Ticket No. 9672 by Jules Verne (the best e book reader txt) ๐
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Hulda, the daughter of an innkeeper in the Norwegian countryside, is engaged to Ole, a fisherman. When Ole fails to return, Hulda fears him dead, until she receives a message that he has scribbled on the back of a lottery ticket. Newspapers broadcast the story, fueling excitement and speculation ahead of the lottery drawing.
The novel, based in part on the Verneโs travel through Scandinavia in 1861, belongs to the collection Voyages Extraordinaires which contains some of his best-known works, like Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Seas and Around the World in Eighty Days. Un Billet de Loterie appeared first in installments in the magazine Magasin dโรducation et de Rรฉcrรฉation, followed immediately by a book edition published by Hetzel.
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- Author: Jules Verne
Read book online ยซTicket No. 9672 by Jules Verne (the best e book reader txt) ๐ยป. Author - Jules Verne
โI donโt know that I am doing you much honor, Dame Hansen,โ replied Sylvius Hogg, โbut I do know that it gives me great pleasure to be here. I have heard my pupils talk of this hospitable inn for years. Indeed, that is one reason I intended to stop here and rest for about a week, but by Saint Olaf! I little expected to arrive here on one leg!โ
And the good man shook the hand of his hostess most cordially.
โWouldnโt you like my brother to fetch a doctor from Bamble?โ inquired Hulda.
โA doctor! my little Hulda! Why! do you want me to lose the use of both my legs?โ
โOh, Mr. Sylvius!โ
โA doctor! Why not send for my friend, the famous Doctor Bork, of Christiania? All this ado about a mere scratch, what nonsense!โ
โBut even a mere scratch may become a very serious thing if not properly attended to,โ remarked Joel.
โWell, Joel, will you tell me why you are so very anxious for this to become serious?โ
โIndeed, I am not, sir; God forbid!โ
โOh, well, He will preserve you and me, and all Dame Hansenโs household, especially if pretty little Hulda here will be kind enough to give me some attention.โ
โCertainly, Mr. Sylvius.โ
โAll right, my friends. I shall be as well as ever in four or five days. How could a man help getting well in such a pretty room? Where could one hope for better care than in this excellent inn? This comfortable bed, with its mottoes, is worth a great deal more than all the nauseous prescriptions of the faculty. And that quaint window overlooking the valley of the Maan! And the streamโs soft, musical murmur that penetrates to the remotest corner of my cozy nest! And the fragrant, healthful scent of the pines that fills the whole house! And the air, this pure exhilarating mountain air! Ah! is not that the very best of physicians? When one needs him one has only to open the window and in he comes and makes you well without cutting off your rations.โ
He said all this so gayly that it seemed as if a ray of sunshine had entered the house with him. At least, this was the impression of the brother and sister, who stood listening to him, hand in hand.
All this occurred in a chamber on the first floor, to which the professor had been conducted immediately upon his arrival; and now, half reclining in a large armchair, with his injured limb resting upon a stool, he gratefully accepted the kindly attentions of Joel and Hulda. A careful bathing of the wound with cold water was the only remedy he would use, and in fact no other was needed.
โThanks, my friends, thanks!โ he exclaimed, โthis is far better than drugs. And now do you know that but for your timely arrival upon the scene of action, I should have become much too well acquainted with the wonders of the Rjukanfos! I should have rolled down into the abyss like a big stone, and have added another legend to those already associated with the Maristien. And there was no excuse for me. My betrothed was not waiting for me upon the opposite bank as in the case of poor Eystein!โ
โAnd what a terrible thing it would have been to Madame Hogg!โ exclaimed Hulda. โShe would never have got over it.โ
โMadame Hogg!โ repeated the professor. โOh! Madame Hogg wouldnโt have shed a tearโ โโ
โOh, Mister Sylvius.โ
โNo, I tell you, for the very good reason that there is no Madame Hogg. Nor can I ever imagine what Madame Hogg would be like, stout or thin, tall or short.โ
โShe would, of course, be amiable, intelligent and good, being your wife,โ replied Hulda, naively.
โDo you really think so, mademoiselle? Well, well, I believe you! I believe you!โ
โBut on hearing of such a calamity, Mister Sylvius,โ remarked Joel, โyour relatives and many friendsโ โโ
โI have no relatives to speak of, but I have quite a number of friends, not counting those I have just made in Dame Hansenโs house, and you have spared them the trouble of weeping for me. But tell me, children, you can keep me here a few days, can you not?โ
โAs long as you please, Mister Sylvius,โ replied Hulda. โThis room belongs to you.โ
โYou see, I intended to stop awhile at Dal as all tourists do, and radiate from here all over the Telemark district; but now, whether I shall radiate, or I shall not radiate, remains to be seen.โ
โOh, you will be on your feet again before the end of the week, I hope, Mister Sylvius,โ remarked Joel.
โSo do I, my boy.โ
โAnd then I will escort you anywhere in the district that you care to go.โ
โWeโll see about that when Richard is himself again. I still have two months leave before me, and even if I should be obliged to spend the whole of it under Dame Hansenโs roof I should have no cause for complaint. Could I not explore that portion of the valley of Vesfjorddal lying between the two lakes, make the ascent of Gousta, and pay another visit to the Rjukanfos? for though I very narrowly escaped falling head foremost into its depths I scarcely got a glimpse of it, and am resolved to see it again.โ
โYou shall do so, Mister Sylvius,โ replied Hulda.
โAnd we will visit it next time in company with good Dame Hansen if she will be kind enough to go with us. And now I think of it, my friends, I must drop a line to Kate, my old housekeeper, and Fink, my faithful old servant in Christiania. They will be very uneasy if they do not hear from me, and I
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