A Strange Manuscript Found in a Copper Cylinder by James De Mille (good summer reads txt) ๐
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A Strange Manuscript Found in a Copper Cylinder is perhaps James De Milleโs most popular book; sadly, De Mille didnโt get to see this novel grow in popularity, as it was first serialized posthumously, in Harperโs Weekly. De Mille had written the novel before the โlost worldโ genre had become saturated, meaning many of the ideas were fresh and original for the time in which it was written. But, since he didnโt succeed in publishing it during his lifetime, by the time the novel was made public other authors like H. Rider Haggard had made the ideas and plot clichรฉd.
The novel itself tells the tale of a shipwrecked sailor, Adam More, who passes through a mysterious underground passage into a hidden land deep in the Antarctic, kept warm by a hidden volcano. The land is populated by an ancient civilization whose views on life and wealth are the polar opposite of those held in British society of the timeโthey view death and poverty as the highest religious and social achievements. As More adventures through the strange land, he encounters fantastic dinosaurs, lovelorn princesses, and the classic kind of adventure that foreshadows the pulp novels of the next century.
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- Author: James De Mille
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At length we came to a place where the terrace ran back till it formed a semicircle against the mountain slope, when several vast portals appeared. Here there was a large space, where the tree-ferns grew in long lines crossing each other, and making a denser shade than usual. On the lower side were several stone edifices of immense size; and in the middle of the place there arose a singular structure, shaped like a half pyramid, with three sides sloping, and the fourth perpendicular, flat on the top, which was approached by a flight of steps. We now went on until we reached the central portal of the range of caverns, and here we stopped. The chief got out and beckoned to me. I followed. He then led the way into the cavern, while I, full of wonder, walked behind him.
VII Scientific Theories and ScepticismThus far Melick had been reading the manuscript, but at this point he was interrupted by the announcement that dinner was ready. Upon this he stopped abruptly; for on board the Falcon dinner was the great event of the day, and in its presence even the manuscript had to be laid aside. Before long they were all seated around the dining-table in the sumptuous cabin, prepared to discuss the repast which had been served up by the genius of the French chef whom Lord Featherstone had brought with him.
Let us pause here for a moment to take a minuter survey of these four friends. In the first place, there was Lord Featherstone himself, young, handsome, languid, good-natured to a fault, with plenty of muscle if he chose to exert it, and plenty of brain if he chose to make use of itโ โa man who had become weary of the monotony of high life, and, like many of his order, was fond of seeking relief from the ennui of prosperity amid the excitements of the sea. Next to him was Dr. Congreve, a middle-aged man, with iron-gray hair, short beard and mustache, short nose, gray eyes, with spectacles, and stoutish body. Next came Noel Oxenden, late of Trinity College, Cambridge, a college friend of Featherstoneโsโ โa tall man, with a refined and intellectual face and reserved manner. Finally, there was Otto Melick, a litterateur from London, about thirty years of age, with a wiry and muscular frame, and the restless manner of one who lives in a perpetual fidget.
For some time nothing was said; they partook of the repast in silence; but at length it became evident that they were thinking of the mysterious manuscript. Featherstone was the first to speak.
โA deuced queer sort of thing this, too,โ said he, โthis manuscript. I canโt quite make it out. Who ever dreamed of people living at the South Poleโ โand in a warm climate, too? Then it seems deuced odd, too, that we should pick up this copper cylinder with the manuscript. I hardly know what to think about it.โ
Melick smiled. โWhy, it isnโt much to see through,โ said he.
โSee through what?โ said the doctor, hastily, pricking up his ears at this, and peering keenly at Melick through his spectacles.
โWhy, the manuscript, of course.โ
โWell,โ said the doctor, โwhat is it that you see? What do you make out of it?โ
โWhy, anyone can see,โ said Melick, โthat itโs a transparent hoax, thatโs all. You donโt mean to say, I hope, that you really regard it in any other light?โ
โA transparent hoax!โ repeated the doctor. โWill you please state why you regard it in that light?โ
โCertainly,โ said Melick. โSome fellow wanted to get up a sensation novel and introduce it to the world with a great flourish of trumpets, and so he has taken this way of going about it. You see, he has counted on its being picked up, and perhaps published. After this he would come forward and own the authorship.โ
โAnd what good would that do?โ asked the doctor, mildly. โHe couldnโt prove the authorship, and he couldnโt get the copyright.โ
โOh, of course not; but he would gain notoriety, and that would give him a great sale for his next effort.โ
The doctor smiled. โSee here, Melick,โ said he, โyouโve a very vivid imagination, my dear fellow; but come, let us discuss this for a little while in a commonsense way. Now how long should you suppose that this manuscript has been afloat?โ
โOh, a few months or so,โ said Melick.
โA few months!โ said the doctor. โA few years you mean. Why, man, there are successive layers of barnacles on that copper cylinder which show a submersion of at least three years, perhaps more.โ
โBy Jove! yes,โ remarked Featherstone. โYour sensation novelist must have been a lunatic if he chose that way of publishing a book.โ
โThen, again,โ continued the doctor, โhow did it get here?โ
โOh, easily enough,โ answered Melick. โThe ocean currents brought it.โ
โThe ocean currents!โ repeated the doctor. โThatโs a very vague expression. What do you mean? Of course it has been brought here by the ocean
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