The Lost World by Arthur Conan Doyle (top rated ebook readers txt) ๐
Description
Even though Doyle is most famous for his Sherlock stories, he was also a prolific novelist, and The Lost World is one of his more famous non-Sherlock novels. Like many novels of the day, it was first published serially.
In it we meet a group of adventurers who head to a deep South American jungle to explore rumors of long-lost dinosaurs. The plot is driven by their journey, discoveries, and subsequent narrow escape. Notably, The Lost World is the novel in which Doyleโs popular recurring character, Professor Challenger, is introduced.
Doyle based many of the characters and locations on people and places he was familiar with: the journalist Ed Malone was modeled on E. D. Morel, and Lord John Roxton on Roger Casement; the Lost World itself was based on descriptions of Bolivia in letters sent to Doyle by his friend Percy Harrison Fawcett.
The novel remains hugely influential and widely adapted today. The title might even remind modern readers of a certain very famous movie franchise about dinosaur theme parks!
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- Author: Arthur Conan Doyle
Read book online ยซThe Lost World by Arthur Conan Doyle (top rated ebook readers txt) ๐ยป. Author - Arthur Conan Doyle
โWhatโs the matter?โ shouted Roxton from below. โAnything wrong with you?โ
โDid you see it?โ I cried, with my arms round the branch and all my nerves tingling.
โWe heard a row, as if your foot had slipped. What was it?โ
I was so shocked at the sudden and strange appearance of this ape-man that I hesitated whether I should not climb down again and tell my experience to my companions. But I was already so far up the great tree that it seemed a humiliation to return without having carried out my mission.
After a long pause, therefore, to recover my breath and my courage, I continued my ascent. Once I put my weight upon a rotten branch and swung for a few seconds by my hands, but in the main it was all easy climbing. Gradually the leaves thinned around me, and I was aware, from the wind upon my face, that I had topped all the trees of the forest. I was determined, however, not to look about me before I had reached the very highest point, so I scrambled on until I had got so far that the topmost branch was bending beneath my weight. There I settled into a convenient fork, and, balancing myself securely, I found myself looking down at a most wonderful panorama of this strange country in which we found ourselves.
The sun was just above the western skyline, and the evening was a particularly bright and clear one, so that the whole extent of the plateau was visible beneath me. It was, as seen from this height, of an oval contour, with a breadth of about thirty miles and a width of twenty. Its general shape was that of a shallow funnel, all the sides sloping down to a considerable lake in the center. This lake may have been ten miles in circumference, and lay very green and beautiful in the evening light, with a thick fringe of reeds at its edges, and with its surface broken by several yellow sandbanks, which gleamed golden in the mellow sunshine. A number of long dark objects, which were too large for alligators and too long for canoes, lay upon the edges of these patches of sand. With my glass I could clearly see that they were alive, but what their nature might be I could not imagine.
From the side of the plateau on which we were, slopes of woodland, with occasional glades, stretched down for five or six miles to the central lake. I could see at my very feet the glade of the iguanodons, and farther off was a round opening in the trees which marked the swamp of the pterodactyls. On the side facing me, however, the plateau presented a very different aspect. There the basalt cliffs of the outside were reproduced upon the inside, forming an escarpment about two hundred feet high, with a woody slope beneath it. Along the base of these red cliffs, some distance above the ground, I could see a number of dark holes through the glass, which I conjectured to be the mouths of caves. At the opening of one of these something white was shimmering, but I was unable to make out what it was. I sat charting the country until the sun had set and it was so dark that I could no longer distinguish details. Then I climbed down to my companions waiting for me so eagerly at the bottom of the great tree. For once I was the hero of the expedition. Alone I had thought of it, and alone I had done it; and here was the chart which would save us a monthโs blind groping among unknown dangers. Each of them shook me solemnly by the hand.
But before they discussed the details of my map I had to tell them of my encounter with the ape-man among the branches.
โHe has been there all the time,โ said I.
โHow do you know that?โ asked Lord John.
โBecause I have never been without that feeling that something malevolent was watching us. I mentioned it to you, Professor Challenger.โ
โOur young friend certainly said something of the kind. He is also the one among us who is endowed with that Celtic temperament which would make him sensitive to such impressions.โ
โThe whole theory of telepathyโ โโ began Summerlee, filling his pipe.
โIs too vast to be now discussed,โ said Challenger, with decision. โTell me, now,โ he added, with the air of a bishop addressing a Sunday-school, โdid you happen to observe whether the creature could cross its thumb over its palm?โ
โNo, indeed.โ
โHad it a tail?โ
โNo.โ
โWas the foot prehensile?โ
โI do not think it could have made off so fast among the branches if it could not get a grip with its feet.โ
โIn South America there are, if my memory serves meโ โyou will check the observation, Professor Summerleeโ โsome thirty-six species of monkeys, but the anthropoid ape is unknown. It is clear, however, that he exists in this country, and that he is not the hairy, gorilla-like variety, which is never seen out of Africa or the East.โ (I was inclined to interpolate, as I looked at him, that I had seen his first cousin in Kensington.) โThis is a whiskered and colorless type, the latter characteristic pointing to the fact that he spends his days in arboreal seclusion. The question which we have to face is whether he approaches more closely to the ape or the man. In the latter case, he may well approximate to what the vulgar have called the โmissing link.โ The solution of this problem is our immediate duty.โ
โIt is nothing of the sort,โ said Summerlee, abruptly. โNow that, through the intelligence and activity of Mr. Maloneโ (I cannot help quoting the words), โwe have got our chart, our one and only immediate duty is to get ourselves safe and sound out of this awful place.โ
โThe fleshpots of civilization,โ groaned Challenger.
โThe ink-pots of civilization, sir.
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