
his partner—the American lady.</p>
<p>This calmed for the moment the impatience of Mrs. Evangelina Scorbitt. A few
days afterwards the Old and New World were shaken up quite enough when the
secret object of the company was announced, and for the realization of which the
N.P.P.A. made an appeal to the public for a subscription.</p>
<p>The Society had purchased this portion of the circumpolar region to make use
of the coal mines of the North Pole.</p>
<h4><b>CHAPTER V.<br/><br/>IN WHICH THE POSSIBILITY THAT COAL MINES SURROUND THE
NORTH POLE IS CONSIDERED.</b></h4>
<p>Are there coal mines at the North Pole? This was the first question suggested
to intelligent people. Some asked why should there be coal mines at the North
Pole? Others with equal propriety asked why should there not be? It is well
known that coal mines are spread all over the world. There are many in different
parts of Europe. America also possesses a great many, and it is probable that
the United States mines are the richest of all. There are also many in Asia,
Africa, and Australia. The more our globe becomes known the more mines are
discovered. We will not be in need of coal for at least hundreds of years to
come. England alone produces 160,000,000 tons every year, and over the whole
world it is estimated 400,000,000 tons are yearly produced. Naturally, this coal
output must grow every year in proportion with the constantly increasing
industries. Even if electricity takes the place of steam, it will still be
necessary to use coal. We are so much in need of it that the world might be
called “an animal of coal,” and therefore it is necessary to take good care of
it. Coal is used not only as a fuel, but also as a crude substance of which
science makes great use. With the transformations to which it has been submitted
in the laboratory, it is possible to paint with it, perfume with it, purify,
heat, light with it, and even beautify a diamond with it. It is as useful as
iron or even more so. It is fortunate that this last-mentioned metal will never
be exhausted, as really the world is composed of it. The world might be
considered a vast mass of iron, as other metals, and even water and stone, stand
far behind it in the composition of our sphere. But if we are sure of a
continuous supply for our consumption of iron, we are not so of coal. Far from
it. People who are competent to speak, and who look into the future for hundreds
of years, always allude to this coal famine. “But,” say the opposing party—and
in the United States there are many people who like to contradict for the mere
sake of argument, and who take pleasure in contradicting—”Why should there be
coal around the North Pole?”</p>
<p>“Why?” answered those who took the part of President Barbicane, “because,
very probably at the geological formation of the world, the sun was such that
the difference of temperature around the equator and the poles were not
appreciable. Then immense forests covered this unknown polar region a long time
before mankind appeared, and when our planet was submitted to the incessant
action of heat and humidity. This theory the journals, magazines, and reviews
publish in a thousand different articles either in a joking or serious way. And
these large forests, which disappeared with the gigantic changes of the earth
before it had taken its present form, must certainly have changed and
transformed under the lapse of time and the action of internal heat and water
into coal mines. Therefore nothing seemed more admissible than this theory, and
that the North Pole would open a large field to those who were able to mine it.
These are facts, undeniable facts. Even people who only calculated on simple
probabilities could not deny them. And these facts led many people to have great
faith in them.</p>
<p>It was on this subject that Major Donellan and his secretary were talking
together one day in the most obscure corner of the “Two Friends” inn. “Well,”
said Dean Toodrink, “there is a possibility that this Barbicane (who I hope may
be hanged some day) is right.”</p>
<p>“It is probable,” said Major Donellan, “and I will almost admit that it is
certain. There will be fortunes made in exploring this region around the pole.
If North America possesses so many coal mines and, according to the papers, new
ones are discovered quite frequently, it is not at all improbable that there are
many yet to be discovered. I may add that Prof. Nordenskiol has found many kinds
of different stones which contain a great variety of fossil plants in his
researches in the Arctic region.”</p>
<p>“Higher up?” asked Dean Toodrink.</p>
<p>“Higher up, or rather further up, in a northerly direction,” answered the
Major, “the presence of coal is practically established, and it seems as if you
would only have to bend down to pick it up. Well, if coal is so plentiful on the
surface of these countries, it is right to conclude that its beds must go all
through the crust of the globe.” He was right. Major Donellan knew the
geological formation around the North Pole well, and he was not a safe person to
dispute this question with. And he might have talked about it at length if other
people in the inn had not listened. But he thought it better to keep quiet after
asking: “Are you not surprised at one thing? One would expect to see engineers
or at least navigators figure in this matter, while there are only gunners at
the head of it?”</p>
<p>It is not surprising that the newspapers of the civilized world soon began to
discuss the question of coal discoveries at the North Pole.</p>
<p>“And why not,” asked the editor of an American paper who took the part of
President Barbicane, “when it is remembered that Capt. Nares, in 1875 and 1876,
at the eighty-second degree of latitude, discovered large flower-beds, hazel
trees, poplars, beech trees, etc.?”</p>
<p>“And in 1881 and 1884,” added a scientific publication of New York, “during
the expedition of Lieut. Greely at Lady Franklin Bay, was not a layer of coal
discovered by our explorers a little way from Fort Conger, near Waterhouse? And
did not Dr. Pavy say that these countries are certainly full of coal, perhaps
placed there to combat at some day the terrible masses of ice which are found
there?”</p>
<p>Against such well-established facts brought out by American discoverers the
enemies of President Barbicane did not know what to answer. And the people who
asked why should there be coal mines began to surrender to the people who asked
why should there be none. Certainly there were some, and very considerable ones,
too. The circumpolar ice-cap conceals precious masses of coal contained in those
regions where vegetation was formerly luxuriant. But if they could no longer
dispute that there were really coal mines in this Arctic region the enemies of
the association tried to get revenge in another way. “Well,” said Major Donellan
one day after a hard discussion which had arisen in the meeting-room of the Gun
Club and during which he met President Barbicane face to face, “all right. I
admit that there are coal mines; I even affirm it, there are mines in the region
purchased by your society, but go and explore them—ha! ha! ha!”</p>
<p>“That is what we are going to do,” said Impey Barbicane.</p>
<p>“Go over the eighty-fourth degree, beyond which no explorer as yet has been
able to put his foot?”</p>
<p>“We will pass it—reach even the North Pole,” said he. “We will reach it.” And
after hearing the President of the Gun Club answer with so much coolness, with
so much assurance, to see his opinion so strongly, so perfectly affirmed, even
the strongest opponent began to hesitate. They seemed to be in the presence of a
man who had lost none of his old-time qualities, quiet, cold, and of an
eminently serious mind, exact as a clock, adventurous, but carrying his
practical ideas into the rashest enterprises.</p>
<p>Major Donellan had an ardent wish to strangle his adversary. But President
Barbicane was stout and well able to stand against wind and tide, and therefore
not afraid of the Major. His enemies, his friends and people who envied him knew
it only too well. But there were many jealous people, and many jokes and funny
stories went round in regard to the members of the Gun Club. Pictures and
caricatures were made in Europe and particularly in England, where people could
not get over the loss which they suffered in the matter of pounds sterling.
“Ah,” said they, “this Yankee has got it in his head to reach the North Pole. He
wants to put his foot where, up to the present time, no living soul has yet
been. He wants to build palaces and houses and, perhaps, the White House of the
United States, in a part of the world which has never yet been reached, while
every other part of the world is so well known to us.” And then wild caricatures
appeared in the different newspapers. In the large show-windows and news-depots,
as well in small cities of Europe as in the large cities of America, there
appeared drawings and cartoons showing President Barbicane in the funniest of
positions trying to reach the North Pole. One audacious American cut had all the
members of the Gun Club trying to make an underground tunnel beneath the
terrible mass of immovable icebergs, to the eighty-fourth degree of northern
latitude, each with an axe in his hand. In another, Impey Barbicane, accompanied
by Mr. J.T. Maston and Capt. Nicholl, had descended from a balloon on the
much-desired point, and after many unsuccessful attempts and at the peril of
their lives, had captured a piece of coal weighing about half a pound. This
fragment was all they discovered of the anticipated coal-fields. There were also
pictures made of J. T. Maston, who was as much used for such purposes as his
chief. After having tried to find the electric attraction of the North Pole, the
secretary of the Gun Club became fixed to the ground by his metallic hand.</p>
<p>The celebrated calculator was too quick-tempered to find any pleasure in the
drawings which referred to his personal conformation. He was exceedingly annoyed
by them, and Mrs. Evangelina Scorbitt, it may be easily understood, was not slow
to share his indignation. Another drawing in the Lanterne of Brussels
represented the members of the Council and the members of the Gun Club tending a
large number of fires. The idea was to melt the large quantities of ice by
putting a whole sea of alcohol on them, which would convert the polar basin into
a large quantity of punch. But of all these caricatures, that which had the
largest success was that which was published by the French <i>Charivari</i>,
under the signature of its designer, “Stop.” In the stomach of a whale Impey
Barbicane and J. T. Maston were seated playing checkers and waiting their
arrival at a good point. The new Jonah and his Secretary had got themselves
swallowed by an immense fish, and it was in this way, after having gone under
the icebergs, that they hoped to gain access to the North Pole. The President of
this new Society did not care much about these pictures, and let them say and
write and sing whatever they liked.</p>
<p>Immediately after the concession was made and the Society was absolute master
of the northern region, appeal was made for a public subscription of
$15,000,000. Shares were issued at $100, to be paid for at once, and the credit
of Barbicane & Co. was such that the money ran in as fast as possible. The
most of it came from the various States of the Union. “So much the better,” said
the people on the part of the N.P.P.A. “The undertaking will be entirely
American.”</p>
<p>So strong, indeed, were the foundations upon which Barbicane & Co. were
established that the amount necessary to be subscribed was raised in a very
short time, and even thrice the amount. Everybody was interested in the matter,
and the most scientific experts did not doubt its success.</p>
<p>The shares were reduced one-third, and on Dec. 16 the capital of the Society
was $15,000,000 in cash. This was about three times as much as the amount
subscribed to the credit of the Gun Club when it was going to send a projectile
from the earth to the moon.</p>
<h4><b>CHAPTER VI.<br/><br/>IN WHICH A TELEPHONE COMMUNICATION BETWEEN MRS.
SCORBITT AND J.T. MASTON IS INTERRUPTED</b>.</h4>
<p>President Barbicane was not only convinced that he would reach his object
when the amount which had been raised took another obstacle out of his way. Had
he not been perfectly sure of success he would not have made an application for
a public subscription. And now the time had come when the North Pole would be
conquered. It was felt certain that President Barbicane and his Council of
Administration had means to succeed where so many others had failed. They would
do what neither Franklin, nor Kane, nor De Long, nor Nares, nor Greely had been
able to accomplish. They would pass the 84th parallel, they would take
possession of the vast region purchased at an auction sale, they would make this
country the thirty-ninth star in the flag of the American Union. “Fake,” was all
that the European delegates and their friends in the Old World could say.
Nothing was more true, however, and this practical, logical means of conquering
the North Pole, which was so simple that it was almost childish, was one which
J.T. Maston had suggested to them. It was that brain, where ideas were
constantly evolving, which had laid out this great geographical project in a way
which could not but succeed.</p>
<p>It cannot be too often repeated that the Secretary of the Gun Club was a
remarkable calculator, we might say a postgraduate calculator. But a single day
was needed by him to solve the most complicated problems in mathematical
science. He laughed at these difficulties whether in algebra or in plain
mathematics. You should have seen him handle his figures, the signs which make
up algebra, the letters in the alphabet, representing the unknown quantities,
the square or crossed lines representing the way in which quantities are to be
operated. All signs and lines, and radicals used in this complex language were
perfectly familiar to him. And how they flew around under his pen, or rather
under the piece of chalk which he attached to his iron hand, because he
preferred to work on a blackboard. And this blackboard, six feet square, this
was all he wanted, he was perfectly at home in his work. Nor was it figures
alone which he used in his calculations. His figures were fantastic, gigantic,
written with a practiced hand. His "2" and "3" were as nice and round as they
could be, his 7 looked like a crutch and almost invited a person to hang on it.
His 8 was as well formed as a pair of eye-glasses; and the letters with which he
established his formulas, the first of the alphabet, a, b, c, which he used to
represent given or known quantities, and the last, x, y, z, which he used for
unknown quantities to be discovered, particularly the "z," and those Greek
letters δ, ω, α. Really an Archimedes might have been well proud of them. And
those other signs, made with a clean hand and without fault, it was simply
astonishing. His + showed well that this sign meant an addition of one object to
the other, his —, if it was a little smaller, was also in good shape. His =,
too, showed that Mr. Maston lived in a country where equality was not a vain
expression, at least amongst the people of the white race. Just as well were his
> and his < and his ::, used in expressing proportions. And the √ , which
indicated the root of a certain number or quantity, it was to him a mark of
triumph, and when he completed it with a horizontal line in this √<SUP>——</SUP>
, it seemed as if this outline on his blackboard would compel the whole world to
submit to his figuring.</p>
<p>But do not think that Mr. J.T. Maston's mathematical intelligence was
confined to elementary algebra! No; no matter what figuring he had to do, it was
alike familiar to him, and with a practised hand he made all the signs and
figures, and even did not hesitate at ∫ which looks very simple, but behind
which lays a great deal of calculation. The same with the sign Σ, which
represents the sum of a finished number. Also the sign ∞, by which the
mathematicians designate the incomplete, and all those mysterious symbols which
are used in this language and which are unknown to the common people. This
astonishing man was able to do anything even in the very highest grades of
mathematics. Such was J. T. Maston. And therefore it was that his associates had
such perfect confidence in him when he set out to figure the most difficult
problems in his audacious brain. This it was which led the Gun Club to trust him
with the difficult problem of sending a projectile to the moon. And this was why
Mrs. Evangelina Scorbitt, jealous of his fame, felt for him an admiration which
ended in love. In this present case—that is, how to solve the conquering of the
North Pole, J. T. Maston had but to begin to think and dream himself into the
Arctic regions. To reach the solution the secretary had but to undertake certain
mathematical problems, very complicated, perhaps, but over which in all cases he
would come out ahead.</p>
<p>It was safe to trust Mr. J. T. Maston, even where the smallest and simplest
mistake would have meant a loss of millions. Never, since the time his youthful
brain began to think of mathematics had he committed a mistake—not even one of a
thousandth of an inch—if his calculations were made up on the length of an
object. If he had made a mistake of only the smallest amount he would have torn
his gutta-percha cap from his head. Now let us see him while engaged in his
calculations, and for this purpose we must go back a few weeks.</p>
<p>It was about a month before the publication of the circular addressed to the
inhabitants of the Old and New Worlds that Mr. Maston had undertaken to figure
out the elements of a scheme in which he had promised his associates the
greatest success. For a number of years Mr. Maston had lived at No. 179 Franklin
Street, one of the most quiet streets of Baltimore, far away from the centre of
business, for which he did not care anything, far away from the noise of the
great crowd, which disgusted him. There he occupied a modest little house known
by the name of “Ballistic Cottage,” having for his income only his pension
allowed to him as a retired officer of artillery and the salary which he
received as Secretary of the Gun Club. He lived alone, served by his Negro
“Fire-Fire.” This Negro was not an ordinary servant; he was rather an
appreciative friend and treated his master as if he were his own brother. Mr.
Maston was a decided bachelor, having an idea that being a bachelor was the only
sensible way of living in the present world. He knew the proverb, “a woman can
draw more with one hair than four oxen at the plough,” and he disproved it. If
he occupied his cottage alone it was only because he wished to do so. We know
that he only had to make the motion to change his solitude of one to a company
of two and his small income to the income of a millionaire. He did not doubt it.
Mrs. Evangelina Scorbitt would have been only too happy to... But up to this
time Mr. Maston had not been happy to ... and it seemed certain that these two
beings, so well made one for the other, at least this was the opinion of the
tender widow, would never reach the transformation period. The cottage was a
very simple one. A ground-floor, with a veranda and a floor over it; a small
parlor and small dining-room, with a kitchen and another room in an outbuilding
stand at the back of the garden. Upstairs his sleeping-room and his
working-studio, looking on the garden, and where the noise of the outer world
could never penetrate. Within these walls there had been made calculations which
would have made Newton, Euclid, or Laplace jealous. How different was the
mansion of Mrs. Evangelina Scorbitt, situated in the richest quarter of New
Park, with facade of balconies, finished in the finest architecture, half
Romanesque, half Gothic, with its richly-furnished apartments, its grand halls,
its picture galleries, in which French artists held the highest places; its
magnificent staircase, its great number of domestics, its stables, its
coach-houses, its garden, with the finest of flowers, statues, fountains, and
the tower on the top of the building, on which the blue and gold coat-of-arms of
the Scorbitt family was upon a glittering banner. Three miles, three long miles
at least separated the Palace at New Park from the “Ballistic Cottage.” But a
private telephone wire connected there, and in answer to “Hello! hello!” a
conversation could be carried on between the mansion and cottage. If the persons
could not look at each other they could at least hear each other. It will
astonish none to hear that time upon time Mrs. Scorbitt began talking and
ringing on the telephone to Mr. Maston when he was busily engaged with his
figures. Then the calculator had to quit his work with some reluctance. He
received a friendly “How do you do?” from Mrs. Scorbitt, which he answered with
a grunt, which was sweetened into a kindly greeting by the distance over the
telephone. After a conversation he was glad to go back to his figures. It was on
the 3d of December, after a long and last conference, that Mr. Maston took leave
of his friends and members of the Club to begin to do his share of the work. It
was a very important work with which he had charged himself, for it was the
question of figure mechanical appliance which would enable him to gain access to
the North Pole, and which would allow him to make use of those large fields of
snow now covered with impenetrable ice. He estimated that he needed at least a
week to accomplish this mysterious calculation, exceedingly complicated and
delicate to handle, involving several deep and important problems. Therefore, to
avoid all unnecessary annoyance, it had been decided that the Secretary of the
Gun Club should retire to his cottage and that he should not be disturbed by any
one. This was a great disappointment for Mrs. Evangelina Scorbitt, but she was
compelled to accept it. While President Barbicane, Capt. Nicholl and his
associates, the jolly Bilsby, Col. Bloomsberry, Tom Hunter, with the wooden
legs, were all saying their good-bys to him and wishing him success, Mrs.
Evangelina Scorbitt appeared and made her last visit to Mr. Maston.</p>
<p>“You will succeed, my dear,” said she at the moment of separation.</p>
<p>“And above all do not make a mistake,” added President Barbicane. “A mistake?
He?” exclaimed Mrs. Scorbitt.</p>
<p>“No more than God has made a mistake in putting together this world,”
modestly answered the Secretary. Then, after shaking hands all around and after
several more sighs and wishes of success and suggestions not to make too severe
a work of it, the calculator was left alone. The door of the Ballistic cottage
was closed and Fire-Fire had orders to admit none, not even if the President of
the United States should ask admission.</p>
<p>During his first two days of seclusion J.T. Maston thought and thought,
without even touching the piece of chalk, upon the problem which he had taken on
himself. He consulted certain books relative to the elements, the earth—its
size, its thickness, its volume, its form, its rotation upon its axis—all
elements which he had to use as the basis of his calculations.</p>
<p>The principles of these elements which he used, and which we put before the
reader, were as follows:</p>
<p>Form of the earth: An ellipsis of revolution the longest radius of which is
6,377,398 metres; the shortest, 6,356,080 meters. The circumference of the earth
at the equator, 40,000 kilometres. Surface of the earth, approximate estimate,
510,000,000 of square kilometers. Bulk of the earth, about 1,000 millards of
cubic kilometres; that is, a cube having a metre in length, height, and
thickness. Density of the earth, about five times that of the water. Time of the
earth on the orbit around the sun, 365 days, 6 hours, 9 minutes, 10 seconds, 37
centimes. This gives the globe a speed of 30,400 miles travelled over by the
rotation of the earth upon its axis. For a point of its surface situated at the
equator, 463 meters per second. These were the principal measures of space,
time, bulk, etc., which Mr. Maston used in his calculations.</p>
<p>It was the 5th of October, about 5 o’clock in the afternoon, it is important
to mention, when this remarkable work was begun, when J. T. Maston began to work
upon it. He began his calculation with a diagram representing the circumference
of the earth around one of its grand circles, say the equator. The blackboard
was there, in a corner of his study, upon a polished oak easel, with good light
shining on it, coming by one of the windows near by. Small pieces of chalk were
on the board attached to the stand. The sponge was near the hand of the
calculator. His right hand, or rather his right hook, was all ready for the
placing of figures which he was going to use. Standing up, Mr. Maston made a
large round circle, which represented the world. The equator he marked by a
straight line. Then in the right corner of the blackboard he began to put the
figures which represented the circumference of the earth:</p>
<P align=center>40,000,000.</p>
<p>This done, he began figuring on his problem. He was so much occupied by it
that he had not observed the weather without. For an hour a storm had raved
through the country which affected all living beings. It was a terrific storm,
the rain was falling in torrents, everything seemed turned upside down in
nature. Two or three times lightning had illuminated the scene around him. But
the mathematician, more and more absorbed in his work, saw and heard nothing.
Suddenly an electric bolt, attracted by the lightning outside, sparkled in his
room, and this disturbed the calculator. “Well,” said Mr. Maston, “if unwelcome
visitors cannot get in by the door they come by telephone. A nice invention for
people who wish to be left alone. I will go to work and cut off the electric
wire, so I will not be disturbed again while my figuring lasts.” With this he
went to the telephone and said sternly: “Who wants to talk to me? Just make it
short.” The reply came back: “Did you not recognize my voice, my dear Mr.
Maston? It is I, Mrs. Scorbitt.” “Mrs. Scorbitt! She will never give me a
moment’s rest,” uttered Mr. Maston to himself in a low voice that she could not
hear. Then he thought he should at least answer her in a polite manner, and
said: “Oh, is that you, Mrs. Scorbitt?”</p>
<p>“Yes, dear Mr. Maston.”</p>
<p>“And what can I do for Mrs. Scorbitt?” asked Maston.</p>
<p>“I want to tell you that a terrible storm and lightning is destroying a large
part of our city.” “Well,” he replied, “I cannot help it.” “But I want to ask
whether you have thought to close your windows?” Mrs. Scorbitt had hardly
finished her sentence when a terrible thunderbolt struck the town. It struck in
the neighborhood of the Ballistic cottage, and the electricity, passing along
the wire with which the telephone was provided, threw the calculator to the
floor with a terrible force. J.T. Maston made the best summersault he ever did
in his life. His metal hook had touched the live wire and he was thrown down
like a shuttlecock. The blackboard, which he had struck in his fall, was sent
flying to another part of the room. Then the electricity passed into other
objects and disappeared through the floor. The stupefied Mr. Maston got up and
touched the different parts of his body to assure himself that he was not hurt
internally. This done, he resumed his cold, calculating way. He picked
everything up in his room, put it in the same place where it had been before and
put his blackboard on the easel, picked up the small pieces of chalk and began
again his work, which had been so suddenly interrupted. He noticed that on
account of the fall the number which he had made on the right side of the
blackboard was partly erased, and he was just about to replace it when his
telephone again rang with a loud noise. “Again,” said J.T, Maston, and going to
the telephone he exclaimed, “who is there?” “Mistress Scorbitt.” “And what does
Mrs. Scorbitt want?” “Did not this terrible thunderbolt strike Ballistic
cottage? I have good reason to think so. Ah, great God, the thunderbolt!”</p>
<p>“Don’t be alarmed, Mrs. Scorbitt.”</p>
<p>“You have not been injured, Mr. Maston?”</p>
<p>“Not at all,” he replied.</p>
<p>“You are sure you have no injuries whatever,” said the lady.</p>
<p>“I am only touched by your kindness towards me,” replied Mr. Maston, thinking
it the best way to answer.</p>
<p>“Good evening, dear Mr. Maston.”</p>
<p>“Good evening, dear Mrs. Scorbitt.”</p>
<p>Returning to his work Mr. Maston said, sotto voce, “To the devil with her. If
she had not handled the telephone at such a time I would not have run the risk
of being hurt by electricity.”</p>
<p>Mr. Maston did not wish to be interrupted in his work again and so took down
his telephone and cut the wire. Then, taking again as basis the figure which he
had written, he added different formulas of it, and finally a certain formula
which he had written on his left side, and then he began to figure in all the
language of algebra. A week later, on the 11th of October, this magnificent
calculation was finished and the Secretary of the Gun Club brought his solution
of the problem with great pride and satisfaction to the members of the Gun Club,
who were awaiting it with very natural impatience. This then was the practical
way to get to the North Pole mathematically discovered. Here was also a society,
under the name of the N.P.P.A., to which the Government of Washington had
accorded a clear title of the Arctic region in case they should buy it on
auction, and we have told of the purchase made in favor of American buyers and
of the appeal for a subscription of $15,000,000.</p>
<h4>CHAPTER VII.<br/><br/>IN WHICH PRESIDENT BARBICANE SAYS NO MORE THAN SUITS HIS
PURPOSE.</h4>
<p>On the 22nd of December the subscribers to Barbicane & Co. were summoned
to a general meeting. It is hardly necessary to say that the headquarters of the
Gun Club were selected as the place of the meeting. In reality the whole block
would not have been sufficient to give room to the large crowd of subscribers
who assembled on that day. But a meeting in the fresh air on one of the public
squares of Baltimore was not very agreeable in such cold weather. Usually the
large hall of the Gun Club was decorated with models of all kinds lent by
members of the Club. It was a real museum of artillery. Even the furniture,
chairs and tables, sofas and divans, recalled by their strange shapes those
murderous engines which had sent into a better world many brave people whose
greatest wish was to die of old age.</p>
<p>On this meeting day all these things were taken down and out. This was not a
meeting for the purpose of war, but a commercial and peaceful meeting over which
Impey Barbicane was going to preside. All room possible had been made for the
subscribers who arrived from all parts of the United States. In the hall as well
as in the adjoining rooms the crowds were pushing and pressing each other
without heeding the innumerable people who were standing on the adjoining
streets. The members of the Gun Club, as first subscribers to the affair, had
places reserved for them very near the desk. Among them could be found Col.
Bloomsberry, more happy than ever; Tom Hunter, with his wooden legs, and the
jolly Bilsby. Very snug in a comfortable armchair was Mrs. Evangelina Scorbitt,
who should really have had a place on the right hand of the President, as she
was in reality the owner of the Arctic region. Several other ladies were in the
crowd. They could readily be seen by their large and much-decorated hats in many
different colors. The large crowd on the outside tried to push into the hall,
and one might easily have thought that all the people present were not merely
helpmates of the members of the Gun Club, but rather their personal friends. The
European delegates—Swedish, Norwegians, Danish, English, Dutch, and
Russian—occupied reserved seats, and if they had bought any stock in this
society it was only each one individually to such an extent as to justify a vote
in the proceedings. After they had been so closely united in purchasing these
regions they were united now only to annoy the purchasers. It may easily be
imagined what intense curiosity they had to hear the important communication
which the President was about to make to them. This communication undoubtedly
would throw some information on the point as to how the society would proceed to
reach the North Pole. Was this not a more difficult thing than merely to make
use of the coal mines? If there should be any objections to make you may be
assured that Major Donellan, backed up by his secretary, Dean Toodrink, would
make them, and the other delegates would not be very slow in adding their word
also. The Major had firmly decided to harass and annoy his rival, Impey
Barbicane, as much as he possibly could.</p>
<p>It was 8 o’clock in the evening. The hall, the parlors, and all quarters
occupied by the Gun Club blazed with lights which the Edison electroliers throw
out. As soon as the doors were thrown open for the public a terrible crowd
jammed into the hall. But everyone became silent as the ushers announced that
the Council of Administration was coming. There, on a draped platform, with a
table covered with black cloth, in full sight, President Barbicane, his
Secretary, J.T. Maston, and his associates, took their places. A triple round of
cheers, followed by hearty “tigers,” rang through the hall and out to the
adjoining streets. Very solemnly Mr. Maston and Capt. Nicholl took their seats.
Then the President, who had remained standing, opened the proceedings. He put
his right hand in his trouser’s pocket and his left hand in his vest front and
began as follows:</p>
<p>“Lady and gentlemen subscribers, the Council of Administration has called a
meeting in these headquarters of the Gun Club to make an important communication
to you. You have learned by the circulars and through the discussions in the
papers that the object of our Club is to explore the large coal fields situated
in the Arctic regions, which we have recently purchased and to which we hold a
title from the American Government. The amount of money raised by public
subscription will be used for these purposes. The success which will be attained
by it surpasses belief and the dividends your money will bring you will be
unsurpassed in the commercial or financial history of this or any other
country.” Here applause was heard for the first time and for a moment the orator
was interrupted. “You do not forget,” said he, “how we have proved to you that
there must be vast coal fields in these regions, perhaps also fields of fossil
ivory. The articles published on this subject do not allow any doubt that coal
fields are there, and coal is now, you know, the basis of all our commercial
industry. Without mentioning the coal which is used every year in firing and
heating, we might think of coal used for many other purposes, of which I could
mention a hundred different ones. It is certain that coal is the most precious
substance, and will some day, on account of the large consumption of it; fail in
its supply. Before 500 years have passed the coal mines which are at present in
use will have stopped giving coal.”</p>
<p>“Three hundred years,” cried one of those present. “Two hundred years,”
answered another.</p>
<p>“Let us say at some time sooner or later,” continued the President, calmly,
“and let us suppose, too, that we will even discover new coal fields yet, whose
coal will give out, say at the end of the nineteenth century.” Here he stopped
to give his listeners a chance to grasp the idea. Then he began again:
“Therefore, we come here, subscribers, and I ask you to rise and go with me to
the North Pole immediately.” Everybody present got up and seemed about to rush
away and pack their trunks, as if President Barbicane had a vessel ready to take
them direct to the North Pole. But a remark made by Major Donellan in a clear
and loud voice brought them back to reality and stopped them at once. “Before
starting” he asked, “I would like to know by what means we can reach the North
Pole?”</p>
<p>“Either by water, or land, or by air,” quietly answered President
Barbicane.</p>
<p>All the people present sat down, and it may readily be understood with what a
feeling of curiosity.</p>
<p>“In spite of all the devotion and courage of previous explorers, the
eighty-fourth parallel has thus far been the northern limit reached. And it may
fairly be supposed that this is as far north as anybody will ever get by the
means employed at the present day. Up to the present time we have only used
boats and vessels to reach the icebergs, and rafts to pass over the fields of
ice. People should not adopt such rash means and face the dangers to which they
are exposed through the low temperature. We must employ other means to reach the
North Pole.”</p>
<p>It could be seen by the excitement which took hold of the auditors, that they
were on the point of hearing the secret which has been so vigorously searched
for by every one.</p>
<p>“And how will you reach it?” demanded the delegate of England.</p>
<p>“Before ten minutes have passed you will know it, Major Donellan,” said
President Barbicane, “and I may add in addressing myself to all the
stockholders, that they should have confidence in us as the promoters of this
affair, for we are the same who have tried to send a projectile to the
moon.”</p>
<p>“Yes,” cried Dean Toodrink, sarcastically, “they tried to go as far as the
moon. And we can easily see that they are here yet.”</p>
<p>President Barbicane ignored the interruption. Shrugging his shoulders, he
said in a loud voice: “Yes, ladies and gentlemen, in ten minutes you will know
what we are going to do.”</p>
<p>A murmur, made up of many “Ahs!” and “Ohs!” followed this remark. It seemed
to them as if the orator had said in ten minutes they would be at the North
Pole. He then continued in the following words:</p>
<p>“First of all, it is a continent which forms this arctic region, or it is an
ocean, and has Commander Nares been right in calling it ‘paleocrystic ocean,’
which means an ocean of old ice? To this question I must answer that I think he
was not right.”</p>
<p>This is not sufficient,” exclaimed Eric Baldenak. “It is not the question of
supposing, it is the question of being certain.”</p>
<p>“Well, we are certain,” came the answer to this furious inquirer. “Yes, it is
a solid continent and not an ice ocean which the N.P.P.A. has purchased and
which now belongs to the United States and which no European power has the right
to touch.”</p>
<p>A little murmur came from the neighborhood of the delegates of the Old World.
“Bah!” they said. “It is full of water, a regular washbasin which you will not
be able to empty.” Dean Toodrink as usual made most of the remarks and met the
hearty applause of his associates. “No, sir,” answered President Barbicane,
quickly. “There is a regular continent, a platform which rises like the Gobi
desert in Central Asia, three or four kilometres above the surface of the ocean.
This is very easy to be seen from the observations made in the neighboring
countries, of which the polar region is only an extension.</p>
<p>“After their explorations have not Nordenskiold, Perry and Maaigaard stated
that Greenland gets higher and higher towards the North Pole?</p>
<p>“Besides, they have found birds, different products and vegetables in the
northern ice—ivory teeth also—which indicate that this region must have been
inhabited and that animals must have been there, and perhaps people as well.
There used to be large forests there, which must have been formed into
coal-fields, which we will explore. Yes, there is a continent, without a doubt,
around the North Pole—a continent free from all human beings, and on which we
will place the banner of the United States.”</p>
<p>At this remark the auditors expressed great delight. When the noise had
finally subsided Major Donellan could be heard to remark: “Well, seven minutes
have already gone by of the ten which, as you say, would be sufficient to reach
the North Pole.”</p>
<p>“We shall be there in three minutes,” coolly answered President
Barbicane.</p>
<p>“But, even if this be a continent, which constitutes your purchase, and if it
is a raised country, as we may have reasons to believe, it is also obstructed by
eternal ice, and in a condition which will make exploration extremely
difficult,” responded the Major. “Impossible,” cried Jan Harald, who emphasized
this remark with a wave of his hand. “Impossible, all right,” said Impey
Barbicane. “But it is to conquer this impossibility that we have purchased this
region. We will need neither vessels nor rafts to reach the North Pole; no,
thanks to our operations, the ice and icebergs, new or old, will melt by
themselves, and it will not cost one dollar of our capital nor one minute of our
time.” At this there was absolute silence. The most important moment had
come.</p>
<p>“Gentlemen,” said the President of the Gun Club, “Archimedes only asked for a
lever to lift the world. Well, this lever we have found. We are now in a
position to remove the North Pole.”</p>
<p>“What, remove the North Pole?” cried Eric Baldenak.</p>
<p>“Will you bring it to America?” asked Jan Harald. Without doubt President
Barbicane did not wish to explain himself just yet, for he continued: “In regard
to this point of leverage—” “Do not tell it! do not tell it!” cried one of his
associates, with a terrible voice.</p>
<p>“In regard to this lever—”</p>
<p>“Keep the secret! keep the secret!” cried the majority of the spectators,
taking up the cry.</p>
<p>“We will keep it,” said President Barbicane.</p>
<p>Naturally, the European delegates were very much vexed at this remark. This
will be easily understood. In spite of all these exclamations the orator never
had any intention of making his plan known. He continued to say: “We obtained
our object, thanks to a mechanical device, one which has no precedent in the
annals of industrial art. We will undertake it and bring it to a successful
finish by means of our capital, and how I will inform you forthwith.”</p>
<p>“Hear! hear!” said the others present.</p>
<p>“First of all, the idea of our plan comes from one of the ablest, most
devoted and illustrious calculators and one of our associates as well,” said
President Barbicane. “One to whom we owe all the calculations which allows us to
have our work in such good condition. As the exploration of the North Pole is
not a piece of play the removal of the pole is a problem which could only be
solved by the highest calculations. Therefore we have called the assistance of
the honorable Secretary, Mr. J.T. Maston.”</p>
<p>“Hip, hip, hip, hurrah, for J. T. Maston,” exclaimed all the auditors,
seemingly electrified by the presence of this extraordinary calculator.</p>
<p>Mrs. Evangelina Scorbitt was deeply touched by this recognition of the
celebrated mathematician, who had already entirely gained her heart. He
contented himself with turning his head to the right and left, bowing and
thanking his auditors.</p>
<p>“Already, dear subscribers,” said President Barbicane, “since the great
meeting in honor of the arrival of the Frenchman, Michel Ardan, in America, some
months before our departure for the moon” (and this confident Yankee spoke of
the trip to the moon as quietly as if it were no more than a trip to New York),
“J T. Maston had already said to himself: ‘We must invent machines to move the
North Pole. We must find a point for action and put the axis of the earth in the
right direction from the object.’ Well, any or all of you who listen to me find
it if you can. I can only say the machines have been invented, the point of
leverage has been found, and now let us pay our attention to the question of
fixing, in the right way, for our end of the axis of the earth.” Here he stopped
speaking, and the astonishment which was expressed on the faces of his auditors
it is impossible to describe.</p>
<p>“What!” cried Major Donellan, “you then have the idea of putting the axis of
the earth in another direction?”</p>
<p>“Yes, sir,” answered President Barbicane promptly. “We have the means of
making a new one which will hereafter regulate the routine of day and
night.”</p>
<p>“You want to modify the daily rotation of the earth?” repeated Col. Karkof,
with fire in his eyes.</p>
<p>“Absolutely, but without affecting its duration,” answered President
Barbicane. This operation will bring the pole at or about the sixty-seventh
parallel of latitude, then the earth will be similar to the planet Jupiter,
whose axis is nearly perpendicular to the plane of its orbit. Now this movement
of 23 degrees 28 minutes will be sufficient to give at our North Pole such a
degree of heat that it will melt in less than no time the icebergs and field
which have been there for thousands of years.”</p>
<p>The audience was out of breath. Nobody thought of interrupting the orator,
even to applaud him. All were taken in by this idea, so ingenious and simple, of
modifying the axis on which this earthly spheroid is rotating. And as for the
European delegates, well, they were simply stupefied, paralyzed, and crushed,
they kept their mouths shut in the last stage of astonishment. But the hurrahs
seemed to rend the hall asunder, when President Barbicane made the additional
remark: “It is the sun which will take upon himself the melting of the icebergs
and fields around the North Pole, and thus make access to the same very easy.
So, as people cannot go to the pole, the pole will come to them.”</p>
<h4>CHAPTER VIII.<br/><br/>YES, JUST LIKE JUPITER.</h4>
<p>Since that memorable meeting in honor of Michel Ardan, the Hon. J.T. Maston
had talked and thought of nothing else but the “changing of the axis of the
earth.” He had studied the subject as much as possible and found out all the
facts and figures about it. As the problem had been solved by this eminent
calculator a new axis was going to take the place of the old one upon which the
earth was now turning, and the world would otherwise remain the same. In the
scheme it would be possible for the climate around the North Pole to become
exactly the same as that of Trondhjem, in Norway, in the Spring. Naturally, then
the large amount of ice would melt under the ardent sun. At the same time the
climates would be distributed over our sphere like those now on the surface of
Jupiter. In other words, the new-formed society of Barbicane was going to change
everything at present on the surface of the earth. And the creation of this new
axis was possible, just as soon as the platform of which Archimedes had dreamed
and the lever imagined by J.T. Maston were at the disposal of these courageous
engineers. And as they had decided to make a secret of their invention until a
future time, people could not do anything else but make their own figures. This
was what all the papers did, calling on the most scientific persons and learning
as well something from the most ignorant persons. If there really were people
living on the surface of Jupiter, they had a good many advantages over those on
the earth, advantages which had all been narrated and explained in the meeting
which was held before the trip to the moon. All these advantages would come to
the people living on the earth if Barbicane & Co. could accomplish what they
intended to do. Twenty-four hours would then always separate two noons from each
other. Twilight and dawn would always be as they are now. But the most curious
thing of all would be the absence of the different seasons of the year. Now
there were Summer, Winter, Fall, and Spring. The people living on Jupiter did
not know these seasons at all. After this experiment people living on this globe
would not know them either. As soon as the new axis would be in smooth working
order there would be no more ice regions, nor torrid zones, but the whole world
would have an even temperature climate.</p>
<p>What, after all, is the torrid zone? It is a part of the surface in which the
people can see the sun twice yearly at its zenith, and the temperate zone but a
part where the sun never goes to the zenith, and the icy region but a part of
the world which the sun forgets entirely for a long time, and around the North
Pole this extends for six months. It is simply the position of the sun which
makes a country exceedingly hot or cold. Well, these things would not appear any
longer on the surface of the world. The sun would be always over the equator: it
would go down every twelve hours just as regularly as before. “And among the
advantages of the new method,” said the friends of President Barbicane, “were
these, that each person could choose a climate which was best for himself and
his health; no more rheumatism, no more colds, no more grippe; the variations of
extreme heat would not be known any more. In short, Barbicane & Co. were
going to change fixtures which had existed ever since the world was in
existence. Certainly the observer would lose a few stars and things which he
perhaps liked to look at now, and the poet would not have any longer his dreamy
nights, etc., but what a great advantage it would be for the world at large.
“And,” said certain journals, “the products of the ground can be regulated so
that agriculturists can give to each sort of plant life the temperature which
suits it most.” Other newspapers asked: “Will we no more have rain, or storms,
or hail—things upon which a great deal depends in the harvest time?”
“Undoubtedly,” said the friends of Barbicane & Co., but these accidents will
be more rare than they have been, as the temperature will be more even. Yes,
taken in all, it will be a great advantage to humanity. It will be the real
millennium of the earthly globe. And Barbicane & Co. will have done a
service to mankind which but for them would have remained an impossibility.”
“Yes,” said Michel Ardan, “our hemisphere, the surface of which is always either
too cold or too warm, will no longer be the place for colds and rheumatism,
etc.” A New York paper of Dec. 27 printed the following article: “Honor to
President Barbicane! His associates and himself will not only annex a new
province to our American continent, and thereby enlarge the already vast
possessions of the United States, but they will make the whole world more
productive and inhabitable. It will be possible then to put seed in the ground
as soon as the crop had grown up and been taken out; there would be no more time
lost during the Winter. And the coal mines also would make the country richer
than the value of its entire present realty. Barbicane & Co. will change the
whole world and put it in better condition. Thanks, then, to the people who have
done this greatest of benefits to humanity.”</p>
<h4><b>CHAPTER IX.<br/><br/>IN WHICH APPEARS THE FRENCH GENTLEMAN TO WHOM WE
REFERRED AT THE BEGINNING OF THIS TRUTHFUL STORY.</b></h4>
<p>Such, then, were to be the profits due to the changes which were to be
wrought by President Barbicane. The earth would continue to revolve and the
course of the year would not be much altered. As the changes would concern the
whole world it was natural that they became of interest to all. In regard to the
new axis which was going to be used that was the secret which neither President
Barbicane nor Capt. Nicholl nor J.T. Maston seemed to be willing to give to the
public. Were they to reveal it before, or would none know of it until after the
change had taken place? A degree of uncertainty began to fill the American mind.
Criticisms very natural and to be expected were made in the papers. By what
mechanical means was this project to be carried out which would bring about this
change? It would necessarily demand a terrible power. One of the greatest papers
at that time commented in the following article: “If the earth was not turning
on its axis, perhaps a very feeble shock would be sufficient to give it such a
movement as might be chosen, but otherwise it would be very difficult if not
impossible to deviate it a fixed amount.” Nothing seemed more correct after
having discussed the effort which the engineers of the N.P.P.A. were to make.
Discussion took on the interesting turn as to whether this result would be
reached insensibly or suddenly. And if the latter, would not terrible accidents
happen at the moment when the change took place? This troubled scientific people
as well as ignorant people. It was not agreeable to know that a blow was to be
struck and not know precisely what the after effects were to be.</p>
<p>It seemed as if the promoters of this undertaking had not fully considered
the consequences - that they would be so very dangerous to the earth, and that
it would not do as much good as first thought. The European delegates, more than
ever angry at the loss which they had suffered, resolved to make the most of
this question and to excite the public as much as possible upon it so as to turn
feeling against the members of the Gun Club.</p>
<p>It will not be forgotten that France had absolutely nothing to do with these
delegates, as it had no intentions of buying the Arctic region. However, a
Frenchman had come to Baltimore, and for his own personal benefit and
information had watched with great interest the proceedings of the Gun Club. He
was an engineer, not more than thirty-five years old. He had been first in the
polytechnic school, and came out of it with the highest honors. He was without
doubt as skilful a calculator as Mr. J.T. Maston. This engineer was a very
intelligent young man, very original, always pleasant, and with most amiable
manners. He always spoke very frankly and used plain language, no matter whether
he was speaking in earnest or in fun. He even went so far as to use slangy
expressions when they served his purpose. He could sit for hours at his table
and figure and calculate, making his figures and calculations as fast as he
could write with a pen. His greatest pleasure, next to these difficult
mathematical efforts, was in “whist,” which he played apparently very
indifferently, not forgetting to figure out all his chances. His name was Alcide
Pierdeux, but he generally signed it, A. Pierd, and sometimes only A. Pie. He
was very tall. His friends remarked that his height measured about the five
millionth part of the quarter of the meridian, and they were not much mistaken.
He had a small head, at least it looked so on his broad shoulders, but with a
most lively expression on his face, and his blue eyes behind his eye-glasses
twinkled merrily. This was characteristic of him, for he had one of those faces
which appear merry, even when they are in sober earnest. He was at once the best
scholar in his class and the best tempered. But even if his head did seem a
little small on his shoulders, it is safe to say that it was filled to its
highest capacity. He was a mathematician, as all his ancestors had been, but he
did not study mathematics to use them in his profession, for which he never had
any taste, as he disliked trade. No, he studied mathematics for themselves
alone, simply to find them out more and more where there was so much unknown to
man. Let us also remark that Alcide Pierdeux was a bachelor. He was as yet
single, or, as he would express it, equal to one (= 1) although his greatest
wish was to get married. His friends all thought that he would marry a very
charming girl, gay and spirituelle. But, unhappily for him, the girl’s father
said that he was too smart and that he would talk to his daughter in language
which she would not be able to understand. How modest and simple this father
was, indeed. And for this reason the young engineer decided to place between
himself and his country the broad ocean. He asked permission to go abroad for a
year and obtained it. He thought that he could not make any better use of his
time than to go to Baltimore and note the actions of the N.P.P.A. And this is
how he came to be at this time in the United States. However, since he got to
Baltimore he had cared little apparently for the great undertaking of Barbicane
& Co. Whether the earth would have a change of the axis or not, what did it
matter to him? He only wanted to know, and his curiosity was at the highest
point to find out, by what means they were to move the earth. He thought again
and again how they would do it and had several plans in his head and dismissed
them only to consider the matter afresh. He concluded that they wanted probably
to substitute a new axis, but he did not clearly see where their point of
operations was to be. Then, again, he would say, “There is the daily movement.
It is impossible to surpress it; how they will do it, is a perfect conundrum to
me.” He had no idea what the plans of Barbicane and Maston were. It is to be
regretted very much that their intentions were not known to him, as he would
have been able to figure out the formulae in a very short time. And so it came
about that on this 29th day of December, Alcide Pierdeux was walking with his
hand at his brow, pondering, about the streets of Baltimore.</p>
<h4>CHAPTER X.<br/><br/>IN WHICH A LITTLE UNEASINESS BEGINS TO SHOW ITSELF.</h4>
<p>A month had elapsed since the meeting of the Gun Club and the stockholders of
the new-formed society, and public opinion was getting much altered. The
advantages of the change to be wrought in the axis of the earth were forgotten
and its disadvantages began to be spoken of. It was very probable, public
opinion said, that a terrible catastrophe would happen, as the change could only
be brought about by a violent shock. What would this catastrophe exactly be? In
regard to the change of climates, was it so desirable after all? The Esquimaux
and the Laps and the Samoyeden and the Tchuktchees would benefit by it, as they
had nothing to lose. The European delegates were very energetic in their talk
against President Barbicane and his work. To begin with they sent information to
their Government. They used the cable frequently and always sent cipher
messages. They asked questions and received instructions. What, then, were these
instructions, always in cipher and very guarded? “Show energy, but do not
compromise our Government,” said one. “Act very considerately, but do not touch
the ‘statu[s] quo,’” said another. Major Donellan and his associates did not
fail to predict a terrible accident. “It is very evident that the American
engineers have taken steps so as not to hurt, or at least as little as possible,
the territory of the United States,” thought Col. Boris Karkof. “But how could
they do it?” asked Jan Harald. “If you shake a tree do not all its branches
suffer while you are shaking it?” “And if somebody hits you on the back does not
your whole body feel the pain?” said Jacques Jansen. “That is, then, what this
strange paragraph of the document meant,” said Dean Toodrink. “That is the
reason why they mentioned certain geographical changes.”</p>
<p>“Yes,” said Eric Baldenak, “that is what we have to fear; this change will
throw the sea out of its basin, and should the ocean leave its present quarters,
would not certain inhabitants of this globe find themselves so located that they
could not readily communicate with their fellow-citizens?”</p>
<p>“It is very possible that they may be brought into such a density of
surrounding medium,” said Jan Harald, gravely, “that they will be unable to
breathe.”</p>
<p>“We will see London at the top of Mount Blanc,” exclaimed Major Donellan. And
with his legs crossed and his head thrown back this gentleman looked straight up
as if the capital of his country was already lost in the clouds. In short, it
became a public danger and a most annoying one. True, it was only a question of
a change of 23 degrees and 28 minutes, but this change might bring about a great
movement of the oceans as the new earth flattened itself around the pole.
Protestations were heard from all over, and the Government of the United States
was asked to interfere. “It was best not to try the operation at all.” “The
consequences of it might destroy this world.” “God has done all things well; it
was not necessary to better his work,” were the comments. And yet there were
people light-hearted enough to make merry at the whole matter. “Look at these
Yankees,” they said, “they want to turn the earth on its axis. If the earth had
shown any faults in its motion it would be all right to better it, but it had
gone on for millions of years and always as regularly as clockwork.”</p>
<p>Instead of answering such questions Engineer Alcide Pierdeux tried to find
which would be the countries and directions, figured out by Mathematician
Maston, in which the test would take place—the exact point of the globe where
the work would begin. As soon as he should know this he would be master of the
situation and know exactly the place which would be in the most danger. It has
been mentioned before that the countries of the old continent were probably
connected with those of the new across the North Pole. Was it not possible, it
was asked in Europe, that President Barbicane and Capt. Nicholl and J.T. Maston
had considered only how to save their own country from any ill consequences
which might come from the shock? He was a Yankee—it was pointed out they were
all Yankees—and particularly this man Barbicane, who had created the idea of
going to the moon. In any case, it was argued, the whole new world, from the
Arctic regions to the Gulf of Mexico, would not have to fear anything from the
shock. It is even probable on the other hand that America would profit immensely
by it and gain some territory. “Who knows what is lying in the two oceans which
wash the American coast? Was it not probable that there was some valuable
territory which they wished to take possession of?” asked people who never saw
anything but the dark side of a question. “Is it sure that there is no danger?
Suppose J.T. Maston should make a mistake in his calculations? And could not the
President have made a mistake when he came to put his apparatus in working
order? This might happen to the smartest people. They might not always put the
bullet in the target, or they might neglect to put the cannonball into the
cannon,” were the comments of these nervous folk. This uneasiness was fomented
by the European delegates. Secretary Dean Toodrink published several articles in
this line, and even stronger ones were put by him in the <i>Standard</i>. Jan
Harald put some in the Swedish journal <i>Aftenbladt</i>, and Col. Boris Karkof
in a Russian journal which had a large circulation. Even in America opinions
differed. The Republicans were friends of President Barbicane, but the Democrats
declared themselves against him. A part of the American press agreed with the
European press. And as in the United States the papers had become great powers,
paying yearly for news about twenty millions of dollars, they had great
influence on the people. In vain did other journals of large circulation speak
in favor of the N.P.P.A. In vain did Mrs. Evangelina Scorbitt pay as high as $10
a line for articles showing the advantages of this invention. In vain did this
ardent widow try to demonstrate that everything was perfectly correct, and that
J.T. Maston could never commit an error in figuring. Finally America took fright
in the matter and was inclined to be governed by Europe. But neither President
Barbicane nor Secretary Maston of the Gun Club seemed to care what was said.
They did not even take the trouble to correct the different articles. They let
people say what they liked and did not try to change their minds at all. They
were too much occupied in preparations for the immense undertaking. It is indeed
strange that the public, who were at first so enthusiastic and so certain of
success, should so suddenly turn and go against this operation.</p>
<p>Soon, however, in spite of the money Mrs. Evangelina Scorbitt spent on the
matter, the President and Secretary of the Club came to be considered dangerous
characters by the people of the two worlds. The Government of the United States
was asked officially by the European powers to interfere and examine the matter.
The originators were to openly show their ideas and by what means they hoped to
accomplish what they intended. They would have to inform the Government which
parts of the world would be most in danger and, in short, tell everything which
the public demanded to know. The Government at Washington was compelled to do
what they were asked. The uprising of public sentiment in the Northern,
Southern, and Middle States of the Union did not allow them any other course. A
commission of engineers, mechanicians, mathematicians, and geographers were
appointed—fifty in all, presided over by John Prestice—by the act of the 19th of
February, with full power to do anything which they considered necessary in the
matter. At first the President of the Society received orders to appear before
this committee. President Barbicane did not respond. Agents went to his house in
Baltimore, but the President was gone. Where was he? No one knew. When did he
depart? Six weeks ago, on the 11th of January, he had left the city, and the
State of Maryland as well, in company with Capt. Nicholl.</p>
<p>Where did they both go? Nobody could tell. Evidently the two members of the
Gun Club went to that mysterious region where preparations were going on for the
great operation. But where could this place be? It was most important to know
where this place was in order to break up and destroy the plans of these
engineers before they had got too far in their work.</p>
<p>The consternation produced by this departure of the President and his
associate was enormous. It soon changed public opinion to hatred against the
N.P.P.A. and its managers. But there was one man who ought to know where the
President and his associate had gone. There was one man who could answer this
gigantic question, which at present excited the whole world and this man
was—J.T. Maston. He was ordered to appear before the Committee of Inquiry under
the Presidency of John Prestice. He did not appear. Had he also left Baltimore?
Had he also gone to join his associates to aid them in their work, the results
of which the whole world now expected with such immense fright? No. J.T. Maston
was living still in his Ballistic Cottage, at No. 179 Franklin Street, working
all the time and already beginning new calculations, only interrupting his work
when he wanted to spend a social evening with Mrs. Evangelina Scorbitt at her
magnificent residence at New Park. An agent was sent to him by the President of
the Inquiry Committee with orders to bring him to their meeting. The agent
arrived at the cottage, knocked at the door and introduced himself. He was
harshly received by “Fire-Fire,” but much worse by the proprietor of the house.
However, Mr. Maston thought it was no more than right that he should go to the
meeting, and he went with the agent. As soon as he had arrived they began to
question him.</p>
<p>The first question was, “Where is President Barbicane and Capt. Nicholl at
present?” He answered with a steady voice, “I know where they are, but I am not
at liberty to disclose this information.” Second question: “Have he and his
associates made the necessary preparations to put this operation in working
order?” “This,” said Maston, “is a part of the secret which I cannot reveal.”
“Would he be land enough to let this Committee examine his own work, so they
would be able to judge if his Society would be in position to accomplish their
intentions?” “No, most certainly I shall not allow it, never; I would rather
destroy it. It is my right as a citizen of free America to refuse to communicate
to any person the result of my work.”</p>
<p>“But,” said President Prestice in a very serious voice, “if it is your right
to keep silent, it is the right of the whole United States to ask you to stop
these rumors and give an explanation of the means which will be employed by your
Company,” Mr. Maston did not agree that it was his right nor that it was his
duty to answer further questions. In spite of their begging, threatening, etc.,
they could obtain nothing from this man with the iron hook. Never, never, would
he say one word of it, and it was hardly possible to believe that such a strong
will was concealed under that cover of “gutta-percha.” Mr. Maston went away as
he had come; he was congratulated by Mrs. Evangelina Scorbitt, who was delighted
by the courageous attitude taken by him. When the results of this last meeting
of the Inquiry Committee became known public indignation really took a turn
which threatened the security and safety of the calculator. The pressure of
public opinion was so great that the Cabinet of the Government of the United
States was compelled to give the Committee full permission to do what they
thought most necessary and advisable in the matter. One evening, the 13th of
March, J.T. Maston was in his study at the Ballistic Cottage, very much
interested in different figures, when suddenly the telephone bell attracted his
attention. “Hello! hello!” said he, annoyed by this sudden interruption, “who
wants me?” “Mme. Scorbitt.” “What does Mrs. Scorbitt want?” “She wants to put
you on your guard, I am informed this moment”—and she had not time to finish the
phrase when Mr. Maston heard a terrible noise at the door of his house. On the
stairs which led to his study there was an extraordinary racket. He could hear
loud voices, many angry voices. Then the noise of a whole army of men moving
towards his door. It was his servant Fire-Fire, who was trying to keep the
intruders from breaking, into the house and disturbing the “home” of the master.
A moment afterwards the door was violently opened and a policeman appeared,
followed by several others. This policeman had a warrant to make a visit to the
house and to take possession of all papers and also of J.T. Maston himself. The
angry Secretary of the Gun Club reached for his revolver, and would have
certainly defended himself had he not been suddenly disarmed. He was held by
officers, and all his papers were put in a bundle. Suddenly he made a bold
effort, freed himself, grabbed his note-book, out of which he tore the last page
and began to chew it very quickly. “Now you can take it,” said he, “for it will
be no good to you.” An hour afterwards he was a prisoner in the jail of
Baltimore. This was undoubtedly the best that could happen to him, as it was
extremely dangerous for him to be at liberty due to the then excited state of
the public mind.</p>
<h4><b>CHAPTER XI.<br/><br/>WHAT WAS FOUND IN THE NOTEBOOK OF J.T. MASTON AND WHAT
IT NO LONGER CONTAINED.</b></h4>
<p>The notebook, which was taken possession of by the police, had thirty pages
covered with formulae and figures, including all the calculations of J.T.
Maston. It was a work of the higher mathematics, which could only be appreciated
by the highest mathematicians. The following formula,</p>
<P align=center><ANTIMG alt="Equation 1"
src="eq1.png" width=529></p>
<P align=center>[Equation 1]</p>
<P class=normal>which was also to be found in the calculation of <i>From the
Earth to the Moon</i>, held a prominent place in these calculations. The
majority of people could not understand anything of what was written in the
notebook, but it would have given satisfaction to give out the results, which
every one expected with so much curiosity. And so it was that all the
newspapers, and the Inquiry Committee as well, tried to read the formulae of
this celebrated calculator. In the work of Mr. Maston were found some problems
correctly executed, others half solved, etc. The calculations had been made with
great exactness and of course the Inquiry Committee supposed that they were
absolutely correct. If the plan was carried out fully it was seen that without a
doubt the earth’s axis would be greatly changed and that the terrible disasters
which were predicted would take place with full force. The reports made by the
Inquiry Committee to the different newspapers ran as follows:</p>
<p>“The idea followed by the Administrative Council of the N.P.P.A. and the
object of which is to substitute a new axis for the old one is to be carried out
by means of the recoil of a piece of ordnance fixed at a certain point of the
earth. If the barrel of this device is immovably fixed to the ground it is not
at all doubtful that it will communicate its shock over our whole planet. The
engine adopted by the engineers of the Society is then nothing else but a
monster cannon, the effect of shooting which would be absolutely nothing if it
were pointed vertically. To produce its highest effect it is necessary to point
it horizontally towards the north or south, and it is this last direction which
has been chosen by Barbicane & Co. Under these conditions the recoil will
produce a movement of the earth towards the north, a movement similar to that of
one billiard ball touched very slightly by another.”</p>
<p>This was really just what the clever Alcide Pierdeux had predicted. As soon
as the cannon has been fired off, the center line of the earth would be
displaced in a parallel direction to that of the recoil. This would change the
direction of the orbit somewhat, and consequently the duration of the year, but
in such a mild way that it must be considered as absolutely free from bad
results. At the same time the earth takes a new movement of rotation around an
axis in the plane of the equator, and the daily rotation will then be
accomplished indefinitely upon this new axis, as if no daily movement had
existed previous to the shock. At present this movement is made around the lines
of the poles, and in combination with the accessory force produced by the recoil
there was created a new axis, the pole of which moves from the present to the
amount of a quantity called “x.” In other words, if the cannon is fired at the
moment when the vernal equinox—one of the intersections of the equator and the
ecliptic—is at the nadir of the point of shooting, and if the recoil is
sufficiently strong to displace the old pole 23 degrees, 28 minutes, the new
axis becomes perpendicular to the direction of the earth’s orbit, the same as it
is for the planet Jupiter.</p>
<p>What the consequences were expected to be we already know, as President
Barbicane had indicated them at the meeting of the 22d of December. But, given
the mass of the earth and the quantity of momentum, which she possesses, is it
possible to conceive a piece of ordnance so strong that its recoil will be able
to produce a modification in the actual direction of the real pole, and
especially to the extent of 23 degrees, 28 minutes? Yes, if a cannon or a series
of cannons are built with the dimensions required by the laws of mechanics, or,
in lieu of these dimensions, if the inventors were in possession of an explosive
strong enough to impel a projectile with the necessary velocity for such a
displacement.</p>
<p>Now, taking as a basis model the cannon of 27 centimetres of the French
Marine Corps, which throws a projectile of 180 kilograms with an initial
velocity of 500 metres a second, by giving to this piece of ordnance an
increased dimension of 100 times—that is, a million times in volume—it would
throw a projectile of 180,000 tons: or, in other words, if the powder had
strength sufficient to give to the projectile an initial velocity 5,600 times
greater than that of the old black powder used for a cannon the desired result
would be obtained. In fact, with a velocity of 2,800 kilometres a second, a
velocity sufficient to go from Paris to St. Petersburg in one second, there was
no doubt that the recoil of the projectile, acting against the earth, would put
everything again in a state of quietude. Well, extraordinary as it may appear,
J.T. Maston and his associates had in their possession exactly this explosive,
of a nearly unlimited power, and of which the gunpowder used to throw the ball
of the [C]olumbiad towards the moon gave but a faint idea. It was Capt. Nicholl
who had discovered it. The substances which entered into its composition were
only imperfectly entered in the notebook of Mr. Maston, and he merely named it
“melimelonite.” All that was known was that it was formed by the reaction of a
melimelo of organic substances and azotic acids. No matter what the explosive
was, with the power which it possessed it was more than sufficient to throw a
projectile weighing 180,000 tons outside of the earth’s attraction, and it was
evident that the recoil which it would produce to the cannon would have the
effect of changing the axis, displacing the North Pole 23 degrees and 28
minutes, bringing the new axis in the direction of the ecliptic, and, as a
consequence of this, effecting all the changes so justly dreaded by the
inhabitants of the earth.</p>
<p>However, there was one chance for humanity to escape the consequences of this
trial, which was to provoke such revulsions in the geographical and climatic
conditions of the globe. Was it possible to build a cannon of such dimensions
that it was to be a million times greater in volume than the one of 27
centimetres? It was doubtful. That was just the point and one of the reasons for
thinking the attempt of Barbicane & Co. would not succeed. But there was the
other possibility, for it seemed that the Company had already begun to work on
their gigantic project. Now the question arose, where was their place of
operations? No one knew, and consequently it was impossible to overtake these
audacious operations. It was well known that Barbicane and Nicholl had left
Baltimore and America. They had gone away two months ago. Where were they? Most
certainly at that unknown point of the globe where the operations were under way
for their grand object. It was evident that this place was indicated on the last
page of the notebook of J.T. Maston. On this point there was no doubt. But this
last page had been torn out and eaten up by the accomplice of Impey Barbicane,
and Maston sat imprisoned in the Baltimore City Prison and absolutely refused to
speak. This was the condition of affairs. If the President succeeded in making
this monster cannon and its projectile—in a word, if the operation was carried
out under the above stated conditions—it would modify the earth’s axis, and
within six months the earth would be subject to the consequences of this
audacious attempt of Barbicane & Co. This would come on the 22d day of
September, twelve hours after the passage of the sun over the meridian of the
place “x.”</p>
<p>The facts that were known were: 1st. That the shooting would be done with a
cannon a million times larger than the cannon of 27 centimetres. 2d. That the
cannon would be loaded with a projectile of 180,000 tons. 3d. That the
projectile would be animated with a velocity of 2,800 kilometres. 4th. That the
shooting would take place on the 22d of September, twelve hours after the
passage of the sun over the meridian of the place “x.” Was it possible to
deduce, under these facts, where was the spot “x,” where the operation was to
take place? Evidently not, said the Inquiry Committee. There was nothing by
which to calculate where the point “x” was, as nothing in the calculations of
Mr. Maston indicated through which point of the globe the new axis was to pass,
or, in other words, on which part of the present earth the new poles would be
situated. Therefore, it would be impossible to know which would be the elevated
and submerged countries, due to the changed surface of the ocean, or which parts
of the earth would be transformed into water, and where water would be
transformed into land. It was evident that the maximum change in the ocean
surface would be 8.415 metres, and that in certain points of the globe various
areas would be lowered and raised to this amount. All, however, depended upon
the location of the point “x,” or where the shooting was to take place. In other
words, “x” was the secret of the promoter of this uncertain affair. “We have,”
said the Committee, “only to mention again that the inhabitants of the world, no
matter in what part of it they are living, are directly interested in knowing
this secret, as they are all directly t[h]reatened by the actions of Barbicane
& Co. Therefore all the inhabitants of Europe, Africa, Asia, America, and
Australia are advised to watch all gun foundries, powder factories, etc., which
are situated in their territory and to note the presence of all strangers whose
arrival may appear suspicious, and to advise the Inquiry Committee at Baltimore
by wire immediately. Heaven grant that this news may arrive before the 22d of
September of the present year, as that date threatens to disturb the order
established since the creation in our earthly system.</p>
<h4>CHAPTER XII.<br/><br/>IN WHICH J.T. MASTON HEROICALLY CONTINUES TO BE
SILENT.</h4>
<p>According to a former story a gun was to be employed to throw the projectile
from the earth to the moon; now the gun was to be employed to change the earth’s
axis. The cannon, always the cannon; these gunners of the Gun Club had nothing
else in their heads but the cannon. They had a real craze for the cannon. Was
this brutal engine again threatening the universe? Yes, we are sorry to confess
it, it was a cannon which was uppermost in the mind of President Barbicane and
his associates. After the Columbiad of Florida, they had gone on to the monster
cannon of the place “x.” We may almost hear them shout with a loud voice: “Take
aim at the moon.” First act, “Fire.” “Change the axis of the earth.” Second act,
“Fire.” And the wish which the whole world had for them was, “To hell.” Third
act, “Fire.” And really their scheme justified the popular opinion.</p>
<p>As it was, the publication of this last report of the Committee in the
newspapers produced an effect of which one can scarcely form an ideal. The
operation to be tried by President Barbicane and Capt. Nicholl, it was very
clear, was going to bring about one of the most disastrous interruptions in the
daily routine of the earth. Everybody understood what the consequences of it
would be. Therefore the experiment of Barbicane & Co. was generally cursed,
denounced, etc. In the Old as well as in the New World the members of the
N.P.P.A. had at the time only enemies. If there were indeed a few friends left
to them among their cranky American admirers, they were very few.</p>
<p>Regarding only their personal security, President Barbicane and Capt. Nicholl
had acted wisely in leaving Baltimore and America. It was safe to believe that
some accident had happened to them. They could not without divine punishment
threaten fourteen hundred million inhabitants by a change wrought in the
habitability of the earth.</p>
<p>But how was it possible that the two leaders of the Gun Club had disappeared
without leaving any trace behind them? How could they have sent away the
material and assistants which were necessary to such an operation without any
one seeing them? A hundred railroad cars, if it was by rail, a hundred vessels,
if it was by water, would not have been more than sufficient to transport the
loads of metal of coal, and of melimelonite. It was entirely incomprehensible
how this departure could have been made incognito. However, it was done. And
still more serious it appeared when it was known after inquiry that no orders
had been sent to the gun foundries or powder factories, or the factories which
produce chemical products in either of the two continents. How inexplicable all
this was! Without doubt it would be explained some day.</p>
<p>At any rate, if President Barbicane and Capt. Nicholl, who had mysteriously
disappeared, were sheltered from any immediate danger, their colleague, Mr.
Maston, was under lock and key, and had to face all the public indignation.
Nothing could make him yield, however. Deep at the bottom of the cell which he
occupied in the prison of Baltimore, the Secretary of the Gun Club gave himself
up more and more to thinking of those distant associates whom he was not able to
follow. He pictured the vision of President Barbicane and his associate, Capt.
Nicholl, preparing their gigantic operation at this unknown point of the globe,
with nothing in their way. He saw them build their enormous device, combining
their melimelonite, moulding the projectile which the sun would so soon count as
one of its small satellites. This new star was to have the charming name
“Scorbetta,” in gallant acknowledgment of the love and esteem felt towards the
rich capitalist widow of New Park. J.T. Maston calculated the days which would
elapse before the one on which the gun would be fired.</p>
<p>It was already the beginning of April. In two months and a half the meridian
star, after having stopped on the Tropic of Cancer, would go back towards the
Tropic of Capricorn. Three months later it would traverse the equatorial line at
the Fall equinox.</p>
<p>And then these seasons, which have appeared annually for millions of years,
and which have changed so regularly, will be brought to an end. For the last
time in 189—the sphere would have submitted to this succession of days and
nights. Truly, this was a magnificent work, superhuman, even divine. J.T. Maston
forgot the Arctic region and the exploration of the coal mines around the pole,
and he only saw, in his mind’s eye, the cosmographic consequences of the
operation. The principal object of the association was now to make those changes
and displacements which were to remodel the face of the earth.</p>
<p>But that was just the point. Did the earth wish to change her face at all?
Was she not still young and charming with the one which God had given her at the
first hour of her creation?</p>
<p>Alone and defenseless in his prison cell, nothing could induce Mr. Maston to
speak about the matter, no matter what plan was tried. The members of the
Inquiry Committee urged him daily to speak, and visited him daily, but they
could obtain nothing. It was about this time that John Prestice had the idea of
using an influence which might possibly succeed, and this was the aid of Mrs.
Evangelina Scorbitt. Every one knew what feelings the generous widow entertained
for Mr. Maston, how devoted she was to him, and what unlimited interest she had
in this celebrated calculator. Therefore, after deliberation of the Committee,
Mrs. Evangelina Scorbitt was authorized to come and go, visiting the prisoner as
much as she liked.</p>
<p>Was she not threatened just as well as any other person on this earth by the
recoil of this monster cannon? Would her palace at New Park be spared any more
than the smallest hut of the Indian? Was not her very existence just as much in
doubt as that of the savage living on the furthest isle of the Pacific Ocean?
That is what the President of the Inquiry Committee gave her to understand, and
for this reason she was begged to use her influence with the mathematician. If
he would consent to speak, and would say at what place President Barbicane and
Capt. Nicholl were, and how many people they had with them to accomplish their
ends, it would yet be time to go and stop them and put an end to their project,
and thus save humanity from this most dangerous catastrophe which threatened the
world.</p>
<p>Mrs. Evangelina Scorbitt was therefore admitted to the prison whenever she
wished it. She was most desirous of seeing J.T. Maston again after he had been
taken from his comfortable study at Ballistic Cottage by those rough police
agents. If any impolite person had on the 9th of April put his ear at the door
of his cell the first time when Mrs. Scorbitt entered he would have heard the
following conversation:</p>
<p>“Ah, at last, my dear Maston, I see you again.”</p>
<p>“You, Mrs. Scorbitt!”</p>
<p>“Yes, my dear friend, after four weeks—four long weeks of separation.”</p>
<p>“Exactly twenty-eight days, five hours and forty-five minutes,” answered J.T.
Maston, after having consulted his watch.</p>
<p>“Finally we are reunited.”</p>
<p>“But how did it happen that they allowed you to penetrate as far as this cell
to see me, dear Mrs. Scorbitt?”</p>
<p>“Under the condition of using all my influence over you, thanks to my
affection for you, in advising you to disclose the secret of the whereabouts of
President Barbicane.”</p>
<p>“What, Evangelina!” cried Mr. Maston, “and you have consented to give me such
advice. You have entertained the thought that I could betray my associates.”</p>
<p>“Me, dear Maston! Do you consider me so bad? Me! To sacrifice your security
for your honor. Me! To persuade you to an act which would shame a life
consecrated entirely to the highest speculations of pure mathematics.”</p>
<p>“Bravo, Mrs. Scorbitt! I see in you once more the generous patron of our
Society. No, I have never doubted your great heart.”</p>
<p>“Thank you, Mr. Maston.”</p>
<p>“In regard to myself,” continued Maston, “allow me to say, before telling the
point of the earth where our great shooting will take place—sell, so to speak,
the secret which I have been able to keep so well, to allow these barbarians to
fly and pursue our friends, to interrupt their works, which will make our profit
and glory, I would rather die.”</p>
<p>“Splendid, Mr. Maston!” cried Mrs. Evangelina Scorbitt.</p>
<p>And these two beings, united by the same enthusiasm, crazed by it if you
will, one as well as the other, were well matched in understanding each other
perfectly.</p>
<p>“No, they will never know the name of the country which my calculations have
designated, and the reputation of which will become immortal,” said J.T. Maston.
“They can silence me if they like, but they will never have the secret from
me.”</p>
<p>“And they can kill me with you,” said Mrs. Evangelina Scorbitt; “I will also
be mute.”</p>
<p>“It is lucky, dear Evangelina, that they are ignorant of your knowledge of
the place.”</p>
<p>“Do you believe that I would be capable of betraying it, because I am only a
woman? Betray my associates and you! No, my friend, no. If they should raise the
whole city and country against you—if the whole world would come to the door of
this cell to take you away, I shall be there, too, and we will at least have one
consolation—we will die together.”</p>
<p>As if there could be any greater consolation and Mr. Maston could dream of a
sweeter death than dying in the arms of Mrs. Evangelina Scorbitt! And so ended
the conversation every time that this excellent woman visited the prisoner. And
when the Inquiry Committee asked her what the result was, she would say:
“Nothing as yet; perhaps with time I shall be able to reach my point.”</p>
<p>Ah, women, women! What are women? “In time,” she urged. But time went on with
fast steps. Weeks went ’round like days, days like hours and hours like
minutes.</p>
<p>It was already May. Mrs. Evangelina Scorbitt had not been able to get any
information from J.T. Maston, and where she had failed there was no hope of any
other person succeeding.</p>
<p>Was it, then, necessary to accept this terrible shock without interfering in
any way? No, no! Under such circumstances resignation was impossible. The
European delegates became more and more out of spirits. There was wrangling
between them every day. Even Jacques Jansen woke up out of his Dutch placidity
and annoyed his colleagues greatly by his daily charges and countercharges. Col.
Boris Karkof even had a duel with the Secretary of the Inquiry Committee in
which he only slightly injured his adversary. And Major Donellan; well, he
neither fought with firearms nor with bare fists, quite contrary to English use,
and he only looked on while his Secretary, Dean Toodrink, exchanged a few blows
according to prize-ring rules with William S. Forster, the phlegmatic dealer in
codfish, the straw man of the N.P.P.A., who really knew absolutely nothing of
the affair.</p>
<p>The whole world was leagued against the United States and wanted to hold the
Americans responsible for the actions of one of their number—the celebrated
Impey Barbicane. There was talk of recalling the ambassadors and the foreign
Ministers at present accredited to this most reckless Government at Washington
and of declaring war against the United States. Poor United States! It only
wished to lay its hands on Barbicane & Co. In vain did the Republic reply to
the Powers of Europe, Asia, Africa and Australia that they were at liberty to
arrest these adventurous Americans wherever they found them. Nobody would listen
patiently to such talk. And so, far away President Barbicane and his associate
were occupied in preparing their great operation. As nothing could be found of
them the foreign countries began to say: “You have their accomplice; now it is
sure that Mr. Maston knows where these people are and what they are doing. Make
him speak, this man, Mr. Maston. Why not use hot oil, melted lead, etc.? Why not
use such means as were used formerly under circumstances less grave and for
cases which only interested a few private people? But it was answered that,
while such means were justified in former times, they could not be used at the
end of a century as far advanced as the nineteenth century was. Therefore, J.T.
Maston had nothing to fear in that line; all that was left to hope was that he
would finally consider the enormity of his crime and would decide to reveal his
secret, or that some accident would reveal it for him.</p>
<h4>CHAPTER XIII.<br/><br/>AT THE CLOSE OF WHICH J.T. MASTON UTTERS AN
EPIGRAM.</h4>
<p>Time went on, however, and very likely also the works of Barbicane and Capt.
Nicholl who were going on also under these very surprising conditions, no one
knew where.</p>
<p>How was it possible, it was asked, that an operation which required the
establishment of a considerable iron foundry, the erection of high blast
furnaces, capable of melting a mass of metal a million times as large as the
marine corps cannon of 27 centimeters, and a projectile weighing 180,000 tons,
all of which necessitated the employment of several thousand workmen, their
transport, their management, etc., —yes, how was it possible that such an
operation could go on without the interested world getting any knowledge of it.
In which part of the Old or New World had Barbicane & Co. secretly
established a foothold so that no hint was given to people living in the
vicinity? Was it on a deserted island in the Pacific Ocean or in the Indian
Ocean? But there were no more deserted islands: the English had gobbled them all
up. Perhaps the new Society had discovered one for this special purpose.
Perhaps, one remarked, they might be in some part of the arctic regions. No,
this could not be, as it was simply because they could not be reached that the
N.P.P.A. was going to remove them. Therefore, to look for President Barbicane
and Capt. Nicholl on one of these islands or in some inaccessible point was
simply wasting time. Did not the notebook taken away from J.T. Maston state that
the shooting would take place on or about the equator? And all the countries
around it were inhabited by some people. It seemed impossible for them to be so
secreted in any part of the habitable world without some one informing the
committee at Baltimore.</p>
<p>Now, what did Alcide Pierdeux think of all this? He was dreaming of all kinds
of consequences which this operation would have. That Capt. Nicholl had invented
an explosive of such tremendous power, that he had found the melimelonite, with
an expansive force three or four thousand times stronger than that of the most
violent explosive known, and 5,600 times stronger than the good old black
gunpowder of our ancestors, this was astonishing enough—very astonishing. But it
was not impossible at all. One can hardly know what the future will bring in
these days of progress when devices exist to destroy whole armies at very long
distances. In any event, the change of the earth’s axis, produced by the recoil
of a piece of ordnance, was not sufficiently novel to astonish the French
engineer. Then, considering the plans of President Barbicane, he said: “It is
evident that the earth receives daily the recoil of all the blows which are
given on its surface. Hundreds of thousands of people amuse themselves daily by
sending thousands of projectiles weighing a few kilograms or millions of
projectiles weighing a few grammes, and even when I walk or jump, or when I
stretch out my arm, all this takes place on the surface of our sphere and adds
to or checks its motion. Is, then, your great machine of such a nature as to
produce the recoil asked for? How in the name of candor can this recoil be
sufficient to move the earth? And if the calculations of this fellow, J.T.
Maston, prove it, it is easy enough to show it. Alcide Pierdeux could not but
admire the ingenious calculations of the Secretary of the Gun Club, which were
communicated by the members of the Inquiry Committee to those wise people who
were able to understand them. And Alcide Pierdeux, who was able to read algebra
like one would read a newspaper, found in this sort of reading matter an
inexpressible charm. If these changes were to take place, what a terrible
catastrophe it would be! Towns would be turned upside down, oceans would be
thrown out of their beds, people killed by millions. It would be an earthquake
of incomparable violence. If besides, said Alcide Pierdeux, this damnable powder
of Capt. Nicholl were less strong, we might hope that the projectile would again
strike the earth after the shooting, and after having made the trip around the
globe, then everything would be replaced in a very short time and without having
caused any very great destruction. But do not worry about that. Thanks to their
melimelonite, the bullet will go its way and not return to the earth to beg her
pardon for having deranged her by putting her back again in her place. Pierdeux
finally said: “If the place of shooting were known I would soon be able to say
upon which places the movement would have the least and where the greatest
effect. The people might be informed in time to save themselves before their
cities and houses had fallen under the blow.” But how were we to know it? “I
think,” he said, “the consequences of the shock may be more complicated than can
even be imagined. The volcanoes, profiting by this occasion, would vomit like a
person who is seasick. Perhaps a part of the ocean might fall into one of their
craters. It would make small difference then. It is entirely possible that we
might have explosions which would make our earth jump. Ah, this Satan Maston,
imagine him juggling with our earthly globe and playing with it as if he were
playing billiards!”</p>
<p>So talked and reasoned Alcide Pierdeux. Soon these terrible hypotheses were
taken up and discussed by the newspapers. The confusion which would be the
result of the scheme of Barbicane & Co. could only result in terrible
accidents. And so it happened that the nearer the day came the greater the
fright which took possession of the bravest people. It was the same as it was in
the year 1000, when all living people supposed that they would be thrown
suddenly into the jaws of death. It maybe recalled what happened at this period.
According to the Apocalypse the people were led to believe that the judgment day
had come. In the last year of the 10th century, says H. Martin, everything was
interrupted—pleasures, business, interest, all, even the public works of the
country. Thinking only of the eternity which was to begin on the morrow,
provision was made only for the most necessary articles for one or two days. All
possessions, real estate, castles, were bequeathed to the Church, so as to
acquire protection in that kingdom of heaven where all were so soon to enter.
Many donations to the churches were made with these words: “As the end of the
world has come, and its ruin is imminent.” When this fatal time came, all the
people ran to the churches and places set apart for religious meetings, and
waited to hear the seven trumpets of the seven angels of the judgment day sound
and call from heaven. We know that the first day of 1,000 came and went, and
nothing was changed. But this time it was not the question of a disturbance
simply based upon some verse of the Bible. It was the question of removing the
axis of the earth, and this was founded on very reliable calculations, and was
very probable.</p>
<p>Under these conditions the situation of J.T. Maston became each day more and
more critical. Mrs. Evangelina Scorbitt trembled lest he would become the victim
of a universal cry for vengeance. Perhaps she even had in her mind the idea of
making him give up the information which he so heroically held to himself. But
she did not dare to mention it to him and she did well. It would have been
unwise for her to expose herself to the volley of rebukes he would have given
her. As we may well understand, fright had taken a strong foothold in the city
of Baltimore and the inhabitants became nearly unmanageable. The excitement was
increased by articles appearing in the daily papers. In any case, if J.T. Maston
had been found among the crowd of people, his fate would have been soon settled.
He would have been given to the wild beast. But he was content and said: “I am
ready for it.” No matter what happened, J.T. Maston refused to make known the
situation of the “x,” knowing very well that if he should unveil the secret
President Barbicane and Capt. Nicholl would be unable to finish their work. It
was an interesting struggle—this fight of one man against the whole world. It
only made J.T. Maston a grander and better man in the eyes of Evangelina
Scorbitt, and also in the opinion of his associates of the Gun Club. The
Secretary of the Gun Club became such a celebrated person that he began to
receive letters, as all criminals do, from people who wished to have a few lines
from the hand which was going to turn the world over. But even if this was all
very nice it became every day more and more dangerous for our Secretary. The
population hung day and night around the prison, with great noise and great
tumult. The enraged crowd wanted to lynch J.T. Maston. The police saw the moment
would come when they would be unable to defend the prison and the prisoner J.T.
Maston. Being desirous of giving satisfaction and information to the American
people, as well as to the people of other countries, the Government at
Washington decided to put J.T. Maston before a court of justice. “What other
people have not been able to accomplish the Judges will not,” said Alcide
Pierdeux, who had after all a kind of a friendly feeling for the unhappy
calculator.</p>
<p>On the morning of the 5th September the President of the Commission went
personally to the cell of the prisoner. Mrs. Evangelina Scorbitt, at her own
request, had been allowed to accompany him. Perhaps at this last attempt the
influence of this excellent lady would succeed and bring the hoped-for result.
There was nothing to be left undone. All means possible were to be used to make
this last attempt successful. If it was not—well, we will see. “Yes, we will
see.” What we would see is the hanging of this brute Maston, said the people,
and the event would have come off in all its horror if the people could have it
their way. So it happened that at 11 o’clock J.T. Maston was ushered into the
presence of Mrs. Evangelina Scorbitt and John Prestice, President of the Inquiry
Committee.</p>
<p>The opening was a very simple one. The conversation consisted of the
following questions and answers, very rapid on one side and very quiet on the
other. And even under these circumstances the calm, quiet speaker was J.T.
Maston.</p>
<p>“For the last time will you answer?” asked John Prestice.</p>
<p>“Answer what?” ironically observed the Secretary of the Gun Club.</p>
<p>“Answer the question, where is the place in which your associate, Barbicane,
is at present.”</p>
<p>“I have told it to you a hundred times.”</p>
<p>“Repeat it for the one hundred and first time.”</p>
<p>“He is where the shooting will take place.”</p>
<p>“Where will the shooting take place?”</p>
<p>“Where my associate, Barbicane, is.”</p>
<p>“Have a care, J.T. Maston.”</p>
<p>“For what?”</p>
<p>“For the consequences of your refusal to answer, the result of which will
be—”</p>
<p>“To prevent you from learning that which you should not know.”</p>
<p>“What we have the right to know.”</p>
<p>“That is not my opinion.”</p>
<p>“We will bring you before the court.”</p>
<p>“Go ahead.”</p>
<p>“And the jury will condemn you.”</p>
<p>“What care I.”</p>
<p>“And as soon as judgment is rendered it will be executed.”</p>
<p>“All right.”</p>
<p>“Dear Maston,” ventured Mrs. Evangelina Scorbitt, whose heart nearly broke on
account of these terrible threats.</p>
<p>“What! You, madam?” said J.T. Maston.</p>
<p>She hung her head and was silent.</p>
<p>“And do you want to know what this judgment will be?”</p>
<p>“If you wish to tell it,” said J.T. Maston.</p>
<p>“That you will suffer capital punishment, as you deserve.”</p>
<p>“Really?”</p>
<p>“That you will be hanged as sure, sir, as two and two make four.”</p>
<p>“Then, sir, I have yet a chance,” said J.T. Maston, reflectingly. “If you
were a little better mathematician you would not say that two and two are four.
You simply prove that all mathematicians have been fools until to-day in
affirming that the sum of two numbers is equal to one of their parts; that is,
two and two are exactly four.”</p>
<p>“Sir!” cried the President, absolutely puzzled.</p>
<p>“Well,” said J.T. Maston, “if you would say, as sure as one and one are two,
all right. That is absolutely evident, because that is no longer a theorem; this
is a definition.”</p>
<p>After this lesson in simple arithmetic the President of the Committee went
out, followed by Mrs. Evangelina Scorbitt, who had so much admiration for the
calculator that she did not venture to look at him.</p>
<h4>CHAPTER XIV.<br/><br/>VERY SHORT, BUT IN WHICH “X” TAKES A GEOGRAPHICAL
VALUE.</h4>
<p>Very luckily for J.T. Maston, the Federal Government received the following
telegram sent by the American Consul stationed at Zanzibar:</p>
<BLOCKQUOTE>“To John S. Wright, Minister of State, Washington,
U.S.A.:</BLOCKQUOTE>
<BLOCKQUOTE>Zanzibar, Sept. 13, 5 A.M. (local time).—Great works are being
executed in the Wamasai, south of the chain of Kilimanjaro. For eight months
President Barbicane and Capt. Nicholl have been established there with a great
number of black help under the authority of Sultan Bali-Bali. This is brought
to the knowledge of the Government by its devoted</BLOCKQUOTE>
<BLOCKQUOTE>“RICHARD W. TRUST, Consul”</BLOCKQUOTE>
<p>And this was how the secret of J.T. Maston became known. And therefore, were
the Secretary of the Gun Club still in prison, he could not have been
hanged.</p>
<p>But, after all, who knows whether he would not rather have been glad to meet
with death in the full glory of his life than to live on with all the chances of
disappointment.</p>
<h4><b>CHAPTER XV.<br/><br/>WHICH CONTAINS A FEW INTERESTING DETAILS FOR THE
INHABITANTS OF THE EARTHLY SPHERE.</b></h4>
<p>Finally the Government of Washington had found out the place where Barbicane
& Co. were operating. Should they doubt the authenticity of this cable? No,
that was not reasonable. The Consul at Zanzibar was a very reliable person, and
his information could be accepted without doubt. It was further corroborated by
later telegrams. It was really in the center of the region of Kilimanjaro in the
African Wamasai, a little under the equatorial line, where the engineers of the
N.P.P.A. were going to accomplish their gigantic works.</p>
<p>How could they have secretly reached this lost country, at the foot of the
celebrated mountain, discovered in 1849 by Drs. Rebviani and Krapf, ascended by
the travellers Otto Ehlers and Abbot? How were they able to establish their
workshops there, erect a foundry and bring a large number of help, or at least
enough to succeed? How had they been able to establish friendly relations with
the dangerous tribes of the country and their sover[e]igns, as cunning as they
were cruel? This we do not know. And perhaps it would never be known, as there
were only a few days left before the 22d of September would arrive. J.T. Maston
heard from Mrs. Evangelina Scorbitt that the mystery of Kilimanjaro had been
unveiled by a telegram sent from Zanzibar. “Great Scott!” he exclaimed, sawing
the air with his iron hand. “Well, we do not travel by telegram yet, nor by the
telephone, and in six days the matter will be finished.”</p>
<p>Those who saw and heard this remarkable man utter these words were astonished
at the energy in the old gunner.</p>
<p>J.T. Maston was right. There was no time left to send agents to Wamasai with
orders to arrest President Barbicane. They would even have been too late had
they departed from Algiers or Egypt, even from Aden, Madagascar, or Zanzibar, as
they would have met thousands of difficulties in this mountainous region, and
perhaps they would have met with an army composed of followers of the Sultan,
who was interested in the matter. Therefore all hope of preventing this
operation had to be given up. But if prevention was impossible nothing seemed
more easy than the figuring out of the terrible consequences, as the exact
situation of “x” was now known.</p>
<p>This problem was difficult enough, but all algebraists and mathematicians of
large reputation ought to be able to solve it. As the cable of the Consul of
Zanzibar had been sent direct to the Minister of State at Washington, the
Federal Government wanted to keep it secret at first. They wished as well that
its contents were published all over the country, so that they could indicate
what the results would be of this displacement of the axis and the uprising of
the oceans, and thus the inhabitants of the world might learn which place of
refuge was open to them according to the section of the globe in which they
lived. And it is easy to understand how anxious the people were to learn their
fate.</p>
<p>On the 14th of September the cable dispatch was sent to the office of the
Observatory at Washington, with orders to figure out the final consequences upon
geographical locations. Two days afterwards the problem was all worked out. The
Old World was notified of the results by cable and the New World by telegram.
After this calculation had been published by thousands of papers, it was the
only thing talked of in the great cities and everywhere. What will happen?</p>
<p>This was the question which everybody was asking at every point of the
globe.</p>
<p>The following was the notice made by the Observatory at Washington:</p>
<P align=center><b>IMPORTANT NOTICE</b></p>
<p>The operation which is being tried by President Barbicane and Capt. Nicholl
is as follows:</p>
<p>The production of a recoil, on the 22d of September, at midnight, by means of
a cannon a million times larger in volume than the cannon of twenty-seven
centimetres, throwing a projectile of 180,000 tons, with a powder giving it a
velocity of 2,800 kilometres.</p>
<p>Now, if this shooting takes place below the equatorial line, nearly on the
thirty-fourth degree of latitude west of the meridian of Paris, at the foot of
Kilimanjaro, and if it is directed towards the south, these are the mechanical
effects which it will have on the earth’s sphere: Instantly, in consequence of
the shock acting with the daily movement a new axis will be formed and, as the
old axis will be displaced to the amount of twenty-three degrees and
twenty-eight minutes, according to the figures obtained by J.T. Maston, the new
axis will be perpendicular to the direction of the ediptic.</p>
<p>Which point will the new axis start from? As the point of shooting is known,
it has been easy to calculate this.</p>
<p>In the North the extremity of the new axis will be situated between Greenland
and Grinnelland, exactly on that part of Baffin’s Sea where it cuts the Arctic
polar circle. In the South it will be on the line of the antarctic circle, a few
degrees east of Adelialand. Under these conditions a new zero meridian, starting
from the new North Pole, will pass through Dublin in Ireland, Paris in France,
Palermo in Sicily, the Gulf of Grand Sytre on the coast of Tripoli, Obed in
Darfur, the mountain chain of Kilimanjaro, Madagascar; the Kerguelen Island, in
the Central Pacific; the new antarctic pole, the antipodes of Paris, Cook
Island, the Island of Quadra, Vancouver, on the margin of British Columbia;
across North America to Melville Island, in the neighborhood of the North
Pole.</p>
<p>In connection with this new axis of rotation, starting from Baffins’ Bay in
the north, to Adelialand in the south, a new equator will be formed above which
the sun will travel without ever changing his daily course. The equinoctial line
will cross the Kilimanjaro, at Wamasai, the Indian Ocean, Goa and Chicacola, a
little below Calcutta in India, Mandalay in the Kingdom of Siam, Kesho in
Tonquin, Hong Kong in China, Risa Island, Marshall Island, Gaspar Rico, Walker
Island in the Pacific, the Cordilleras in the Argentine Republic, Rio de Janeiro
in Brazil, the islands of Trinity and St. Helena in the Atlantic Ocean, St. Paul
de Loando on the Congo, and finally it will meet again in the territories of
Wamasai, back of Kilimanjaro. This new equator being thus determined by the
creation of the new axis, it became possible to calculate the changes of the
ocean tides, which was so important for the security of the inhabitants of the
earth. It is just to observe that the directors of the North Polar Practical
Association had taken measure to weaken the shock as much as possible. If the
shooting had been towards the north the consequences of it would have been much
more disastrous for the more civilized parts of the earth. On the other hand,
shooting towards the south the consequences would only be felt most in parts
less populated and less civilized. The careful calculations made showed how the
waters would be distributed when thrown out of their beds by the flattening of
the sphere around the new poles. The globe would be divided by two great
circles, intersecting in a right angle at Kilimanjaro, and at its antipodes in
the equinoctial ocean. This would form four sections, two in the north and two
in the south, separated by the lines upon which the ocean upheaval would be
zero.</p>
<p>In the northern hemisphere: The first section west of Kilimanjaro would take
in Africa from the Congo to Egypt, Europe from Turkey to Greenland, America from
English Columbia to Peru, and from Brazil as high as San Salvador, and finally
the whole northern Atlantic Ocean and the largest part of the temperate Atlantic
zone.</p>
<p>The second section, east of Kilimanjaro, would include the greater patt of
Europe, from the Black Sea to Sweden, European and Asiatic Russia, Arabia,
nearly the whole of India, Persia, Beloochistan, Afganistan, Turkestan, the
Celestial Empire, Mongolia, Japan, Corea, the Black Sea, the Caspian Sea, the
greater part of the Pacific Ocean, the territories of Alaska in North America,
and also the polar region which belonged to the American society, North Polar
Practical Association.</p>
<p>The southern hemisphere would embrace the third section east of Kilimanjaro,
which would include Madagascar, the islands of Marion, Kerguelen, Maurice,
Reunion, and all the islands of the Indian Ocean, the Antarctic Ocean (as far as
the new pole), half the island of Malacca, Java, Sumatra, Borneo, the islands of
Sonde, the Philippines, Australia, New Zealand, New Guinea, New Caledonia, all
the northern parts of the Pacific and its numerous archipelagos, nearly up to
the 160th meridian.</p>
<p>The fourth section, west of Kilimanjaro, would comprise the southern part of
Africa, from the Congo to the canal of Mozambique to the Cape of Good Hope, the
southern Atlantic Ocean from Pernambuco and Lima, Bolivia, Paraguay, Uraguay,
the Argentine Republic, Patagonia, the Fire Islands, the Malouine Islands,
Sandwich and Shetland Islands, and the southern part of the Pacific Ocean east
of the present 160th degree of latitude.</p>
<p>These would be the four sections, separated by the line of zero in
calculating the sea-level changes. Now, the question was to indicate the effects
produced on the surface of the four sections in consequence of the displacement
of the oceans.</p>
<p>Upon each of these sections there was a central point on which the effect
would be at a maximum, either by the oceans rising up or by the waters retiring
entirely. The calculations of J. T. Maston had established without a doubt, that
at each of these maxima points the greatest height obtained would be 8,415
metres. It was therefore certain that the consequences would be most severe
against the security of those points through the operation carried out by
Barbicane & Co. The two effects may be considered separate in their
action.</p>
<p>In two of the sections situated opposite each other in the northern
hemisphere and in the southern as well, the oceans would retreat and invade the
two other sections, opposing each other in each of the two hemispheres.</p>
<p>In the first section: The Atlantic Ocean would be nearly entirely emptied and
the maximum point of depression being nearly at the region of Bermuda, where the
ground would appear, if the depth of the ocean was inferior at that point to
8,415 metres. Consequently between Europe and America vast territories would be
discovered which the United States, England, France, Spain, and Portugal could
claim according to the geographical situation, as these powers might wish to do.
It must be observed that in consequence of the falling of the oceans the air
will also fall equally as much. Therefore the barometric pressure of Europe and
that of America will be modified to such an extent that cities, situated even 20
or 30 degrees from the maxima points would only have the quantity of air which
is now actually found in a height of one league in the atmosphere. The principal
cities, such as New York, Philadelphia, Charleston, Panama, Lisbon, Madrid,
Paris, London, Edinburgh, Dublin, Cairo, Constantinople, Dantzig, Stockholm, on
one side, and the cities corresponding in latitude on the other side, would keep
their normal position with regard to the general level of the air. In regard to
Bermuda, air would be missing there the same as it would be wanting to aeronauts
who go higher than 8,000 metres. Therefore, it would be impossible to live
there.</p>
<p>The same effect would obtain in the opposite section, which would contain the
Indian Ocean, Australia, and a part of the Pacific Ocean, which would be thrown
partly on the southern seacoasts of Australia.</p>
<p>The air into which they would be thrown would be very clear; there was no
doubt on that point, but it would not be dense enough for human wants.</p>
<p>These in general were a part of the modifications which would take place in
the two sections in which the oceans would be more or less emptied. There would
undoubtedly appear new islands and mountains in such parts as the water did not
entirely abandon.</p>
<p>But if the diminuation of the thickness of the air did not bring enough
inconveniences to those parts of the new continents raised to the high zones of
the atmosphere, what was to be the case of those parts which the erruption of
waters put below the surface? We may still breathe under the diminished pressure
of air below the atmospheric pressure. On the contrary, under a very few inches
of water we cannot breathe at all, and this was the condition in which the other
two sections found themselves. In the section northwest of Kilimanjaro the
maximum point would be at Yakoutsk, in Siberia.</p>
<p>From this city submerged 8,415 metres under the water, less its present
actual altitude, the liquid mass, decreasing, would extend to the neutral lines,
drowning the greater part of Asiatic Russia and of India, of China, of Japan,
and of American Alaska, to the Behring Sea. In regard to St. Petersburg and
Moscow on one side, and Calcutta, Bangkok, Saigon, Pekin, Hong Kong and Yeddo on
the other side, these cities would disappear under a cover of water sufficient
to drown all Russians, Hindoos, Siamese, Cochin Chinese, Chinese and Japanese,
if they did not have time to emigrate before the catastrophe.</p>
<p>In the section southeast of Kilimanjaro the disasters would be equally
marked. This section is in a great part covered by the Atlantic and Pacific
oceans, the level of which would raise 8,415 metres at the Archipelagos of the
Azores. All this vast area would disappear under this artificial deluge, among
others the angle of Southern Africa from Guinea and Kilimanjaro to the Cape of
Good Hope, and the triangle of South America formed by Peru, Central Brazil,
Chili, and the Argentine Republic, as far as Terra del Fuego and Cape Horn. The
Patagonians, high as they are located, would not escape this immersion, and
would not even have opportunity of taking refuge on that part of the Andes, as
the highest points of that range would not be visible at all in this part of the
globe.</p>
<p>This, then, must be the result, the lowering of the upper and raising of the
lower sections, and an entirely new surface to the oceans, produced by the
corruscations in the surface of the earth’s sphere. Such were the happenings
which would result, and against which the people of this world had no help if
they could not prompdy stop Barbicane & Co. in their criminal attempt.</p>
<h4><b>CHAPTER XVI.<br/><br/>IN WHICH A CROWD OF DISSATISFIED PEOPLE BREAK INTO
THE CELL OF J. T. MASTON.</b></h4>
<p>After this public notice there was nothing left but to wait for the coming
danger or to run away to the neutral lines, where there would be no danger. The
threatened people were, in general, divided into two classes—”the people who
would be suffocated and those who would be drowned.” This communication roused
many different suggestions, which, however, all turned into the strongest and
most violent protestations against the schemer and schemers. Among those who
would suffocate were the Americans in the United States, the Europeans of
France, England, Spain, etc. Even the prospect of annexing territories now at
the bottom of the ocean was not sufficient to make them quietly accept these
changes. Paris, carried towards the new pole a distance about equal to that
which separates it now from the old one, would gain nothing by it. It would have
a continued Spring, it is true, but it would lose considerable air. And this was
not satisfactory to the Parisians, who like to have as much air as possible, and
boulevard property and cafés went begging. Among those who would be drowned were
the inhabitants of South America, of Australia, Canada, India, Zealand, etc.
Great Britain would suffer the loss of her richest colonies, which Barbicane
& Co. would take away from her through their operation. Evidently the Gulf
of Mexico would constitute a vast kingdom of the Antilles, of which the Yankees
and Mexicans could claim possession by the principles of the Monroe doctrine.
The islands of the Philippines, Celebes and the water around them would leave
vast territories of which the English and Spanish people could take possession.
It is a vain compensation. It did not at all balance the loss due to the
terrible flood.</p>
<p>If under the new oceans only Samoyedens, Lapons of Siberia, Feugans,
Patogonians—even Tartars, Chinese, Japanese, or a few Argentines—would suffer
and be lost, perhaps the civilized powers would have accepted this sacrifice
complacently. But too many powers took part in the great catastrophe not to
raise a torrent of protest.</p>
<p>And what especially concerned Europe was, that although the central part of
it would be nearly intact, it would be raised in the west and lowered in the
east, half suffocated on one side and half drowned on the other. This was not
very acceptable. The Mediterranean Sea would be almost emptied, and this would
not be very agreeable to the Frenchmen, Italians, Spaniards, Greeks, Turks, and
Egyptians, who by their situation on the coast, had indisputable rights in ocean
travel. And then, what good would be the Suez Canal, which would be saved by its
position on the neutral line? But what use could be made of this immense work of
Lesseps when there was no longer the Mediterranean on one side of the isthmus
and the Red Sea on the other, at least, within any reasonable distance of
it?</p>
<p>No, never, never would England consent to see Gibralter, Malta, and Cyprus
transformed into mountain-tops, lost in the clouds, so that its men-of-war could
no longer approach them. No, she would not be satisfied with the possession of
some of the territory which would be gained from the Atlantic Ocean. Major
Donellan had, however, prepared already to return to Europe to secure his rights
on this new territory in case the operation of Barbicane & Co. should
succeed. It is seen how protests came from all parts of the world, even from
States where the changes would be imperceptible, because their people were
interested in some other direction more or less.</p>
<p>These protestations became more and more violent after the arrival of the
cablegram from Zanzibar which indicated the point of shooting, and which it was
found necessary to publish the above report to explain. President Barbicane and
Captain Nicholl as well as J.T. Maston, were put under the ban of humanity and
declared outlaws. But what a business all this created for the newspapers. What
sales they had, and how the circulations ran up; how on many occasions they were
forced to print extra editions. It is perhaps the first time in journalistic
history that they were all united with each other, as they generally quarrel
incessantly. This was not a European or an American affair; it was an affair
which concerned the whole world. It was like a bomb falling into a powder
magazine.</p>
<p>In regard to Maston, it looked as if his last hour had come. A rabid crowd
rushed into his prison on the evening of Sept. 17, with the intention of
lynching him, and the jailer did not put any obstacles in their way. They rushed
along the corridor but the cell of J.T. Maston was empty. Mrs. Evangelina
Scorbitt had come to his help with a heavy purse of gold, and he had made his
escape. The jailer had been bribed by an amount of money on which he could live
the rest of his life without working. He remembered that Baltimore, Washington,
New York, and many of the principal cities of America were on the line of those
parts which would be raised, and which would still have enough air for the daily
consumption of their inhabitants.</p>
<p>J.T. Maston had gained a quiet resting spot and a safe place from the enraged
crowd of people, and so this great man owed his life to the devotion of a loving
woman. There were only four days to wait, four days only before the gigantic
operation of Barbicane & Co. would be accomplished. The public notice had
been read far and wide and had created as much public excitement as such a
momentous document only could. If there were at the beginning a few sceptics on
the subject, there were none at present. The various governments had notified in
haste those of their provinces which would be raised into the air and those, a
much larger number, the territory of which would be overrun with water. In
consequence of this advice sent by telegraph over the five continents of the
world an emigration began such as had never been seen before. Every race was
represented, white, black, brown, yellow, etc., in one chromatic procession.
Unhappily, time was wanting for all to secure safety. The hours were now
counted. A few months notice would be required for the Chinese to leave China,
the Australians, Australia, the Siberians, Siberia. In some instances the danger
was a local one as soon as the place of the shooting was known, so the fright
became less general. Some provinces and even some States began to feel easy
again. In a word, except in the regions directly threatened, there was only felt
an apprehension of the terrible shock. And during all this time Alcide Pierdeux
was saying to himself, “How in the wide world can President Barbicane make a
cannon a million times larger than that of twenty-seven centimetre? This Maston,
I would like very much to meet him—to have with him a talk upon this subject.
This does not agree with anything sensible, it is too enormous and too
improbable.”</p>
<p>Be this as it may, the failure of the operation was the only hope which was
left for certain parts of the world to escape more terrible destruction.</p>
<h4><b>CHAPTER XVII.<br/><br/>WHAT HAD BEEN DONE AT KILIMANJARO DURING EIGHT MONTH
OF THIS MEMORABLE YEAR.</b></h4>
<p>The country of Wamasai is situated in the eastern part of Central Africa,
between the coast of Zanzibar and the regions of the large lakes, where the
Victoria Nyanza and the Tanganiyka form a great interior ocean. The part best
known is that which has been visited by the Englishman Johnston, Count Tekeli
and the German doctor Meyer. This mountainous land is under the sovereignty of
Sultan Bali-Bali, whose people consist of 30,000 or 40,000 Negroes.</p>
<p>Three degrees below the Equator is situated the chain of Kilimanjaro, which
here reaches its greatest altitude. Among other peaks is the Mount of Kibo, with
an altitude of 5,704 metres. The important ruler of this region has under his
domination towards the south, north, and west the vast and fertile plains of
Wamasai, which stretch from the lake of Victoria Nyanza across the province of
Mozambique.</p>
<p>A few leagues below Kilimanjaro is the small village of Kisongo, the regular
residence of the Sultan. This capital is in reality only a large hamlet. It is
occupied by a very intelligent and industrious people, who work themselves as
industriously as their slaves under the iron rule which Bali-Bali imposes on
them.</p>
<p>This Sultan rightly ranked as one of the most remarkable rulers of those
people of Central Africa who try to escape the influence, or more correctly the
domination of England. At this capital of Kisongo, President Barbicane and Capt.
Nicholl accompanied by six men who were devoted to them, arrived in the first
week of January of the current year. On leaving the United States, whence their
departure was only known to Mrs. Evangelina Scorbitt, and J. T. Maston, they had
embarked in New York for the Cape of Good Hope, whence a vessel transported them
to Zanzibar, on the island of the same name. There a bark secretly chartered by
the Sultan brought them to the port of Mombas, on the African border on the
other side of the channel. An escort sent by the Sultan waited for them at this
port, and after a hard voyage nearly a hundred leagues across this terrible
region, obstructed by forests, deep marshes, etc., they arrived at the royal
residence. After knowing the calculations of J.T. Maston, President Barbicane
had already put himself in communication with Bali-Bali through the help of a
Swedish explorer, who had passed several years in this part of Africa. As the
Sultan had become one of their most ardent admirers since their trip to the
moon, a trip whose reputation had gone as far as these countries, he had a great
friendship for these courageous Yankees. Without telling him for what purpose it
was, Impey Barbicane had easily obtained permission from the Sultan to undertake
important works at the southern foot of Kilimanjaro. In return for a large sum,
estimated at $300,000, Bali-Bali had bound himself to furnish them all the
workmen necessary. In other words, the captain and his friends were authorized
to do at Kilimanjaro whatever they liked to do. They could dispose of the large
chain of mountains according to their desires; they could tear them down if they
liked, or they could take them away if they would be able to do so. In
consequence of these arrangements, which the Sultan had made at his own figure,
the North Polar Practical Association was as much proprietor of this country as
they already were to the polar region. The reception which President Barbicane
and Capt. Nicholl received at Kisongo was very cordial. Bali-Bali displayed an
admiration amounting to adoration for these celebrated travellers who had made
this dangerous voyage to reach the country around the North Pole.</p>
<p>He had in short an extraordinary sympathy for the creators of these
mysterious operations which were going to be accomplished in his kingdom. He
also promised them absolute secrecy on his part as well as on the part of his
people, whose co-operation was assured to them. Not a single Negro who worked at
their shop would be allowed to leave them for a single day under pain of the
most severe punishment. This is how this operation was veiled in mystery so that
the most active and sharpest agents of America and Europe failed to penetrate
it. If it was finally discovered it must have been that the Sultan modified his
severe rules after the accomplishment of the works and that there were traitors
and babblers even amongst the Negroes. In this way Richard W. Trust, consul at
Zanzibar, had received wind of what was going on at Kilimanjaro. But then at
that date, the 13th of September, it was too late to stop President Barbicane in
the accomplishment of his design.</p>
<p>And now, why had Barbicane & Co. chosen the Wamasai for the theatre of
their operations? First, because the country suited them in regard to its
geographical situation, as it was in a very little known part of Africa, and as
it was very far from the territory usually visited by travellers. Then, the mass
of Kilimanjaro offered them all the qualities of solidity and material necessary
for their work. And, moreover, on the surface of this country were found the raw
materials which they needed in a condition very easy to handle. A few months
before leaving the United States President Barbicane had learnt from the Swedish
explorer that at the foot of Kilimanjaro iron and coal were plentiful on the
ground. No mines to dig into, no fields to explore a thousand feet deep in the
earth’s shell. Iron and coal were so plentiful even for this great undertaking
that they only had to stoop down to pick it up. In other words, there existed in
the neighborhood of this mountain enormous fields of nitrate of soda and of iron
pyrites, which were necessary for the manufacture of melimelonite. President
Barbicane and Capt. Nicholl had taken with them only ten people, of whom they
were absolutely sure, and no one else. These ten men had to supervise the 10,000
Negroes put at their disposal by Bali-Bali, and to them was given the task of
manufacturing the monster cannon and its not less monster projectile. Two weeks
after the arrival of President Barbicane and his associate at Wamasai three
large workshops were established at the southern foot of Kilimanjaro, one for
the cannon foundry, the second for the manufacture of the projectile, and the
third for the manufacture of the melimelonite.</p>
<p>Now, first of all, how had Barbicane & Co. met the problem of
manufacturing a cannon of such colossal dimensions? We will see and understand
at the same time that the difficulty of creating such a device was not easily
comprehensible by the inhabitants of the world. In reality the making of a
cannon a million times larger than that of twenty-seven centimetres was a
superhuman work. Already great difficulties had been met in the manufacture of
pieces of forty-two centimetres long, which would throw projectiles of 780 kilos
with 274 kilograms of powder. Barbicane & Co. did not think of these
difficulties. It was not a cannon, not even a mortar, which they intended to
make, but simply a gallery bored in the massive rock of Kilimanjaro,—a shaft of
a mine, if you wish to call it so.</p>
<p>Evidently this shaft of a mine, this enormous elongated mine, could replace a
metal cannon the fabrication of which would have been as dear as difficult and
to which it would. be necessary to give an unwieldy thickness to avoid all risk
of an explosion. Barbicane & Co. had always entertained the idea of
operating in this manner, and if the notebook of J. T. Maston mentioned a cannon
it was that of 27 centimetres which had been used in the calculations as a
basis. Consequently a spot was chosen at a height of a hundred feet on the
southern slope of the chain. Nothing would be in the way of the projectile when
it would fly out of the mouth of this tunnel bored in the massive rock of
Kilimanjaro. It was with extreme precision and not without very hard work that
the men could dig this gallery. But Barbicane & Co. could readily make
perforations with simple machines put in action by means of compressed air which
was secured by using the powerful falls of water from the mountains. In the
holes bored through the headings of the shaft were placed charges of
melimelonite. And nothing more was necessary than this violent explosive to
shiver the rock, extremely hard as it was.</p>
<p>The thousands of workmen, led by their ten co-operators under the general
direction of Barbicane & Co., labored with a great deal of zeal and
intelligence to bring the work to a speedy end. At the end of six months the
shaft measured 27 metres in diameter and the lining of it 6 metres in thickness.
As it was absolutely necessary that the projectile should glide through a bore
perfectly smooth the interior of it was covered with a casting exactly prepared.
In reality this part of the work was very similar to that of the celebrated
Columbiad, of Moon City, which had sent the projectile to the moon. But such
work as this is impossible to the ordinary engineers of this world at
present.</p>
<p>As soon as the boring was finished the workmen pushed on with the work at the
second workshop.</p>
<p>At the same time that this metallic lining was being made they were also
employed at making the enormous projectile. For this operation it was necessary
to obtain a cylindrical mass which would weigh 80,000,000 kilograms, or 180,000
tons. It must be understood that there was never any idea of melting this
projectile in one single piece. It had to be manufactured in thousand-ton
pieces, which would be hoisted one after the other into the shaft and put in
place over the chamber where the melimelonite was stored. After having been
jointed each to the other, these pieces would form a compact whole, which would
fit the sides of the tubular lining. In regard to the construction of the
massive furnaces to effect the melting of the metal, there was met perhaps the
greatest difficulty. Ten furnaces of ten metres each in height were at the end
of a month in working order and able to produce each 180 tons per day. This
would be 1,800 tons for twenty-four hours—180,000 tons after 100 work-days.</p>
<p>In regard to the third workshop, made for the manufacture of the
melimelonite, the work was easily done, but under such secret precautions, that
the composition of this explosive it has not been possible to state perfectly.
Everything went along splendidly. It could not have been possible to have met
with more success in any factory. One would hardly expect to escape an accident
of some sort on a three-hundred-thousand franc job. It is easily understood that
the Sultan was delighted. He followed the operation with indefatigable interest.
And the presence of His Majesty helped greatly to make these Negroes work as
hard as possible. One day Bali-Bali asked what all these operations were going
on for. He received his reply from President Barbicane: “It is a work,” said he,
“which will change the face of the earth—a work which will bring the greatest
glory on the greatest Sultan of all the Eastern kings.”</p>
<p>By the 29th of August the works were entirely finished.</p>
<p>The shaft was bored to the wished-for point. It was provided with a smooth
bore of six metres diameter. At the bottom of the shaft were placed the 2,000
tons of melimelonite; then came the projectile 105 metres long. After deducting
the space occupied by the powder and projectile there remained still 492 metres
before the muzzle was reached, which secured all the effect possible by the
recoil produced by the expansion of the gas.</p>
<p>Now, the first question which might come up was, would the projectile deviate
from the trajectory assigned to it by the calculations of J.T. Maston? In no
way, for the calculations were absolutely correct. They indicated to what extent
the projectile would deviate to the east of the meridian of Kilimanjaro because
of the rotation of the earth on its axis, and what would be the form of the
curve which it would describe because of its enormous initial velocity.
Secondly, would it be visible during its course? No, because in going out of the
shaft it would be thrown in the shadow of the earth and it could not be seen,
for in consequence of its low trajectory it would have a very sharp angle of
velocity compared with the earth’s course. In fact, Barbicane and Capt. Nicholl
could well be proud of their work, which had so far succeeded in its every
detail. Why was J.T. Maston not there to watch this great operation, founded on
the figuring which he had done? And who was it that kept him so far away, so
very far, when this terrible detonation would wake the echoes as far as the
furthermost horizon of Africa?</p>
<p>Thinking of him, his two associates did not know that the Secretary had been
compelled to keep away from Ballistic Cottage after having got out of prison and
hidden himself in a safe place away from the savage people. They did not know to
what extent indignation had been roused against the engineer of the N. P. P. A.
They did not know that they, too, would have been burnt or hanged and tortured
to death if it had been possible to have reached them. Really, they ought to
have been glad that at the moment when the shooting would take place they would
only be saluted by the cries of this Negro people of Eastern Africa, “Well, at
last!” said Capt. Nicholl to President Barbicane, when on the 22d of September
they were standing before their finished work. “Yes, at last,” said Impey
Barbicane. “What a chance it was that placed at our disposition this admirable
melimelonite!” said Capt. Nicholl. “Which will make you the most illustrious
person on the earth, Nicholl.” “Without doubt, Barbicane,” modestly answered
Capt. Nicholl. “But do you know how much it would have been necessary to dig out
Kilimanjaro if we only had gun-cotton equal to that which threw our projectile
to the moon?”</p>
<p>“How much, Nicholl?”</p>
<p>“One hundred and eighty galleries, Barbicane.”</p>
<p>“Well, we would have digged them, Captain.”</p>
<p>“And 180 projectiles of 180,000 tons.”</p>
<p>“We would have melted them, Nicholl.”</p>
<p>“It was useless to expect reasonable conversation between two persons of this
type. But after they made the trip to the moon, what would they not be capable
of? On the very same evening only a few hours before the minute when the gun was
to be fired, and while President Barbicane and Capt. Nicholl were congratulating
themselves, Alcide Pierdeux, closeted in his studio at Baltimore, uttered a cry
of hurrah! as if he were crazy.</p>
<p>Then, suddenly getting up from the table, which was covered with figures and
calculations, he cried out:</p>
<p>“Ah! What a fool Maston is!—what a stupid fellow! His whole problem will go
in the soup! Christopher Columbus! Why did I not see this before? If I only knew
where he was at this moment I would invite him to have supper with me and to sip
a glass of champagne at the very moment when they are going to fire off the
gun.”</p>
<p>And after these and many exclamations which he generally used in playing
whist he said: “Oh, the old fool! Without a doubt he must have been dull when he
made his calculations for this affair of Kilimanjaro. He will find it very
necessary to make another. Oh, what a fool with his cannon!”</p>
<h4><b>CHAPTER XVIII.<br/><br/>IN WHICH THE POPULATION OF WAMASAI ASSEMBLE TO HEAR
PRESIDENT BARBICANE SAY “FIRE” TO CAPT. NICHOLL.</b></h4>
<p>It was in the evening of the 22d of September, that memorable date which
public opinion credited with an influence as unlucky as that of the 1st of
January of the year 1000. Twelve hours after the sun had passed the meridian of
Kilimanjaro, that is at midnight, Capt. Nicholl was to touch off the terrible
cannon.</p>
<p>Kilimanjaro being 35 degrees east of the meridian of Paris, and Baltimore 79
degrees east of said meridian, there was a difference of 114 degrees between
these two places, or 456 minutes in time, or 7 hours and 36 minutes. So the
exact moment at which the shooting would take place would be 5 hours and 24
minutes post meridian in that great city of Maryland. The weather was
magnificent. The sun had just gone down on the plains of Wamasai, behind a
horizon of perfect purity. It was impossible to wish for a prettier night, one
more calm or starry, in which to throw the projectile across space. Not a cloud
would be mixed with the artificial vapors developed by the deflagration of the
melimelonite.</p>
<p>Who knows, perhaps President Barbicane and Capt. Nicholl regretted that they
were not able to get into the projectile. In the first second they would have
travelled 2,800 kilometres. Sultan Bali-Bali, with the great personages of his
court, that is, his Finance Ministers and his Ministers of Public Works,
together with the Black Brigade, who had helped in the great work, were all
assembled to watch the different steps of the shooting.</p>
<p>But, with great precaution, they had all taken a position three kilometres
from the shaft bored in the Kilimanjaro, so that they would have nothing to fear
from the concussion of the air.</p>
<p>Several thousand natives, deputed from Kisongo and neighboring States in the
south of the province, by the orders of the Sultan, were present to witness this
splendid spectacle. A wire was stretched, connecting an electric battery to the
touch-hole of the shaft, ready to send the current and start the deflagration of
the melimelonite. As a preliminary an excellent meal had been served at the
table of the Sultan for his American guests and the persons of his court, all at
the expense of Bali-Bali, who did everything very grandly as long as he was
reimbursed by the members of the firm of Barbicane & Co.</p>
<p>It was 11 o’clock when this feast, commenced at 7:30, was finished, and at
the end of it the Sultan proposed a toast to the engineers of the N. P. P. A.
and to the success of their great enterprise. An hour yet, and the change in the
geographical and climatic conditions of the earth would be accomplished.</p>
<p>President Barbicane, his associate, and his ten helpers took their places
around the cannon, to the interior of which ran the wire of the electric
battery. Barbicane with his chronometer in his hand counted the minutes, and
never in his life did they seem so long to him. The minutes seemed not merely
years but centuries. At ten minutes before midnight Capt. Nicholl and Barbicane
approached the key which put the electric thread in communication with the shaft
of Kilimanjaro. The Sultan, his court and the crowd of natives formed an immense
circle around the cannon. It was important that the shooting should take place
at the exact moment indicated in the calculations of J. T. Maston—that is, at
the moment when the sun would cut that equinoctial line which it would never
leave again in its apparent orbit around the earth. Five minutes to twelve, four
minutes, three minutes, two minutes, one minute to twelve—</p>
<p>President Barbicane watched the hands of his chronometer, lighted by a
lantern which was held by one of his helpers, while Capt. Nicholl, his finger on
the button of the apparatus, was ready to connect the circuit of
electricity.</p>
<p>Twenty seconds, ten seconds, five seconds, one second. Not the slightest
tremor could be noted in the hand of the impassive Nicholl. His partner and
himself were no more excited than, at the moment when they waited, sitting in
the projectile, for the Columbiad to fire them to the regions of the moon.</p>
<p>“Fire,” ordered President Barbicane.</p>
<p>At this moment Capt. Nicholl pressed the button. A terrible detonation
followed, the echoes of which spread to the furthest corners of the province of
Wamasai. A sharp whistle passed the crowd, a terrible rush of air, caused by the
milliards of milliards of measures of gas, made by the instantaneous
deflagrations of the 2,000 tons of melimelonite. It might be described as one of
those meteors in which all the violence of nature is accumulated sweeping across
the earth. The effect could not have been more terrible if all the cannons of
the whole globe had been joined together with all the thunderbolts of heaven and
all had united in one grand report.</p>
<h4><b>CHAPTER XIX.<br/><br/>IN WHICH J.T. MASTON REGRETS THAT THE CROWD DID NOT
LYNCH HIM WHEN HE WAS IN PRISON.</b></h4>
<p>The capitals of two worlds, the largest cities as well as the smaller ones,
stood waiting terror-stricken. Thanks to the journals which had published the
news broadcast over the world, every one knew the precise hour at which the
shooting would take place and the local hour which corresponded with that of
Kilimanjaro, situated 35 degrees east, allowing for the difference of
longitude.</p>
<p>A few of the principal cities, the sun travelling a degree in four minutes
were as follows:</p>
<p>At Paris, 9:40 P.M.</p>
<p>At St. Petersburg, 11:31 P.M.</p>
<p>At London, 9:30 P.M.</p>
<p>At Rome, 10:20 P.M.</p>
<p>At Madrid, 9:15 P.M.</p>
<p>AtBerlin, 11:20 P.M.</p>
<p>At Constantinople, 11:26 P.M.</p>
<p>At Calcutta, 3:04 A.M.</p>
<p>At Nanking, 5:05 A.M.</p>
<p>At Baltimore, it was said, twelve hours after the passage of the sun of the
meridian of Kilimanjaro, it was 5:24 P.M. It is impossible to describe the pangs
which were produced at this moment. The most powerful of modern pens would be
helpless at the task. The people of Baltimore stood fearing that they would be
swept off the surface of the earth by the terrible mass of water which would
fall on their city. They expected to see the Bay of Chesapeake empty itself upon
them. Then, besides, the city, even should the waters not come upon it, would be
terribly shaken up by the shock which would be produced. The monuments would be
destroyed; its best quarters swallowed up at the bottom of the abysses which
would open through the surface of the ground. These fears ran through the
different parts of the globe which were not scheduled for submersion by the
upheaval of the oceans.</p>
<p>Every human being felt the marrow in his bones creep and shake at this
fearful moment.</p>
<p>Yes, all trembled, all save one person, and that one was the engineer Alcide
Pierdeux. As he had not had time to make known to the public the discoveries
which he had made by means of his last calculations, he drank a bumper of
champagne to the health of both worlds in the café of one of the best known
hotels. Just as the twenty-fourth minute after 5 o’clock, corresponding with
midnight at Kilimanjaro, was reached—</p>
<p>At Baltimore, nothing.</p>
<p>At London, Paris, Constantinople, Berlin, nothing, not the least shock.</p>
<p>Mr. John Milne, standing in his coal mine at Shamokui with a seismometer
which he had arranged there, did not note the least abnormal movement in the
earth’s shell in this part of the globe. In Baltimore the heavens were cloudy
and it was impossible to note in the apparent movement of the stars any
derangement which would have indicated the change in the earth’s axis.</p>
<p>What a night J.T. Maston passed in his place of safety which was unknown to
all save Mrs. Evangelina Scorbitt! He was beside himself, this visionary
engineer. He could not rest in his place of hiding. He seemed to have grown old
in one day and looked sharply out to see if the daily course of the sun was
modified. This would have been a certain proof of the success of his work. This
change could not be seen even on the morning of the 23d of September, because at
this date the star invariably rises in the east for all points of the globe. The
next day the sun travelled over the horizon the same as it had always done.</p>
<p>The European delegates had assembled on the platform of their hotel. They had
by their side instruments of extreme precision which would enable them to note
if the sun took a course in the direction of the equator.</p>
<p>Well, nothing changed. A few minutes after the rising of the sun the great
disc inclined away towards the Australian hemisphere. Nothing was changed in its
apparent course.</p>
<p>Major Donellan and his associates saluted the heavenly torch with
enthusiastic hurrahs, and gave it a reception like a favorite star in the
theatre. The heavens were in superb condition, the horizon free from the vapors
of the night, never did the great sun-god present a more beautiful aspect in
such splendid condition before the astonished public. “And precisely at the
place marked by the laws of astronomy,” said Eric Baldenak.</p>
<p>“Yes by our old astronomy,” said Boris Karkof, “and these fools pretended to
destroy it.”</p>
<p>“Well, they will have their expenses to pay and ridicule to endure besides,”
added Jacques Jansen, by whose voice Holland seemed to speak all alone.</p>
<p>“And the Arctic regions will eternally stay under the ice as they have
discovered,” said Prof. Jan Harald.</p>
<p>“Hurrah for the sun,” said Major Donellan. “Such as it is, it has been and
always will be sufficient for our earth.”</p>
<p>“Hurrah, hurrah,” repeated in single voice the representatives of old Europe.
At this moment Dean Toodrink, who had not said anything so far, made this very
cautious remark:</p>
<p>But perhaps they did not shoot yet.</p>
<p>“Not shoot yet,” said the Major. “Heaven grant that they have fired off the
cannon twice rather than once.”</p>
<p>And that was exactly what J. T. Maston and Mrs. Evangelina Scorbitt were
saying.</p>
<p>The wise and the ignorant were united this time by the logic of the
situation. Even Alcide Pierdeux repeated it, and added: “Even if they did shoot,
what is the difference? The earth will not stop waltzing on its old axis and
turning as it used to do.”</p>
<p>In fact no one knew what had happened at Kilimanjaro. But at the close of the
day an answer came to the question which was engrossing the attention of
mankind.</p>
<p>A cablegram arrived in the United States, and here is what this dispatch,
sent by Richard W. Trust, Consul at Zanzibar, contained:</p>
<BLOCKQUOTE>“Zanzibar, Sept. 23, 7:25 A.M.” “To <i>John S. Wright, Minister of
State</i>:</BLOCKQUOTE>
<BLOCKQUOTE>“The cannon was fired off yesterday evening at midnight exactly by
the device bored in the southern part of Kilimanjaro. Passage of the
projectile was accompanied with a powerful whirr and terrible detonation.
Whole provinces destroyed by the concussion of the air. Ocean agitated as far
as the Mozambique channel. A large number of vessels disabled and thrown on
the coast. Towns and villages destroyed. Everything else is well. RICHARD W.
TRUST.”</BLOCKQUOTE>
<p>Yes, everything else went on well. Nothing had been changed in the state of
worldly affairs save the terrible disasters produced in Wamasai, which was
partly deluged by the artificial waterspout, and the shipwrecks which were
produced by the current of air. The same thing precisely happened when the
Columbiad threw its projectile to the moon. The shock to the ground of Florida,
was it not felt through a radius of 100 miles? Yes, certainly, but this time the
effect should have been a hundred times stronger.</p>
<p>Whatever had happened the dispatch gave two pieces of information to the
interested people of the old and new worlds.</p>
<p>First—That the enormous cannon had been erected in the flank of
Kilimanjaro.</p>
<p>Second—That the gun had been fired at the fixed hour. And now, the whole
world uttered an exclamation of intense satisfaction, followed by a great burst
of laughter.</p>
<p>The trial which Barbicane & Co. had made had entirely failed. The
calculations of J.T. Maston were good only for the waste basket. The N.P.P.A.
could only announce its failure. But, perhaps, it might be that the secretary of
the Gun Club had made a mistake in his calculations.</p>
<p>“Rather would I believe that I have been mistaken in the affection which I
feel for him,” said Mrs. Evangelina Scorbitt.</p>
<p>But beyond all, the most discontented human being was J.T. Maston. When he
saw that nothing had been changed in the movement of the earth, that the
conditions remained precisely the same as they were since the creation, he hoped
that some accident had prevented the success of Barbicane & Co., and that
his associates had met with some disaster.</p>
<p>But there was the cablegram from Zanzibar which stated without a doubt that
the operation had taken place.</p>
<p>Failed! ! And what of the formulas and calculations on which he had spent so
much time? Is it possible that a cylinder 600 metres long, 27 metres wide,
throwing a projectile of 180.000 kilograms, with the deflagration of 200 tons of
melimelonite, with an initial velocity of 2,800 kilometres, would not be
sufficient to move the earthly axis? It did not seem probable.</p>
<p>But why?</p>
<p>So J.T. Maston, in a state of violent excitement, declared that he would quit
his retreat. Mrs. Evangelina Scorbitt tried in vain to prevent it. Not that she
feared for his life, as all danger of that sort had passed. But the insults
which he would have to bear, the jokes which would be cracked about him, the
remarks which would be made in regard to his work—she wanted to spare him from
these. And then, moreover, what would his associates of the Gun Club say? Did
they not have to thank this man for the want of success of their operation and
for making them ridiculous? Was he not the man who had figured out the whole
affair and on whose shoulders rested all the responsibility?</p>
<p>J.T. Maston would not listen to any one. He resisted the begging and tears of
Mrs. Evangelina Scorbitt. He went out of the house where he had kept himself
hiding. He was recognized, and those who had trembled for fear of the
consequences of his work now took revenge by joking and laughing at him, and
this in many thousand different ways. He was forced to listen to jeering
remarks, even from the street gamins. “Ah,” they shouted, “here he is who wanted
to change the axis of the earth, who wanted to discover coal mines around the
North Pole, who even wanted to remove it.” In short, the Secretary of the Gun
Club was compelled to return to the mansion of Mrs. Evangelina Scorbitt, who
used all her wealth of tenderness to console him. It was in vain, however. J.T.
Maston could not be consoled, as his cannon had produced upon the earth’s sphere
no more effect than a simple popgun would have done. A fortnight went by in this
way, and the world resumed its daily routine and did not even think any longer
of the projects of the N.P.P.A.</p>
<p>A fortnight and no news yet from President Barbicane and Capt. Nicholl. Had
they perished by the discharge in the land of Wamasai? Had they sacrificed their
lives in the most mysterious operation of modern times? No.</p>
<p>After the detonation both were overthrown along with the Sultan arid his
court, and a thousand natives in one grand tumble, but they all got up after a
little time strong and hearty.</p>
<p>“Did you succeed?” asked Bali-Bali, rubbing his shoulder.</p>
<p>“Do you doubt it?”</p>
<p>“Me doubt it?”</p>
<p>“But when will you know?”</p>
<p>“In a few days,” said Barbicane.</p>
<p>Did he appreciate that the operation had failed? Perhaps. But he never would
have acknowledged it before the Sultan at Wamasai.</p>
<p>Forty-eight hours later the two partners had taken leave of Wamasai, not,
however, before having paid an enormous sum for the damage done to the country.
As this amount of money went into the private purse of the Sultan, and as his
subjects did not receive one cent of it, he had no reason to complain of the
operation.</p>
<p>Then the two associates, followed by their ten helpers, reached Zanzibar,
where they found a vessel to take them to Suez. From there under false names the
steamer Morris brought them to Marseilles; then they took the train to Paris,
where they arrived without having had any collision or accident, and taking the
railroad to Havre they arrived in time to go to America by the Bourgogne of the
Transatlantic line. In twenty-two days they made the trip from Wamasai to New
York, and on the 15th day of October the two knocked at the door of the mansion
of New Park, at three minutes past noon. An instant afterwards they found
themselves in the presence of Mrs. Evangelina Scorbitt and J. T. Maston.</p>
<h4>CHAPTER XX.<br/><br/>IN WHICH THIS STORY, AS TRUTHFUL AS IT IS IMPROBABLE, IS
FINISHED.</h4>
<p>“Barbicane!!! Nicholl!!”</p>
<p>“Maston.”</p>
<p>“You.”</p>
<p>“We.”</p>
<p>And in this plural pronoun, uttered simultaneously by the two associates in a
single voice, might be heard a flood of irony and reproaches.</p>
<p>J.T. Maston pressed his iron hook on his forehead. Then, with a voice which
seemed to stick in his throat, he said:</p>
<p>“Did your shaft at Kilimanjaro really have a diameter of twenty-seven
metres?”</p>
<p>“Yes, sir.”</p>
<p>“Did your projectile really weigh 180,000,000 of kilograms?”</p>
<p>“Yes.”</p>
<p>“And was the shooting really done with 2.000 pounds of melimelonite?”</p>
<p>“Yes.”</p>
<p>This thrice-repeated “yes” fell on J. T. Maston like masses of stone on his
head.</p>
<p>“Then I can only conclude”—said he.</p>
<p>“What?” asked President Barbicane.</p>
<p>“As follows,” said J. T. Maston. “As the operation did not succeed, the
powder did not give to the projectile an initial velocity of 2,800
kilometres.”</p>
<p>“Really?” said Capt. Nicholl, with a tone of sarcasm.</p>
<p>“Yes, your melimelonite is good only to charge pistols of straw.”</p>
<p>Capt. Nicholl sprang up at this remark, which was an outrageous insult to
him.</p>
<p>“Maston!” said he.</p>
<p>“Nicholl!”</p>
<p>“You ought to be blown up with the melimelonite.”</p>
<p>“No, gun cotton; that is more sure.”</p>
<p>Mrs. Evangelina Scorbitt had to interfere and cool these two enraged gunners
down.</p>
<p>“Gentlemen,” said she, between associates.</p>
<p>“And anyhow,” President Barbicane resumed, with a very calm expression, “what
is the good of criminations? It is certain that the calculations of our friend,
J. T. Maston, were correct, as it is certain that the explosive of our friend
Nicholl had sufficient power. Yes, we have only employed known quantities of
science. We lacked experience. Why did we fail? Perhaps we may never know.”</p>
<p>“Well,” said the Secretary of the Gun Club, “we will commence all over
again.” “And the money then which has been spent for this operation is a dead
loss,” observed Capt. Nicholl.</p>
<p>“But public opinion,” said Evangelina Scorbitt, “would not allow you a second
trial.”</p>
<p>“What will become of our Arctic region?” said Capt. Nicholl.” “Where will the
stock of the N.P.P.A. fall to?” said President Barbicane. Well, it had already
fallen so far that the stock was offered at the price of old paper.</p>
<p>This, then, was the result of the gigantic operation. This was the memorable
fiasco to which the superhuman projects of Barbicane & Co. had led.</p>
<p>If ever engineers, unlucky engineers were laughed at in public, if ever the
newspaper made drawings, songs, and paragraphs not at all flattering to the
people mentioned in them, this occasion exceeded them all. President Barbicane,
the Directors of the new Society and their associates of the Gun Club were
universally sneered at. In every language they were made ridiculous, and to make
it easier to the whole population of the world to read the scornful articles
were printed in “Volapuk.” In Europe, especially, all the remarks and songs to
make the persons of the N.P.P.A. ridiculous were spread broadcast. The greatest
hit was made by a Frenchman, who composed a ballad which was sung in every
concert hall of France and America. But will we never know to what the failure
of this enterprise was due? Did this failure prove that the operation was
impossible of realization; that the powers at the disposal of mankind would
never be sufficient to bring about a change in the earth’s movement? Did it
prove that the country around the North Pole would never be removed to those
regions where the sun and heat would melt the ice without human help?</p>
<p>Information on this subject came a few days after the return of President
Barbicane and Capt. Nicholl to the United States. A very simple paragraph
appeared in the <i>Times</i> of the 17th of October. Here is the article:</p>
<BLOCKQUOTE>“We all know that the result of the operation to create a new axis
has been nothing. However, the calculations of J.T. Maston, founded on
established facts, would have produced the desired result if through an
unexplainable slip an error had not been embraced in them from the beginning.
When the celebrated secretary of the Gun Club took for a basis of his
calculations the circumference of the earth’s sphere, he figured it at 40,000
metres in place of 40,000,000 metres, and to which the failing of the
operation is due.</BLOCKQUOTE>
<BLOCKQUOTE>“Where could such an error come from? Who could have provoked
it?... How could such a remarkable calculator commit such an error?</BLOCKQUOTE>
<BLOCKQUOTE>“It is certain that had the problem of the modification of the
earth’s axis been correctly figured, it would have had been exactly solved.
But this forgetting of three zeros has made a change at the end of the
calculation of twelve naughts.</BLOCKQUOTE>
<BLOCKQUOTE>“It is not a cannon one million times larger than that of
twenty-seven centimetres, which was necessary. A trillion of these cannons
throwing a trillion projectiles of 80,000 tons each would be necessary to
displace the North Pole, admitting that the melimelonite had the expansive
power which had been attributed to it by Capt. Nicholl.</BLOCKQUOTE>
<BLOCKQUOTE>“Therefore the whole shock under the conditions under which it was
produced has displaced the North Pole only three-thousandths of a milimeter,
and has only changed the level of the ocean at the most nine-thousandths of
three-thousandths of a milimetre. In regard to the projectile fired, it will
be a small planet, and will belong in future to the solar system, sustained by
solar attraction.</BLOCKQUOTE>
<BLOCKQUOTE>ALCIDE PIERDEUX ”.</BLOCKQUOTE>
<p>So this want of attention on the part of J.T. Maston at the beginning of his
calculations had produced such a humiliating result for his Company.</p>
<p>But even if his associates were very angry against him, if everybody laughed
and joked at him, it is only fair to state in his favor that this mistake which
had wrecked the operation had spared the world a terrible catastrophe.</p>
<p>A flood of telegrams and letters arrived from all parts of the world
congratulating J.T. Maston on his mistake of three naughts. J.T. Maston, more
downhearted and crushed than ever, would not listen to the hurrahs which the
world now uttered for him. President Barbicane, Capt. Nicholl, Tom Hunter, with
wooden legs; Col. Bloomsberry, the gay Bilsby, and his associates would never
pardon him. But Mrs. Evangelina Scorbitt she could not be angry with him, most
excellent lady.</p>
<p>J.T. Maston had begun to do his calculations over again, refusing to admit
that he was wrong at that point.</p>
<p>He was, however; the Engineer Alcide Pierdeux had not made a mistake. Having
learnt his error at the last moment, when he had no time to make it known, he
had remained perfectly composed among all the fright and terror of those about
him. That was why he proposed a toast in champagne at the moment when the
shooting was taking place in the Old World. Yes, indeed, three naughts had been
forgotten in the circumference of the earth. Suddenly J.T. Maston remembered the
whole matter.</p>
<p>It was at the beginning of his work when he had shut himself up in the
“Ballistic Cottage,” and written the number 40,000, 000 on his blackboard. At
that moment the electric bell began to ring with great force. J.T. Maston went
to the phone. He exchanged a few words with Mrs. Evangelina Scorbitt. Suddenly a
terrible stroke of lightning from the storm through the telephone knocked over
his blackboard and himself. He got up, commenced to write over again the numbers
which had been half rubbed out on his blackboard. He had just written the
numbers 40,000 when the telephone rang for the second time. He went again to
listen to Mme. Scorbitt, and when he did begin his work he forgot to put on the
last three naughts of the earth’s circumference.</p>
<p>It was the fault of Mrs. Evangelina Scorbitt. If she had not interrupted him
he would not have been thrown on the floor by the shock from the telephone. He
would not have noticed anything of lightning and thunder, and all his mass of
figures and calculations would not have ended in a mistake.</p>
<p>What a terrible blow it was to this unhappy lady when J.T. Maston was
compelled to tell her the circumstances which had produced the mistake! Yes, she
was the cause of the disaster. It was on her account that J.T. Maston found
himself dishonored through the long years which he bad yet to live, as nearly
every member of the Gun Club usually lived to the age of a hundred years.</p>
<p>After this conversation at New Park, J. T. Maston had gone away from the
mansion. He went back to his Ballistic Cottage and walked into his study
muttering to himself: “Well, now I am not good for anything any more in this
world.”</p>
<p>“Not even good enough to get married,” said a broken voice at his elbow.</p>
<p>It was that of Mrs. Evangelina Scorbitt. Absolutely crushed and heart-broken,
she had followed him.</p>
<p>“Dear Maston”—she began.</p>
<p>“Well, yes,” said he, “but only under one condition—that I shall never make
any mathematical calculations.”</p>
<p>“My dear friend, I have a horror of them,” answered the excellent widow.</p>
<p>Thus it happened that the Secretary of the Gun Club made Mrs. Evangelina
Scorbitt Mrs. J. T. Maston.</p>
<p>In regard to the article of Alcide Pierdeux, we might say that it brought him
into great celebrity and reputation.</p>
<p>It was translated into all languages, printed in every paper, and thus his
name became known all over the world. The father of his old sweetheart had
refused him his daughter’s hand, after telling him that he could not give him
his daughter, as he was too smart. But now, after having read this article and
being unable to understand it without any help, he began to feel sorry and know
better. He sent him an invitation to dine with him and his daughter.</p>
<h4><b>CHAPTER XXI.<br/><br/>VERY SHORT, SINCE ENOUGH HAS BEEN SAID TO MAKE THE
WORLD’S POPULATION FEEL PERFECTLY SURE AGAIN.</b></h4>
<p>And now the inhabitants of the world could again be perfectly easy. President
Barbicane and Capt. Nicholl will not again begin that enterprise so woefully
miscarried, J.T. Maston will not again figure out any calculations, however free
from mistakes. The article of Alcide Pierdeux has told the truth. What the law
of mechanics proves to us is that to produce a displacement of the axis of 23
degrees and 28 minutes, even with the melimelonite, a trillion cannons similar
to the one which had been bored into the cliff of Kilimanjaro would be
necessary. But our whole sphere, bored over its whole surface, is too small to
accommodate them. Therefore the inhabitants of the earth may sleep in peace. To
modify the conditions in which the earth is moving is beyond the efforts of
humanity. It is not meet that mere humanity should change anything in the order
established by our Creator in the system of the universe.</p>
<h4>END OF THE VOYAGE EXTRAORDINAIRE</h4>
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