In Search of the Castaways; Or, The Children of Captain Grant

CONTENTS
THE three books gathered under the title “In Search of the Castaways” occupied much of Verne’s attention during the three years following 1865. The characters used in these books were afterwards reintroduced in “The Mysterious Island,” which was in its turn a sequel to “Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea.” Thus this entire set of books form a united series upon which Verne worked intermittently during ten years.
“In Search of the Castaways,” which has also been published as “The Children of Captain Grant” and as “A Voyage Around the World,” is perhaps most interesting in connection with the last of these titles. It is our author’s first distinctly geographical romance. By an ingenious device he sets before the rescuers a search which compels their circumnavigation of the globe around a certain parallel of the southern hemisphere. Thus they cross in turn through South America, Australia and New Zealand, besides visiting minor islands.
The three great regions form the sub-titles of the three books which compose the story. In each region the rescuers meet with adventures characteristic of the land. They encounter Indians in America; bushrangers in Australia; and Maoris in New Zealand. The passage of the searching party gives ground,—one is almost tempted to say, excuse,—for a close and careful description of each country and of its inhabitants, step by step. Even the lesser incidents of the story are employed to emphasise the distinctive features of each land. The explorers are almost frozen on the heights of the Andes, and almost drowned in the floods of the Patagonian Pampas. An avalanche sweeps some of them away; a condor carries off a lad. In Australia they are stopped by jungles and by quagmires; they hunt kangaroos. In New Zealand they take refuge amid hot sulphur springs and in a house “tabooed”; they escape by starting a volcano into eruption.
Here then are fancy and extravagance mixed with truth and information. Verne has done a vast and useful work in stimulating the interest not only of Frenchmen but of all civilised nations, with regard to the lesser known regions of our globe. He has broadened knowledge and guided study. During the years following 1865 he even, for a time, deserted his favorite field of labor, fiction, and devoted himself to a popular semi-scientific book, now superseded by later works, entitled “The Illustrated Geography of France and her Colonies.”

Jules Verne
Содержание

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INTRODUCTION TO VOLUME FOUR


IN SEARCH OF THE CASTAWAYS


or


SOUTH AMERICA


CHAPTER I THE SHARK


CHAPTER II THE THREE DOCUMENTS


CHAPTER III THE CAPTAIN’S CHILDREN


CHAPTER IV LADY GLENARVAN’S PROPOSAL


CHAPTER V THE DEPARTURE OF THE “DUNCAN”


CHAPTER VI AN UNEXPECTED PASSENGER


CHAPTER VII JACQUES PAGANEL IS UNDECEIVED


CHAPTER VIII THE GEOGRAPHER’S RESOLUTION


CHAPTER IX THROUGH THE STRAITS OF MAGELLAN


CHAPTER X THE COURSE DECIDED


CHAPTER XI TRAVELING IN CHILI


CHAPTER XII ELEVEN THOUSAND FEET ALOFT


CHAPTER XIII A SUDDEN DESCENT


CHAPTER XIV PROVIDENTIALLY RESCUED


CHAPTER XV THALCAVE


CHAPTER XVI THE NEWS OF THE LOST CAPTAIN


CHAPTER XVII A SERIOUS NECESSITY


CHAPTER XVIII IN SEARCH OF WATER


CHAPTER XIX THE RED WOLVES


CHAPTER XX STRANGE SIGNS


CHAPTER XXI A FALSE TRAIL


CHAPTER XXII THE FLOOD


CHAPTER XXIII A SINGULAR ABODE


CHAPTER XXIV PAGANEL’S DISCLOSURE


CHAPTER XXV BETWEEN FIRE AND WATER


CHAPTER XXVI THE RETURN ON BOARD


IN SEARCH OF THE CASTAWAYS


OR THE CHILDREN OF CAPTAIN GRANT


AUSTRALIA


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CHAPTER I A NEW DESTINATION


CHAPTER II TRISTAN D’ACUNHA AND THE ISLE OF AMSTERDAM


CHAPTER III CAPE TOWN AND M. VIOT


CHAPTER IV A WAGER AND HOW DECIDED


CHAPTER V THE STORM ON THE INDIAN OCEAN


CHAPTER VI A HOSPITABLE COLONIST


CHAPTER VII THE QUARTERMASTER OF THE “BRITANNIA”


CHAPTER VIII PREPARATION FOR THE JOURNEY


CHAPTER IX A COUNTRY OF PARADOXES


CHAPTER X AN ACCIDENT


CHAPTER XI CRIME OR CALAMITY


CHAPTER XII TOLINE OF THE LACHLAN


CHAPTER XIII A WARNING


CHAPTER XIV WEALTH IN THE WILDERNESS


CHAPTER XV SUSPICIOUS OCCURRENCES


CHAPTER XVI A STARTLING DISCOVERY


CHAPTER XVII THE PLOT UNVEILED


CHAPTER XVIII FOUR DAYS OF ANGUISH


CHAPTER XIX HELPLESS AND HOPELESS


IN SEARCH OF THE CASTAWAYS


OR THE CHILDREN OF CAPTAIN GRANT


NEW ZEALAND


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CHAPTER I A ROUGH CAPTAIN


CHAPTER II NAVIGATORS AND THEIR DISCOVERIES


CHAPTER III THE MARTYR-ROLL OF NAVIGATORS


CHAPTER IV THE WRECK OF THE “MACQUARIE”


CHAPTER V CANNIBALS


CHAPTER VI A DREADED COUNTRY


CHAPTER VII THE MAORI WAR


CHAPTER VIII ON THE ROAD TO AUCKLAND


CHAPTER IX INTRODUCTION TO THE CANNIBALS


CHAPTER X A MOMENTOUS INTERVIEW


CHAPTER XI THE CHIEF’S FUNERAL


CHAPTER XII STRANGELY LIBERATED


CHAPTER XIII THE SACRED MOUNTAIN


CHAPTER XIV A BOLD STRATAGEM


CHAPTER XV FROM PERIL TO SAFETY


CHAPTER XVI WHY THE “DUNCAN” WENT TO NEW ZEALAND


CHAPTER XVII AYRTON’S OBSTINACY


CHAPTER XVIII A DISCOURAGING CONFESSION


CHAPTER XIX A CRY IN THE NIGHT


CHAPTER XX CAPTAIN GRANT’S STORY


CHAPTER XXI PAGANEL’S LAST ENTANGLEMENT

О книге

Язык

Английский

Год издания

2000-02-01

Темы

Australia -- Fiction; Ship captains -- Fiction; South America -- Fiction; Voyages and travels -- Fiction; Seafaring life -- Fiction; Castaways -- Fiction; Ocean travel -- Fiction; New Zealand -- Fiction

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