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<h1> FIVE WEEKS IN A BALLOON </h1>
<h3> Or, </h3>
<h1> Journeys And Discoveries In Africa By Three Englishmen. </h1>
<h2> By Jules Verne, </h2>
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<h1> FIVE WEEKS IN A BALLOON. </h1>
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<h2> CHAPTER FIRST. </h2>
<p>The End of a much-applauded Speech.—The Presentation of Dr. Samuel
Ferguson.—Excelsior.—Full-length Portrait of the Doctor.—A
Fatalist convinced.—A Dinner at the Travellers' Club.—Several
Toasts for the Occasion.</p>
<p>There was a large audience assembled on the 14th of January, 1862, at the
session of the Royal Geographical Society, No. 3 Waterloo Place, London.
The president, Sir Francis M——, made an important
communication to his colleagues, in an address that was frequently
interrupted by applause.</p>
<p>This rare specimen of eloquence terminated with the following sonorous
phrases bubbling over with patriotism:</p>
<p>"England has always marched at the head of nations" (for, the reader will
observe, the nations always march at the head of each other), "by the
intrepidity of her explorers in the line of geographical discovery."
(General assent). "Dr. Samuel Ferguson, one of her most glorious sons,
will not reflect discredit on his origin." ("No, indeed!" from all parts
of the hall.)</p>
<p>"This attempt, should it succeed" ("It will succeed!"), "will complete and
link together the notions, as yet disjointed, which the world entertains
of African cartology" (vehement applause); "and, should it fail, it will,
at least, remain on record as one of the most daring conceptions of human
genius!" (Tremendous cheering.)</p>
<p>"Huzza! huzza!" shouted the immense audience, completely electrified by
these inspiring words.</p>
<p>"Huzza for the intrepid Ferguson!" cried one of the most excitable of the
enthusiastic crowd.</p>
<p>The wildest cheering resounded on all sides; the name of Ferguson was in
every mouth, and we may safely believe that it lost nothing in passing
through English throats. Indeed, the hall fairly shook with it.</p>
<p>And there were present, also, those fearless travellers and explorers
whose energetic temperaments had borne them through every quarter of the
globe, many of them grown old and worn out in the service of science. All
had, in some degree, physically or morally, undergone the sorest trials.
They had escaped shipwreck; conflagration; Indian tomahawks and war-clubs;
the fagot and the stake; nay, even the cannibal maws of the South Sea
Islanders. But still their hearts beat high during Sir Francis M——'s
address, which certainly was the finest oratorical success that the Royal
Geographical Society of London had yet achieved.</p>
<p>But, in England, enthusiasm does not stop short with mere words. It
strikes off money faster than the dies of the Royal Mint itself. So a
subscription to encourage Dr. Ferguson was voted there and then, and it at
once attained the handsome amount of two thousand five hundred pounds. The
sum was made commensurate with the importance of the enterprise.</p>
<p>A member of the Society then inquired of the president whether Dr.
Ferguson was not to be officially introduced.</p>
<p>"The doctor is at the disposition of the meeting," replied Sir Francis.</p>
<p>"Let him come in, then! Bring him in!" shouted the audience. "We'd like to
see a man of such extraordinary daring, face to face!"</p>
<p>"Perhaps this incredible proposition of his is only intended to mystify
us," growled an apoplectic old admiral.</p>
<p>"Suppose that there should turn out to be no such person as Dr. Ferguson?"
exclaimed another voice, with a malicious twang.</p>
<p>"Why, then, we'd have to invent one!" replied a facetious member of this
grave Society.</p>
<p>"Ask Dr. Ferguson to come in," was the quiet remark of Sir Francis M——.</p>
<p>And come in the doctor did, and stood there, quite unmoved by the thunders
of applause that greeted his appearance.</p>
<p>He was a man of about forty years of age, of medium height and physique.
His sanguine temperament was disclosed in the deep color of his cheeks.
His countenance was coldly expressive, with regular features, and a large
nose—one of those noses that resemble the prow of a ship, and stamp
the faces of men predestined to accomplish great discoveries. His eyes,
which were gentle and intelligent, rather than bold, lent a peculiar charm
to his physiognomy. His arms were long, and his feet were planted with
that solidity which indicates a great pedestrian.</p>
<p>A calm gravity seemed to surround the doctor's entire person, and no one
would dream that he could become the agent of any mystification, however
harmless.</p>
<p>Hence, the applause that greeted him at the outset continued until he,
with a friendly gesture, claimed silence on his own behalf. He stepped
toward the seat that had been prepared for him on his presentation, and
then, standing erect and motionless, he, with a determined glance, pointed
his right forefinger upward, and pronounced aloud the single word—</p>
<p>"Excelsior!"</p>
<p>Never had one of Bright's or Cobden's sudden onslaughts, never had one of
Palmerston's abrupt demands for funds to plate the rocks of the English
coast with iron, made such a sensation. Sir Francis M——'s
address was completely overshadowed. The doctor had shown himself
moderate, sublime, and self-contained, in one; he had uttered the word of
the situation—</p>
<p>"Excelsior!"</p>
<p>The gouty old admiral who had been finding fault, was completely won over
by the singular man before him, and immediately moved the insertion of Dr.
Ferguson's speech in "The Proceedings of the Royal Geographical Society of
London."</p>
<p>Who, then, was this person, and what was the enterprise that he proposed?</p>
<p>Ferguson's father, a brave and worthy captain in the English Navy, had
associated his son with him, from the young man's earliest years, in the
perils and adventures of his profession. The fine little fellow, who
seemed to have never known the meaning of fear, early revealed a keen and
active mind, an investigating intelligence, and a remarkable turn for
scientific study; moreover, he disclosed uncommon address in extricating
himself from difficulty; he was never perplexed, not even in handling his
fork for the first time—an exercise in which children generally have
so little success.</p>
<p>His fancy kindled early at the recitals he read of daring enterprise and
maritime adventure, and he followed with enthusiasm the discoveries that
signalized the first part of the nineteenth century. He mused over the
glory of the Mungo Parks, the Bruces, the Caillies, the Levaillants, and
to some extent, I verily believe, of Selkirk (Robinson Crusoe), whom he
considered in no wise inferior to the rest. How many a well-employed hour
he passed with that hero on his isle of Juan Fernandez! Often he
criticised the ideas of the shipwrecked sailor, and sometimes discussed
his plans and projects. He would have done differently, in such and such a
case, or quite as well at least—of that he felt assured. But of one
thing he was satisfied, that he never should have left that pleasant
island, where he was as happy as a king without subjects—no, not if
the inducement held out had been promotion to the first lordship in the
admiralty!</p>
<p>It may readily be conjectured whether these tendencies were developed
during a youth of adventure, spent in every nook and corner of the Globe.
Moreover, his father, who was a man of thorough instruction, omitted no
opportunity to consolidate this keen intelligence by serious studies in
hydrography, physics, and mechanics, along with a slight tincture of
botany, medicine, and astronomy.</p>
<p>Upon the death of the estimable captain, Samuel Ferguson, then twenty-two
years of age, had already made his voyage around the world. He had
enlisted in the Bengalese Corps of Engineers, and distinguished himself in
several affairs; but this soldier's life had not exactly suited him;
caring but little for command, he had not been fond of obeying. He,
therefore, sent in his resignation, and half botanizing, half playing the
hunter, he made his way toward the north of the Indian Peninsula, and
crossed it from Calcutta to Surat—a mere amateur trip for him.</p>
<p>From Surat we see him going over to Australia, and in 1845 participating
in Captain Sturt's expedition, which had been sent out to explore the new
Caspian Sea, supposed to exist in the centre of New Holland.</p>
<p>Samuel Ferguson returned to England about 1850, and, more than ever
possessed by the demon of discovery, he spent the intervening time, until
1853, in accompanying Captain McClure on the expedition that went around
the American Continent from Behring's Straits to Cape Farewell.</p>
<p>Notwithstanding fatigues of every description, and in all climates,
Ferguson's constitution continued marvellously sound. He felt at ease in
the midst of the most complete privations; in fine, he was the very type
of the thoroughly accomplished explorer whose stomach expands or contracts
at will; whose limbs grow longer or shorter according to the resting-place
that each stage of a journey may bring; who can fall asleep at any hour of
the day or awake at any hour of the night.</p>
<p>Nothing, then, was less surprising, after that, than to find our
traveller, in the period from 1855 to 1857, visiting the whole region west
of the Thibet, in company with the brothers Schlagintweit, and bringing
back some curious ethnographic observations from that expedition.</p>
<p>During these different journeys, Ferguson had been the most active and
interesting correspondent of the Daily Telegraph, the penny newspaper
whose circulation amounts to 140,000 copies, and yet scarcely suffices for
its many legions of readers. Thus, the doctor had become well known to the
public, although he could not claim membership in either of the Royal
Geographical Societies of London, Paris, Berlin, Vienna, or St.
Petersburg, or yet with the Travellers' Club, or even the Royal
Polytechnic Institute, where his friend the statistician Cockburn ruled in
state.</p>
<p>The latter savant had, one day, gone so far as to propose to him the
following problem: Given the number of miles travelled by the doctor in
making the circuit of the Globe, how many more had his head described than
his feet, by reason of the different lengths of the radii?—or, the
number of miles traversed by the doctor's head and feet respectively being
given, required the exact height of that gentleman?</p>
<p>This was done with the idea of complimenting him, but the doctor had held
himself aloof from all the learned bodies—belonging, as he did, to
the church militant and not to the church polemical. He found his time
better employed in seeking than in discussing, in discovering rather than
discoursing.</p>
<p>There is a story told of an Englishman who came one day to Geneva,
intending to visit the lake. He was placed in one of those odd vehicles in
which the passengers sit side by side, as they do in an omnibus. Well, it
so happened that the Englishman got a seat that left him with his back
turned toward the lake. The vehicle completed its circular trip without
his thinking to turn around once, and he went back to London delighted
with the Lake of Geneva.</p>
<p>Doctor Ferguson, however, had turned around to look about him on his
journeyings, and turned to such good purpose that he had seen a great
deal. In doing so, he had simply obeyed the laws of his nature, and we
have good reason to believe that he was, to some extent, a fatalist, but
of an orthodox school of fatalism withal, that led him to rely upon
himself and even upon Providence. He claimed that he was impelled, rather
than drawn by his own volition, to journey as he did, and that he
traversed the world like the locomotive, which does not direct itself, but
is guided and directed by the track it runs on.</p>
<p>"I do not follow my route;" he often said, "it is my route that follows
me."</p>
<p>The reader will not be surprised, then, at the calmness with which the
doctor received the applause that welcomed him in the Royal Society. He
was above all such trifles, having no pride, and less vanity. He looked
upon the proposition addressed to him by Sir Francis M——as the
simplest thing in the world, and scarcely noticed the immense effect that
it produced.</p>
<p>When the session closed, the doctor was escorted to the rooms of the
Travellers' Club, in Pall Mall. A superb entertainment had been prepared
there in his honor. The dimensions of the dishes served were made to
correspond with the importance of the personage entertained, and the
boiled sturgeon that figured at this magnificent repast was not an inch
shorter than Dr. Ferguson himself.</p>
<p>Numerous toasts were offered and quaffed, in the wines of France, to the
celebrated travellers who had made their names illustrious by their
explorations of African territory. The guests drank to their health or to
their memory, in alphabetical order, a good old English way of doing the
thing. Among those remembered thus, were: Abbadie, Adams, Adamson,
Anderson, Arnaud, Baikie, Baldwin, Barth, Batouda, Beke, Beltram, Du
Berba, Bimbachi, Bolognesi, Bolwik, Belzoni, Bonnemain, Brisson, Browne,
Bruce, Brun-Rollet, Burchell, Burckhardt, Burton, Cailland, Caillie,
Campbell, Chapman, Clapperton, Clot-Bey, Colomieu, Courval, Cumming, Cuny,
Debono, Decken, Denham, Desavanchers, Dicksen, Dickson, Dochard, Du
Chaillu, Duncan, Durand, Duroule, Duveyrier, D'Escayrac, De Lauture,
Erhardt, Ferret, Fresnel, Galinier, Galton, Geoffroy, Golberry, Hahn,
Halm, Harnier, Hecquart, Heuglin, Hornemann, Houghton, Imbert, Kauffmann,
Knoblecher, Krapf, Kummer, Lafargue, Laing, Lafaille, Lambert, Lamiral,
Lampriere, John Lander, Richard Lander, Lefebvre, Lejean, Levaillant,
Livingstone, MacCarthy, Maggiar, Maizan, Malzac, Moffat, Mollien,
Monteiro, Morrison, Mungo Park, Neimans, Overweg, Panet, Partarrieau,
Pascal, Pearse, Peddie, Penney, Petherick, Poncet, Prax, Raffenel, Rabh,
Rebmann, Richardson, Riley, Ritchey, Rochet d'Hericourt, Rongawi, Roscher,
Ruppel, Saugnier, Speke, Steidner, Thibaud, Thompson, Thornton, Toole,
Tousny, Trotter, Tuckey, Tyrwhitt, Vaudey, Veyssiere, Vincent, Vinco,
Vogel, Wahlberg, Warrington, Washington, Werne, Wild, and last, but not
least, Dr. Ferguson, who, by his incredible attempt, was to link together
the achievements of all these explorers, and complete the series of
African discovery.</p>
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