<p>"At six o'clock, I perceived a great portion of the earth's visible area
to the eastward involved in thick shadow, which continued to advance with
great rapidity, until, at five minutes before seven, the whole surface in
view was enveloped in the darkness of night. It was not, however, until
long after this time that the rays of the setting sun ceased to illumine
the balloon; and this circumstance, although of course fully anticipated,
did not fail to give me an infinite deal of pleasure. It was evident that,
in the morning, I should behold the rising luminary many hours at least
before the citizens of Rotterdam, in spite of their situation so much
farther to the eastward, and thus, day after day, in proportion to the
height ascended, would I enjoy the light of the sun for a longer and a
longer period. I now determined to keep a journal of my passage, reckoning
the days from one to twenty-four hours continuously, without taking into
consideration the intervals of darkness.</p>
<p>"At ten o'clock, feeling sleepy, I determined to lie down for the rest of
the night; but here a difficulty presented itself, which, obvious as it
may appear, had escaped my attention up to the very moment of which I am
now speaking. If I went to sleep as I proposed, how could the atmosphere
in the chamber be regenerated in the interim? To breathe it for more than
an hour, at the farthest, would be a matter of impossibility, or, if even
this term could be extended to an hour and a quarter, the most ruinous
consequences might ensue. The consideration of this dilemma gave me no
little disquietude; and it will hardly be believed, that, after the
dangers I had undergone, I should look upon this business in so serious a
light, as to give up all hope of accomplishing my ultimate design, and
finally make up my mind to the necessity of a descent. But this hesitation
was only momentary. I reflected that man is the veriest slave of custom,
and that many points in the routine of his existence are deemed
essentially important, which are only so at all by his having rendered
them habitual. It was very certain that I could not do without sleep; but
I might easily bring myself to feel no inconvenience from being awakened
at intervals of an hour during the whole period of my repose. It would
require but five minutes at most to regenerate the atmosphere in the
fullest manner, and the only real difficulty was to contrive a method of
arousing myself at the proper moment for so doing. But this was a question
which, I am willing to confess, occasioned me no little trouble in its
solution. To be sure, I had heard of the student who, to prevent his
falling asleep over his books, held in one hand a ball of copper, the din
of whose descent into a basin of the same metal on the floor beside his
chair, served effectually to startle him up, if, at any moment, he should
be overcome with drowsiness. My own case, however, was very different
indeed, and left me no room for any similar idea; for I did not wish to
keep awake, but to be aroused from slumber at regular intervals of time. I
at length hit upon the following expedient, which, simple as it may seem,
was hailed by me, at the moment of discovery, as an invention fully equal
to that of the telescope, the steam-engine, or the art of printing itself.</p>
<p>"It is necessary to premise, that the balloon, at the elevation now
attained, continued its course upward with an even and undeviating ascent,
and the car consequently followed with a steadiness so perfect that it
would have been impossible to detect in it the slightest vacillation
whatever. This circumstance favored me greatly in the project I now
determined to adopt. My supply of water had been put on board in kegs
containing five gallons each, and ranged very securely around the interior
of the car. I unfastened one of these, and taking two ropes tied them
tightly across the rim of the wicker-work from one side to the other;
placing them about a foot apart and parallel so as to form a kind of
shelf, upon which I placed the keg, and steadied it in a horizontal
position. About eight inches immediately below these ropes, and four feet
from the bottom of the car I fastened another shelf—but made of thin
plank, being the only similar piece of wood I had. Upon this latter shelf,
and exactly beneath one of the rims of the keg, a small earthern pitcher
was deposited. I now bored a hole in the end of the keg over the pitcher,
and fitted in a plug of soft wood, cut in a tapering or conical shape.
This plug I pushed in or pulled out, as might happen, until, after a few
experiments, it arrived at that exact degree of tightness, at which the
water, oozing from the hole, and falling into the pitcher below, would
fill the latter to the brim in the period of sixty minutes. This, of
course, was a matter briefly and easily ascertained, by noticing the
proportion of the pitcher filled in any given time. Having arranged all
this, the rest of the plan is obvious. My bed was so contrived upon the
floor of the car, as to bring my head, in lying down, immediately below
the mouth of the pitcher. It was evident, that, at the expiration of an
hour, the pitcher, getting full, would be forced to run over, and to run
over at the mouth, which was somewhat lower than the rim. It was also
evident, that the water thus falling from a height of more than four feet,
could not do otherwise than fall upon my face, and that the sure
consequences would be, to waken me up instantaneously, even from the
soundest slumber in the world.</p>
<p>"It was fully eleven by the time I had completed these arrangements, and I
immediately betook myself to bed, with full confidence in the efficiency
of my invention. Nor in this matter was I disappointed. Punctually every
sixty minutes was I aroused by my trusty chronometer, when, having emptied
the pitcher into the bung-hole of the keg, and performed the duties of the
condenser, I retired again to bed. These regular interruptions to my
slumber caused me even less discomfort than I had anticipated; and when I
finally arose for the day, it was seven o'clock, and the sun had attained
many degrees above the line of my horizon.</p>
<p>"April 3d. I found the balloon at an immense height indeed, and the
earth's apparent convexity increased in a material degree. Below me in the
ocean lay a cluster of black specks, which undoubtedly were islands. Far
away to the northward I perceived a thin, white, and exceedingly brilliant
line, or streak, on the edge of the horizon, and I had no hesitation in
supposing it to be the southern disk of the ices of the Polar Sea. My
curiosity was greatly excited, for I had hopes of passing on much farther
to the north, and might possibly, at some period, find myself placed
directly above the Pole itself. I now lamented that my great elevation
would, in this case, prevent my taking as accurate a survey as I could
wish. Much, however, might be ascertained. Nothing else of an
extraordinary nature occurred during the day. My apparatus all continued
in good order, and the balloon still ascended without any perceptible
vacillation. The cold was intense, and obliged me to wrap up closely in an
overcoat. When darkness came over the earth, I betook myself to bed,
although it was for many hours afterward broad daylight all around my
immediate situation. The water-clock was punctual in its duty, and I slept
until next morning soundly, with the exception of the periodical
interruption.</p>
<p>"April 4th. Arose in good health and spirits, and was astonished at the
singular change which had taken place in the appearance of the sea. It had
lost, in a great measure, the deep tint of blue it had hitherto worn,
being now of a grayish-white, and of a lustre dazzling to the eye. The
islands were no longer visible; whether they had passed down the horizon
to the southeast, or whether my increasing elevation had left them out of
sight, it is impossible to say. I was inclined, however, to the latter
opinion. The rim of ice to the northward was growing more and more
apparent. Cold by no means so intense. Nothing of importance occurred, and
I passed the day in reading, having taken care to supply myself with
books.</p>
<p>"April 5th. Beheld the singular phenomenon of the sun rising while nearly
the whole visible surface of the earth continued to be involved in
darkness. In time, however, the light spread itself over all, and I again
saw the line of ice to the northward. It was now very distinct, and
appeared of a much darker hue than the waters of the ocean. I was
evidently approaching it, and with great rapidity. Fancied I could again
distinguish a strip of land to the eastward, and one also to the westward,
but could not be certain. Weather moderate. Nothing of any consequence
happened during the day. Went early to bed.</p>
<p>"April 6th. Was surprised at finding the rim of ice at a very moderate
distance, and an immense field of the same material stretching away off to
the horizon in the north. It was evident that if the balloon held its
present course, it would soon arrive above the Frozen Ocean, and I had now
little doubt of ultimately seeing the Pole. During the whole of the day I
continued to near the ice. Toward night the limits of my horizon very
suddenly and materially increased, owing undoubtedly to the earth's form
being that of an oblate spheroid, and my arriving above the flattened
regions in the vicinity of the Arctic circle. When darkness at length
overtook me, I went to bed in great anxiety, fearing to pass over the
object of so much curiosity when I should have no opportunity of observing
it.</p>
<p>"April 7th. Arose early, and, to my great joy, at length beheld what there
could be no hesitation in supposing the northern Pole itself. It was
there, beyond a doubt, and immediately beneath my feet; but, alas! I had
now ascended to so vast a distance, that nothing could with accuracy be
discerned. Indeed, to judge from the progression of the numbers indicating
my various altitudes, respectively, at different periods, between six A.M.
on the second of April, and twenty minutes before nine A.M. of the same
day (at which time the barometer ran down), it might be fairly inferred
that the balloon had now, at four o'clock in the morning of April the
seventh, reached a height of not less, certainly, than 7,254 miles above
the surface of the sea. This elevation may appear immense, but the
estimate upon which it is calculated gave a result in all probability far
inferior to the truth. At all events I undoubtedly beheld the whole of the
earth's major diameter; the entire northern hemisphere lay beneath me like
a chart orthographically projected: and the great circle of the equator
itself formed the boundary line of my horizon. Your Excellencies may,
however, readily imagine that the confined regions hitherto unexplored
within the limits of the Arctic circle, although situated directly beneath
me, and therefore seen without any appearance of being foreshortened, were
still, in themselves, comparatively too diminutive, and at too great a
distance from the point of sight, to admit of any very accurate
examination. Nevertheless, what could be seen was of a nature singular and
exciting. Northwardly from that huge rim before mentioned, and which, with
slight qualification, may be called the limit of human discovery in these
regions, one unbroken, or nearly unbroken, sheet of ice continues to
extend. In the first few degrees of this its progress, its surface is very
sensibly flattened, farther on depressed into a plane, and finally,
becoming not a little concave, it terminates, at the Pole itself, in a
circular centre, sharply defined, whose apparent diameter subtended at the
balloon an angle of about sixty-five seconds, and whose dusky hue, varying
in intensity, was, at all times, darker than any other spot upon the
visible hemisphere, and occasionally deepened into the most absolute and
impenetrable blackness. Farther than this, little could be ascertained. By
twelve o'clock the circular centre had materially decreased in
circumference, and by seven P.M. I lost sight of it entirely; the balloon
passing over the western limb of the ice, and floating away rapidly in the
direction of the equator.</p>
<p>"April 8th. Found a sensible diminution in the earth's apparent diameter,
besides a material alteration in its general color and appearance. The
whole visible area partook in different degrees of a tint of pale yellow,
and in some portions had acquired a brilliancy even painful to the eye. My
view downward was also considerably impeded by the dense atmosphere in the
vicinity of the surface being loaded with clouds, between whose masses I
could only now and then obtain a glimpse of the earth itself. This
difficulty of direct vision had troubled me more or less for the last
forty-eight hours; but my present enormous elevation brought closer
together, as it were, the floating bodies of vapor, and the inconvenience
became, of course, more and more palpable in proportion to my ascent.
Nevertheless, I could easily perceive that the balloon now hovered above
the range of great lakes in the continent of North America, and was
holding a course, due south, which would bring me to the tropics. This
circumstance did not fail to give me the most heartful satisfaction, and I
hailed it as a happy omen of ultimate success. Indeed, the direction I had
hitherto taken, had filled me with uneasiness; for it was evident that,
had I continued it much longer, there would have been no possibility of my
arriving at the moon at all, whose orbit is inclined to the ecliptic at
only the small angle of 5 degrees 8' 48".</p>
<p>"April 9th. To-day the earth's diameter was greatly diminished, and the
color of the surface assumed hourly a deeper tint of yellow. The balloon
kept steadily on her course to the southward, and arrived, at nine P.M.,
over the northern edge of the Mexican Gulf.</p>
<p>"April 10th. I was suddenly aroused from slumber, about five o'clock this
morning, by a loud, crackling, and terrific sound, for which I could in no
manner account. It was of very brief duration, but, while it lasted
resembled nothing in the world of which I had any previous experience. It
is needless to say that I became excessively alarmed, having, in the first
instance, attributed the noise to the bursting of the balloon. I examined
all my apparatus, however, with great attention, and could discover
nothing out of order. Spent a great part of the day in meditating upon an
occurrence so extraordinary, but could find no means whatever of
accounting for it. Went to bed dissatisfied, and in a state of great
anxiety and agitation.</p>
<p>"April 11th. Found a startling diminution in the apparent diameter of the
earth, and a considerable increase, now observable for the first time, in
that of the moon itself, which wanted only a few days of being full. It
now required long and excessive labor to condense within the chamber
sufficient atmospheric air for the sustenance of life.</p>
<p>"April 12th. A singular alteration took place in regard to the direction
of the balloon, and although fully anticipated, afforded me the most
unequivocal delight. Having reached, in its former course, about the
twentieth parallel of southern latitude, it turned off suddenly, at an
acute angle, to the eastward, and thus proceeded throughout the day,
keeping nearly, if not altogether, in the exact plane of the lunar elipse.
What was worthy of remark, a very perceptible vacillation in the car was a
consequence of this change of route—a vacillation which prevailed,
in a more or less degree, for a period of many hours.</p>
<p>"April 13th. Was again very much alarmed by a repetition of the loud,
crackling noise which terrified me on the tenth. Thought long upon the
subject, but was unable to form any satisfactory conclusion. Great
decrease in the earth's apparent diameter, which now subtended from the
balloon an angle of very little more than twenty-five degrees. The moon
could not be seen at all, being nearly in my zenith. I still continued in
the plane of the elipse, but made little progress to the eastward.</p>
<p>"April 14th. Extremely rapid decrease in the diameter of the earth. To-day
I became strongly impressed with the idea, that the balloon was now
actually running up the line of apsides to the point of perigee—in
other words, holding the direct course which would bring it immediately to
the moon in that part of its orbit the nearest to the earth. The moon
itself was directly overhead, and consequently hidden from my view. Great
and long-continued labor necessary for the condensation of the atmosphere.</p>
<p>"April 15th. Not even the outlines of continents and seas could now be
traced upon the earth with anything approaching distinctness. About twelve
o'clock I became aware, for the third time, of that appalling sound which
had so astonished me before. It now, however, continued for some moments,
and gathered intensity as it continued. At length, while, stupefied and
terror-stricken, I stood in expectation of I knew not what hideous
destruction, the car vibrated with excessive violence, and a gigantic and
flaming mass of some material which I could not distinguish, came with a
voice of a thousand thunders, roaring and booming by the balloon. When my
fears and astonishment had in some degree subsided, I had little
difficulty in supposing it to be some mighty volcanic fragment ejected
from that world to which I was so rapidly approaching, and, in all
probability, one of that singular class of substances occasionally picked
up on the earth, and termed meteoric stones for want of a better
appellation.</p>
<p>"April 16th. To-day, looking upward as well as I could, through each of
the side windows alternately, I beheld, to my great delight, a very small
portion of the moon's disk protruding, as it were, on all sides beyond the
huge circumference of the balloon. My agitation was extreme; for I had now
little doubt of soon reaching the end of my perilous voyage. Indeed, the
labor now required by the condenser had increased to a most oppressive
degree, and allowed me scarcely any respite from exertion. Sleep was a
matter nearly out of the question. I became quite ill, and my frame
trembled with exhaustion. It was impossible that human nature could endure
this state of intense suffering much longer. During the now brief interval
of darkness a meteoric stone again passed in my vicinity, and the
frequency of these phenomena began to occasion me much apprehension.</p>
<p>"April 17th. This morning proved an epoch in my voyage. It will be
remembered that, on the thirteenth, the earth subtended an angular breadth
of twenty-five degrees. On the fourteenth this had greatly diminished; on
the fifteenth a still more remarkable decrease was observable; and, on
retiring on the night of the sixteenth, I had noticed an angle of no more
than about seven degrees and fifteen minutes. What, therefore, must have
been my amazement, on awakening from a brief and disturbed slumber, on the
morning of this day, the seventeenth, at finding the surface beneath me so
suddenly and wonderfully augmented in volume, as to subtend no less than
thirty-nine degrees in apparent angular diameter! I was thunderstruck! No
words can give any adequate idea of the extreme, the absolute horror and
astonishment, with which I was seized possessed, and altogether
overwhelmed. My knees tottered beneath me—my teeth chattered—my
hair started up on end. "The balloon, then, had actually burst!" These
were the first tumultuous ideas that hurried through my mind: "The balloon
had positively burst!—I was falling—falling with the most
impetuous, the most unparalleled velocity! To judge by the immense
distance already so quickly passed over, it could not be more than ten
minutes, at the farthest, before I should meet the surface of the earth,
and be hurled into annihilation!" But at length reflection came to my
relief. I paused; I considered; and I began to doubt. The matter was
impossible. I could not in any reason have so rapidly come down. Besides,
although I was evidently approaching the surface below me, it was with a
speed by no means commensurate with the velocity I had at first so
horribly conceived. This consideration served to calm the perturbation of
my mind, and I finally succeeded in regarding the phenomenon in its proper
point of view. In fact, amazement must have fairly deprived me of my
senses, when I could not see the vast difference, in appearance, between
the surface below me, and the surface of my mother earth. The latter was
indeed over my head, and completely hidden by the balloon, while the moon—the
moon itself in all its glory—lay beneath me, and at my feet.</p>
<p>"The stupor and surprise produced in my mind by this extraordinary change
in the posture of affairs was perhaps, after all, that part of the
adventure least susceptible of explanation. For the bouleversement in
itself was not only natural and inevitable, but had been long actually
anticipated as a circumstance to be expected whenever I should arrive at
that exact point of my voyage where the attraction of the planet should be
superseded by the attraction of the satellite—or, more precisely,
where the gravitation of the balloon toward the earth should be less
powerful than its gravitation toward the moon. To be sure I arose from a
sound slumber, with all my senses in confusion, to the contemplation of a
very startling phenomenon, and one which, although expected, was not
expected at the moment. The revolution itself must, of course, have taken
place in an easy and gradual manner, and it is by no means clear that, had
I even been awake at the time of the occurrence, I should have been made
aware of it by any internal evidence of an inversion—that is to say,
by any inconvenience or disarrangement, either about my person or about my
apparatus.</p>
<p>"It is almost needless to say that, upon coming to a due sense of my
situation, and emerging from the terror which had absorbed every faculty
of my soul, my attention was, in the first place, wholly directed to the
contemplation of the general physical appearance of the moon. It lay
beneath me like a chart—and although I judged it to be still at no
inconsiderable distance, the indentures of its surface were defined to my
vision with a most striking and altogether unaccountable distinctness. The
entire absence of ocean or sea, and indeed of any lake or river, or body
of water whatsoever, struck me, at first glance, as the most extraordinary
feature in its geological condition. Yet, strange to say, I beheld vast
level regions of a character decidedly alluvial, although by far the
greater portion of the hemisphere in sight was covered with innumerable
volcanic mountains, conical in shape, and having more the appearance of
artificial than of natural protuberance. The highest among them does not
exceed three and three-quarter miles in perpendicular elevation; but a map
of the volcanic districts of the Campi Phlegraei would afford to your
Excellencies a better idea of their general surface than any unworthy
description I might think proper to attempt. The greater part of them were
in a state of evident eruption, and gave me fearfully to understand their
fury and their power, by the repeated thunders of the miscalled meteoric
stones, which now rushed upward by the balloon with a frequency more and
more appalling.</p>
<p>"April 18th. To-day I found an enormous increase in the moon's apparent
bulk—and the evidently accelerated velocity of my descent began to
fill me with alarm. It will be remembered, that, in the earliest stage of
my speculations upon the possibility of a passage to the moon, the
existence, in its vicinity, of an atmosphere, dense in proportion to the
bulk of the planet, had entered largely into my calculations; this too in
spite of many theories to the contrary, and, it may be added, in spite of
a general disbelief in the existence of any lunar atmosphere at all. But,
in addition to what I have already urged in regard to Encke's comet and
the zodiacal light, I had been strengthened in my opinion by certain
observations of Mr. Schroeter, of Lilienthal. He observed the moon when
two days and a half old, in the evening soon after sunset, before the dark
part was visible, and continued to watch it until it became visible. The
two cusps appeared tapering in a very sharp faint prolongation, each
exhibiting its farthest extremity faintly illuminated by the solar rays,
before any part of the dark hemisphere was visible. Soon afterward, the
whole dark limb became illuminated. This prolongation of the cusps beyond
the semicircle, I thought, must have arisen from the refraction of the
sun's rays by the moon's atmosphere. I computed, also, the height of the
atmosphere (which could refract light enough into its dark hemisphere to
produce a twilight more luminous than the light reflected from the earth
when the moon is about 32 degrees from the new) to be 1,356 Paris feet; in
this view, I supposed the greatest height capable of refracting the solar
ray, to be 5,376 feet. My ideas on this topic had also received
confirmation by a passage in the eighty-second volume of the Philosophical
Transactions, in which it is stated that at an occultation of Jupiter's
satellites, the third disappeared after having been about 1" or 2" of time
indistinct, and the fourth became indiscernible near the limb.(*4)</p>
<p>"Cassini frequently observed Saturn, Jupiter, and the fixed stars, when
approaching the moon to occultation, to have their circular figure changed
into an oval one; and, in other occultations, he found no alteration of
figure at all. Hence it might be supposed, that at some times and not at
others, there is a dense matter encompassing the moon wherein the rays of
the stars are refracted.</p>
<p>"Upon the resistance or, more properly, upon the support of an atmosphere,
existing in the state of density imagined, I had, of course, entirely
depended for the safety of my ultimate descent. Should I then, after all,
prove to have been mistaken, I had in consequence nothing better to
expect, as a finale to my adventure, than being dashed into atoms against
the rugged surface of the satellite. And, indeed, I had now every reason
to be terrified. My distance from the moon was comparatively trifling,
while the labor required by the condenser was diminished not at all, and I
could discover no indication whatever of a decreasing rarity in the air.</p>
<p>"April 19th. This morning, to my great joy, about nine o'clock, the
surface of the moon being frightfully near, and my apprehensions excited
to the utmost, the pump of my condenser at length gave evident tokens of
an alteration in the atmosphere. By ten, I had reason to believe its
density considerably increased. By eleven, very little labor was necessary
at the apparatus; and at twelve o'clock, with some hesitation, I ventured
to unscrew the tourniquet, when, finding no inconvenience from having done
so, I finally threw open the gum-elastic chamber, and unrigged it from
around the car. As might have been expected, spasms and violent headache
were the immediate consequences of an experiment so precipitate and full
of danger. But these and other difficulties attending respiration, as they
were by no means so great as to put me in peril of my life, I determined
to endure as I best could, in consideration of my leaving them behind me
momently in my approach to the denser strata near the moon. This approach,
however, was still impetuous in the extreme; and it soon became alarmingly
certain that, although I had probably not been deceived in the expectation
of an atmosphere dense in proportion to the mass of the satellite, still I
had been wrong in supposing this density, even at the surface, at all
adequate to the support of the great weight contained in the car of my
balloon. Yet this should have been the case, and in an equal degree as at
the surface of the earth, the actual gravity of bodies at either planet
supposed in the ratio of the atmospheric condensation. That it was not the
case, however, my precipitous downfall gave testimony enough; why it was
not so, can only be explained by a reference to those possible geological
disturbances to which I have formerly alluded. At all events I was now
close upon the planet, and coming down with the most terrible impetuosity.
I lost not a moment, accordingly, in throwing overboard first my ballast,
then my water-kegs, then my condensing apparatus and gum-elastic chamber,
and finally every article within the car. But it was all to no purpose. I
still fell with horrible rapidity, and was now not more than half a mile
from the surface. As a last resource, therefore, having got rid of my
coat, hat, and boots, I cut loose from the balloon the car itself, which
was of no inconsiderable weight, and thus, clinging with both hands to the
net-work, I had barely time to observe that the whole country, as far as
the eye could reach, was thickly interspersed with diminutive habitations,
ere I tumbled headlong into the very heart of a fantastical-looking city,
and into the middle of a vast crowd of ugly little people, who none of
them uttered a single syllable, or gave themselves the least trouble to
render me assistance, but stood, like a parcel of idiots, grinning in a
ludicrous manner, and eyeing me and my balloon askant, with their arms set
a-kimbo. I turned from them in contempt, and, gazing upward at the earth
so lately left, and left perhaps for ever, beheld it like a huge, dull,
copper shield, about two degrees in diameter, fixed immovably in the
heavens overhead, and tipped on one of its edges with a crescent border of
the most brilliant gold. No traces of land or water could be discovered,
and the whole was clouded with variable spots, and belted with tropical
and equatorial zones.</p>
<p>"Thus, may it please your Excellencies, after a series of great anxieties,
unheard of dangers, and unparalleled escapes, I had, at length, on the
nineteenth day of my departure from Rotterdam, arrived in safety at the
conclusion of a voyage undoubtedly the most extraordinary, and the most
momentous, ever accomplished, undertaken, or conceived by any denizen of
earth. But my adventures yet remain to be related. And indeed your
Excellencies may well imagine that, after a residence of five years upon a
planet not only deeply interesting in its own peculiar character, but
rendered doubly so by its intimate connection, in capacity of satellite,
with the world inhabited by man, I may have intelligence for the private
ear of the States' College of Astronomers of far more importance than the
details, however wonderful, of the mere voyage which so happily concluded.
This is, in fact, the case. I have much—very much which it would
give me the greatest pleasure to communicate. I have much to say of the
climate of the planet; of its wonderful alternations of heat and cold, of
unmitigated and burning sunshine for one fortnight, and more than polar
frigidity for the next; of a constant transfer of moisture, by
distillation like that in vacuo, from the point beneath the sun to the
point the farthest from it; of a variable zone of running water, of the
people themselves; of their manners, customs, and political institutions;
of their peculiar physical construction; of their ugliness; of their want
of ears, those useless appendages in an atmosphere so peculiarly modified;
of their consequent ignorance of the use and properties of speech; of
their substitute for speech in a singular method of inter-communication;
of the incomprehensible connection between each particular individual in
the moon with some particular individual on the earth—a connection
analogous with, and depending upon, that of the orbs of the planet and the
satellites, and by means of which the lives and destinies of the
inhabitants of the one are interwoven with the lives and destinies of the
inhabitants of the other; and above all, if it so please your Excellencies—above
all, of those dark and hideous mysteries which lie in the outer regions of
the moon—regions which, owing to the almost miraculous accordance of
the satellite's rotation on its own axis with its sidereal revolution
about the earth, have never yet been turned, and, by God's mercy, never
shall be turned, to the scrutiny of the telescopes of man. All this, and
more—much more—would I most willingly detail. But, to be
brief, I must have my reward. I am pining for a return to my family and to
my home, and as the price of any farther communication on my part—in
consideration of the light which I have it in my power to throw upon many
very important branches of physical and metaphysical science—I must
solicit, through the influence of your honorable body, a pardon for the
crime of which I have been guilty in the death of the creditors upon my
departure from Rotterdam. This, then, is the object of the present paper.
Its bearer, an inhabitant of the moon, whom I have prevailed upon, and
properly instructed, to be my messenger to the earth, will await your
Excellencies' pleasure, and return to me with the pardon in question, if
it can, in any manner, be obtained.</p>
<p>"I have the honor to be, etc., your Excellencies' very humble servant,</p>
<p>"HANS PFAALL."</p>
<p>Upon finishing the perusal of this very extraordinary document, Professor
Rub-a-dub, it is said, dropped his pipe upon the ground in the extremity
of his surprise, and Mynheer Superbus Von Underduk having taken off his
spectacles, wiped them, and deposited them in his pocket, so far forgot
both himself and his dignity, as to turn round three times upon his heel
in the quintessence of astonishment and admiration. There was no doubt
about the matter—the pardon should be obtained. So at least swore,
with a round oath, Professor Rub-a-dub, and so finally thought the
illustrious Von Underduk, as he took the arm of his brother in science,
and without saying a word, began to make the best of his way home to
deliberate upon the measures to be adopted. Having reached the door,
however, of the burgomaster's dwelling, the professor ventured to suggest
that as the messenger had thought proper to disappear—no doubt
frightened to death by the savage appearance of the burghers of Rotterdam—the
pardon would be of little use, as no one but a man of the moon would
undertake a voyage to so vast a distance. To the truth of this observation
the burgomaster assented, and the matter was therefore at an end. Not so,
however, rumors and speculations. The letter, having been published, gave
rise to a variety of gossip and opinion. Some of the over-wise even made
themselves ridiculous by decrying the whole business; as nothing better
than a hoax. But hoax, with these sort of people, is, I believe, a general
term for all matters above their comprehension. For my part, I cannot
conceive upon what data they have founded such an accusation. Let us see
what they say:</p>
<p>Imprimus. That certain wags in Rotterdam have certain especial antipathies
to certain burgomasters and astronomers.</p>
<p>Don't understand at all.</p>
<p>Secondly. That an odd little dwarf and bottle conjurer, both of whose
ears, for some misdemeanor, have been cut off close to his head, has been
missing for several days from the neighboring city of Bruges.</p>
<p>Well—what of that?</p>
<p>Thirdly. That the newspapers which were stuck all over the little balloon
were newspapers of Holland, and therefore could not have been made in the
moon. They were dirty papers—very dirty—and Gluck, the
printer, would take his Bible oath to their having been printed in
Rotterdam.</p>
<p>He was mistaken—undoubtedly—mistaken.</p>
<p>Fourthly, That Hans Pfaall himself, the drunken villain, and the three
very idle gentlemen styled his creditors, were all seen, no longer than
two or three days ago, in a tippling house in the suburbs, having just
returned, with money in their pockets, from a trip beyond the sea.</p>
<p>Don't believe it—don't believe a word of it.</p>
<p>Lastly. That it is an opinion very generally received, or which ought to
be generally received, that the College of Astronomers in the city of
Rotterdam, as well as other colleges in all other parts of the world,—not
to mention colleges and astronomers in general,—are, to say the
least of the matter, not a whit better, nor greater, nor wiser than they
ought to be.</p>
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