The Survivors of the Chancellor by Jules Verne (inspirational books TXT) ๐
Description
Desiring a more romantic crossing of the Atlantic, Englishman J. R. Kazallon decides to forgo a steamship and instead sets sail on the Chancellor, a large three-mast sailing ship. What follows is a classic nautical adventure, told in the form of a series of diary entries and filled with tragedy, suffering, and even horror. Despite the grim subject matter, Jules Verne still finds space to include ample descriptions of geology, biology, and meteorology.
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- Author: Jules Verne
Read book online ยซThe Survivors of the Chancellor by Jules Verne (inspirational books TXT) ๐ยป. Author - Jules Verne
The wife is an insignificant, insipid woman, of about forty years of age. She never reads, never talks, and I believe I am not wrong in saying, never thinks. She seems to look without seeing, and listen without hearing, and her sole occupation consists in giving her orders to her companion, Miss Herbey, a young English girl of about twenty.
Miss Herbey is extremely pretty. Her complexion is fair and her eyes deep blue, whilst her pleasing countenance is altogether free from that insignificance of feature which is not unfrequently alleged to be characteristic of English beauty. Her mouth would be charming if she ever smiled, but exposed as she is to the ridiculous whims and fancies of a capricious mistress, her lips rarely relax from their ordinary grave expression. Yet humiliating as her position must be, she never utters a word of open complaint, but quietly and gracefully performs her duties accepting without a murmur the paltry salary which the bumptious petroleum-merchant condescends to allow her.
The Manchester engineer, William Falsten, looks like a thorough Englishman. He has the management of some extensive hydraulic works in South Carolina, and is now on his way to Europe to obtain some improved apparatus, and more especially to visit the mines worked by centrifugal force, belonging to the firm of Messrs. Cail. He is forty-five years of age, with all his interests so entirely absorbed by his machinery that he seems to have neither a thought nor a care beyond his mechanical calculations. Once let him engage you in conversation, and there is no chance of escape; you have no help for it but to listen as patiently as you can until he has completed the explanation of his designs.
The last of our fellow-passengers, Mr. Ruby, is the type of a vulgar tradesman. Without any originality or magnanimity in his composition, he has spent twenty years of his life in mere buying and selling, and as he has generally contrived to do business at a profit, he has realized a considerable fortune. What he is going to do with the money, he does not seem able to say: his ideas do not go beyond retail trade, his mind having been so long closed to all other impressions that it appears incapable of thought or reflection on any subject besides. Pascal says, โLโhomme est visiblement fait pour penser. Cโest toute sa dignitรฉ et tout son mรฉrite;โ but to Mr. Ruby the phrase seems altogether inapplicable.
VOctober 7thโ โThis is the tenth day since we left Charleston, and I should think our progress has been very rapid. Robert Curtis, the mate, with whom I continue to have many a friendly chat, informed me that we could not be far off Cape Hatteras in the Bermudas; the shipโs bearings, he said were lat. 32ยฐ 20โฒ N. and long. 64ยฐ 50โฒ W., so that he had every reason to believe that we should sight St. Georgeโs Island before night.
โThe Bermudas!โ I exclaimed. โBut how is it we are off the Bermudas? I should have thought that a vessel sailing from Charleston to Liverpool, would have kept northwards, and have followed the track of the Gulf Stream.โ
โYes, indeed; sir,โ replied Curtis, โthat is the usual course; but you see that this time the captain hasnโt chosen to take it.โ
โBut why not?โ I persisted.
โThatโs not for me to say, sir; he ordered us eastwards, and eastwards we go.โ
โHavenโt you called his attention to it?โ I inquired.
Curtis acknowledged that he had already pointed out what an unusual route they were taking, but that the captain had said that he was quite aware what he was about. The mate made no further remark; but the knit of his brow, as he passed his hand mechanically across his forehead, made me fancy that he was inclined to speak out more strongly.
โAll very well, Curtis,โ I said, โbut I donโt know what to think about trying new routes. Here we are at the 7th of October, and if we are to reach Europe before the bad weather sets in, I should suppose there is not a day to be lost.โ
โRight, sir, quite right; there is not a day to be lost.โ
Struck by his manner, I ventured to add, โDo you mind, Mr. Curtis giving me your honest opinion of Captain Huntly?โ
He hesitated a moment, and then replied shortly, โHe is my captain, sir.โ
This evasive answer of course put an end to any further interrogation on my part, but it only set me thinking the more.
Curtis was not mistaken. At about three oโclock the lookout man sung out that there was land to windward, and descried what seemed as if it might be a line of smoke in the northeast horizon. At six, I went on deck with M. Letourneur and his son, and we could then distinctly make out the low group of the Bermudas, encircled by their formidable chain of breakers.
โThere,โ said Andrรฉ Letourneur to me, as we stood gazing at the distant land, โthere lies the enchanted Archipelago, sung by your poet Moore. The exile Waller, too, as long ago as 1643, wrote an enthusiastic panegyric on the islands, and I have been told that at one time English ladies would wear no other bonnets than such as were made of the leaves of the Bermuda palm.โ
โYes,โ I replied, โthe Bermudas were all the rage in the seventeenth century, although latterly they have fallen into comparative oblivion.โ
โBut let me tell you, M. Andrรฉ,โ interposed Curtis, who had as usual joined our party, โthat although poets may rave, and be as enthusiastic as they like about these islands, sailors will tell a different tale. The hidden reefs that lie in a semicircle about two or three leagues from shore make the attempt to land a very dangerous
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