Topsy-Turvy by Jules Verne (best book recommendations .txt) π
Description
Two decades after Jules Verneβs From the Earth to the Moon and Around the Moon, the Baltimore Gun Club returns with its sights on the North Poleβs rich coal deposits. Access to the area would be facilitated under a more temperate climate, which, the team believes, can be achieved by slightly altering the Earthβs axis of rotation. This climate change would affect every region of the globe to various degrees, thus creating anxiety and opposition worldwide.
Sans Dessus Dessous, number 34 in the Voyages Extraordinaires collection, appeared in French in 1889 and was published in English the following year by J. G. Ogilvie as Topsy-Turvy.
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- Author: Jules Verne
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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 projectileβ βin a word, if the operation was carried out under the above stated conditionsβ βit would modify the earthβs 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 22nd day of September, twelve hours after the passage of the sun over the meridian of the place βx.β
The facts that were known were:
That the shooting would be done with a cannon a million times larger than the cannon of 27 centimetres.
That the cannon would be loaded with a projectile of 180,000 tons.
That the projectile would be animated with a velocity of 2,800 kilometres.
That the shooting would take place on the 22nd of September, twelve hours after the passage of the sun over the meridian of the place βx.β
Was it possible to deduce, under these facts, where was the spot βx,β where the operation was to take place? Evidently not, said the Inquiry Committee. There was nothing by which to calculate where the point βxβ 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 βx,β or where the shooting was to take place. In other words, βxβ was the secret of the promoter of this uncertain affair. βWe have,β said the Committee, βonly 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 threatened 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 22nd of September of the present year, as that date threatens to disturb the order established since the creation in our earthly system.
In Which J. T. Maston Heroically Continues to Be SilentAccording 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 earthβs 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 βx.β We may almost hear them shout with a loud voice: βTake aim at the moon.β First act, βFire.β βChange the axis of the earth.β Second act, βFire.β And the wish which the whole world had for them was, βTo hell.β Third act, βFire.β And really their scheme justified the popular opinion.
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.
Regarding only their personal security, President Barbicane and Capt. Nicholl had acted wisely in leaving Baltimore and
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