- Authors
- Barrie, James M.
- Bronte, Anne
- Bronte, Charlotte
- Burroughs, Edgar Rice
- Carroll, Lewis
- Collins, Wilkie
- Conrad, Joseph
- Cooper, James Fenimore
- Crane, Stephen
- de Balzac, Honoré
- Defoe, Daniel
- Dickens, Charles
- Dostoevsky, Fyodor
- Doyle, Arthur Conan
- Hawthorne, Nathaniel
- Huxley, Aldous
- Joyce, James
- London, Jack
- Melville, Herman
- Milton, John
- Nesbit, Edith
- Orwell, George
- Poe, Edgar Allan
- Pope, Alexander
- Rand, Ayn
- Shakespeare, William
- Shelley, Mary
- Stoker, Bram
- The Brothers Grimm
- Tolstoy, Leo
- Twain, Mark
- Verne, Jules
- An Antarctic Mystery
- Around the World in Eighty Days
- From the Earth to the Moon
- Chapter 1 - The Gun Club
- Chapter 2 - President Barbicane's Communication
- Chapter 3 - Effect of the President's Communication
- Chapter 4 - Reply From the Observatory of Cambridge
- Chapter 5 - The Romance of the Moon
- Chapter 6 - Permissive Limits of Ignorance and Belief in the United States
- Chapter 7 - The Hymn of the Cannon-Ball
- Chapter 8 - History of the Cannon
- Chapter 9 - The Question of the Powders
- Chapter 10 - One Enemy vs. Twenty-Five Millions of Friends
- Chapter 11 - Florida and Texas
- Chapter 12 - Urbi et Orbi
- Chapter 13 - Stones Hill
- Chapter 14 - Pickaxe and Trowel
- Chapter 15 - The Fete of the Casting
- Chapter 16 - The Columbiad
- Chapter 17 - A Telegraphic Dispatch
- Chapter 18 - The Passenger of the Atlanta
- Chapter 19 - A Monster Meeting
- Chapter 20 - Attack and Riposte
- Chapter 21 - How a Frenchman Manages an Affair
- Chapter 22 - The New Citizen of the United States
- Chapter 23 - The Projectile-Vehicle
- Chapter 24 - The Telescope of the Rocky Mountains
- Chapter 25 - Final Details
- Chapter 26 - Fire!
- Chapter 27 - Foul Weather
- Chapter 28 - A New Star
- Journey to the Center of the Earth
- Round The Moon
- The Adventures Of A Special Correspondent
- The Blockade Runners
- The Underground City
- Wells, H.G.
- Wilde, Oscar
- GRE in English Literature
- About FictionClassics.com
Chapter 17 - A Telegraphic Dispatch
Submitted by Xangis on Fri, 02/16/2007 - 20:10.
Chapter 17 - A Telegraphic Dispatch
The great works undertaken by the Gun Club had now virtually come to an end; and two months still remained before the day for the discharge of the shot to the moon. To the general impatience these two months appeared as long as years! Hitherto the smallest details of the operation had been daily chronicled by the journals, which the public devoured with eager eyes.
Just at this moment a circumstance, the most unexpected, the most extraordinary and incredible, occurred to rouse afresh their panting spirits, and to throw every mind into a state of the most violent excitement.
One day, the 30th of September, at 3:47 P.M., a telegram, transmitted by cable from Valentia (Ireland) to Newfoundland and the American Mainland, arrived at the address of President Barbicane.
The president tore open the envelope, read the dispatch, and, despite his remarkable powers of self-control, his lips turned pale and his eyes grew dim, on reading the twenty words of this telegram.
Here is the text of the dispatch, which figures now in the archives of the Gun Club:
FRANCE, PARIS, 30 September, 4 A.M. Barbicane, Tampa Town, Florida, United States.
Substitute for your spherical shell a cylindro-conical projectile. I shall go inside. Shall arrive by steamer Atlanta. MICHEL ARDAN.
