- Authors
- Alcott, Louisa May
- Barrie, James M.
- Bronte, Anne
- Bronte, Charlotte
- Burroughs, Edgar Rice
- Carroll, Lewis
- Cather, Willa
- 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
- Kafka, Franz
- Kipling, Rudyard
- Lawrence, D.H.
- 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
- Dick Sand: A Captain At Fifteen
- Facing The Flag
- From the Earth to the Moon
- Journey to the Center of the Earth
- Preface
- Chapter 1 - The Professor and His Family
- Chapter 2 - A Mystery to be Solved at Any Price
- Chapter 3 - The Runic Writing Exercises The Professor
- Chapter 4 - The Enemy To Be Starved Into Submission
- Chapter 5 - Famine, Then Victory, Followed By Dismay
- Chapter 6 - Exciting Discussions About An Unparalleled Enterprise
- Chapter 7 - A Woman's Courage
- Chapter 8 - Serious Preparations For Vertical Descent
- Chapter 9 - Iceland! But What Next?
- Chapter 10 - Interesting Conversations With Icelandic Savants
- Chapter 11 - A Guide Found to the Centre of the Earth
- Chapter 12 - A Barren Land
- Chapter 13 - Hospitality Under The Arctic Circle
- Chapter 14 - But Arctics Can Be Inhospitable, Too
- Chapter 15 - Snæfell At Last
- Chapter 16 - Boldly Down The Crater
- Chapter 17 - Vertical Descent
- Chapter 18 - The Wonders of Terrestrial Depths
- Chapter 19 - Geological Studies In Situ
- Chapter 20 - The First Signs of Distress
- Chapter 21 - Compassion Fuses The Professor's Heart
- Chapter 22 - Total Failure of Water
- Chapter 23 - Water Discovered
- Chapter 24 - Well Said, Old Mole! Canst Thou Work I' The Ground So Fast?
- Chapter 25 - De Profundis
- Chapter 26 - The Worst Peril Of All
- Chapter 27 - Lost In The Bowels Of The Earth
- Chapter 28 - The Rescue In The Whispering Gallery
- Chapter 29 - Thalatta! Thalatta!
- Chapter 30 - A New Mare Internum
- Chapter 31 - Preparations For A Voyage Of Discovery
- Chapter 32 - Wonders Of The Deep
- Chapter 33 - A Battle Of Monsters
- Chapter 34 - The Great Geyser
- Chapter 35 - An Electric Storm
- Chapter 36 - Calm Philosophic Discussions
- Chapter 37 - The Liedenbrock Museum of Geology
- Chapter 38 - The Professor In His Chair Again
- Chapter 39 - Forest Scenery Illuminated By Electricity
- Chapter 40 - Preparations For Blasting A Passage To The Centre Of The Earth
- Chapter 41 - The Great Explosion And The Rush Down Below
- Chapter 42 - Headlong Speed Upward Through The Horrors Of Darkness
- Chapter 43 - Shot Out Of A Volcano At Last!
- Chapter 44 - Sunny Lands In The Blue Mediterranean
- Chapter 45 - All's Well That Ends Well
- Round The Moon
- The Adventures Of A Special Correspondent
- The Blockade Runners
- The Underground City
- Wells, H.G.
- Wilde, Oscar
- Woolf, Virginia
- GRE in English Literature
- About FictionClassics.com
Preface
Submitted by Xangis on Sat, 06/21/2008 - 15:16.
The "Voyages Extraordinaires" of M. Jules Verne deserve to be made widely known in English-speaking countries by means of carefully prepared translations. Witty and ingenious adaptations of the researches and discoveries of modern science to the popular taste,which demands that these should be presented to ordinary readers in the lighter form of cleverly mingled truth and fiction, these books will assuredly be read with profit and delight, especially by English youth. Certainly no writer before M. Jules Verne has been so happy in weaving together in judicious combination severe scientific truth with a charming exercise of playful imagination.
Iceland, the starting point of the marvelous underground journey imagined in this volume, is invested at the present time with a painful interest in consequence of the disastrous eruptions last Easter Day, which covered with lava and ashes the poor and scanty vegetation upon which four thousand persons were partly dependent for the means of subsistence. For a long time to come the natives of that interesting island, who cleave to their desert home with all that amor patriae which is so much more easily understood than explained, will look, and look not in vain, for the help of those on whom fall the smiles of a kindlier sun in regions not torn by earthquakes nor blasted and ravaged by volcanic fires. Will the readers of this little book, who, are gifted with the means of indulging in the luxury of extended beneficence, remember the distress of their brethren in the far north, whom distance has not barred from the claim of being counted our "neighbours"? And whatever their humane feelings may prompt them to bestow will be gladly added to the Mansion-House Iceland Relief Fund.
In his desire to ascertain how far the picture of Iceland, drawn in the work of Jules Verne is a correct one, the translator hopes in the course of a mail or two to receive a communication from a leading man of science in the island, which may furnish matter for additional information in a future edition.
The scientific portion of the French original is not without a few errors, which the translator, with the kind assistance of Mr. Cameron of H. M. Geological Survey, has ventured to point out and correct. It is scarcely to be expected in a work in which the element of amusement is intended to enter more largely than that of scientific instruction, that any great degree of accuracy should be arrived at. Yet the translator hopes that what trifling deviations from the text or corrections in foot notes he is responsible for, will have done a little towards the increased usefulness of the work.
F. A. M.
The Vicarage,
Broughton-in-Furness
