The Waif of the "Cynthia"

NO. 659 DOUBLE NUMBER PRICE 20 CENTS
The Seaside Library, Pocket Edition, Issued Tri-weekly. By subscription $50 per annum.
Copyrighted 1885 by George Munro— Entered at the Post Office at New York at second class rates— Jan. 6, 1886
Rand McNally edition, published Feb. 1888 325 pages printed on fine paper beautifully illustrated with handsome illuminated and embossed covers.
THE WAIF OF THE CYNTHIA.
CHAPTER I.
MR. MALARIUS' FRIEND.
There is probably neither in Europe nor anywhere else a scholar whose face is more universally known than that of Dr. Schwaryencrona, of Stockholm. His portrait appears on the millions of bottles with green seals, which are sent to the confines of the globe.
Truth compels us to state that these bottles only contain cod liver oil, a good and useful medicine; which is sold to the inhabitants of Norway for a couronnes, which is worth one franc and thirty-nine centimes.
Formerly this oil was made by the fishermen, but now the process is a more scientific one, and the prince of this special industry is the celebrated Dr. Schwaryencrona.
There is no one who has not seen his pointed beard, his spectacles, his hooked nose, and his cap of otter skin. The engraving, perhaps, is not very fine, but it is certainly a striking likeness. A proof of this is what happened one day in a primary school in Noroe, on the western coast of Norway, a few leagues from Bergen.
Two o'clock had struck. The pupils were in their classes in the large, sanded hall—the girls on the left and the boys on the right—occupied in following the demonstration which their teacher, Mr. Malarius, was making on the black-board. Suddenly the door opened, and a fur coat, fur boots, fur gloves, and a cap of otter, made their appearance on the threshold.

Jules Verne
André Laurie
О книге

Язык

Английский

Год издания

2005-07-22

Темы

Arctic regions -- Discovery and exploration -- Fiction; Foundlings -- Fiction

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