Journey to the Center of the Earth (Barnes & Noble Classics Series) (35 page)

BOOK: Journey to the Center of the Earth (Barnes & Noble Classics Series)
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JULES VERNE
My object has been to depict the earth, and not the earth alone, but the universe, for I have sometimes taken my readers away from the earth, in the novel. And I have tried at the same time to realize a very high ideal of beauty of style. It is said that there can’t be any style in a novel of adventure, but that isn’t true; though I admit that it is very much more difficult to write such a novel in a good literary form than the studies of character which are so in vogue to-day.
—as reported to R. H. Sherard and printed in McClure’s Magazine (January 1894)
THE NATION
The death of Jules Verne should strike with a sense of personal bereavement all boys who read and all men in whom the romantic imagination of boyhood has not yet perished. He was a prophet with honor in his own country, for he and the famous Cathedral of Amiens were the twin marvels of that provincial city. Their two pictures, in all sizes and styles, stare from hundreds of shop windows. But this tribute is only a faint echo of that which came to him from every corner of the globe. Wherever love of adventure, coupled with curiosity as to the mechanism of the universe, exists, there Jules Verne finds his disciples. ‘Around the World in Eighty Days,’ ‘Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea,’ ‘The Mysterious Island,’ ‘A Voyage to the Centre of the Earth,’ ‘From the Earth to the Moon’—here is a rollcall that should stir the pulses of graybeards, and almost summon back their irrevocable youth....
The books of Jules Verne are the ‘Arabian Nights’ elaborately fitted with all modern improvements. The genii and the sorcerers of a few centuries ago have their lineal descendants in the accomplished gentlemen who are sometimes described as “the wizards of science.” A submarine boat, a fast express, an automobile, a dirigible balloon, or a hollow shell shot at the moon, is a comfortable and highly plausible substitute for a travelling carpet or a roc. Given the problem of annihilating space and time, the unknown authors of the ‘Arabian Nights’ and Jules Verne both solve it according to formulas popular in their own day.
The charm of mystery is evident in the very title of Verne’s works. No lad of twelve can resist the challenge of ‘Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea,’ ‘Voyage to the Centre of the Earth,’ and ‘The Mysterious Island.’ Had the subject-matter belied the captions, many eager readers would still have pegged away, lured by the mere magic of the words stamped on the binding. But the stories are worthy of their delicious names....
On the scientific side of Verne’s writings one may easily lay undue stress. He is not the first to embed scientific knowledge in stories for boys, though he is uncommonly successful in sugar-coating the pill. The method of Abbott and his imitators is to let Rollo draw Uncle George into endless and often futile discussions of the wonders of earth and sky. There is too much talk and too little action. Verne, on the contrary—and he has had many followers, notably H. G. Wells—vitalizes the dead fact by employing it in some striking feat in mastery of man or nature.—March 30, 1905
CHARLES
F
HORNE
Jules Verne was the establisher of a new species of story-telling, that which interweaves the most stupendous wonders of science with the simplest facts of human life. Our own Edgar Allan Poe had pointed the way; and Verne was ever eager to acknowledge his indebtedness to the earlier master. But Poe died; and it was Verne who went on in book after book, fascinating his readers with cleverly devised mysteries, instructing and astonishing them with the new discoveries of science, inspiring them with the splendor of man’s destiny. When, as far back as 1872, his early works were “crowned” by the French Academy, its Perpetual Secretary, M. Patin, said in his official address, “The well-worn wonders of fairyland are here replaced by a new and more marvelous world, created from the most recent ideas of science.”
More noteworthy still is Verne’s position as the true, the astonishingly true, prophet of the discoveries and inventions that were to come. He was far more than the mere creator of that sort of scientific fairyland of which Secretary Patin spoke, and with which so many later writers, Wells, Haggard and Sir Conan Doyle, have since delighted us. He himself once keenly contrasted his own methods with those of Wells, the man he most admired among his many followers. Wells, he pointed out, looked centuries ahead and out of pure imagination embodied the unknowable that some day might perchance appear. “While I,” said Verne, “base my inventions on a groundwork of actual fact.”
—from his introduction to the Works
of Jules
Verne (1911)
GEORGE ORWELL
Like most writers, Jules Verne was one of those people to whom nothing ever happens.
—from the New Statesman (January 18, 1941 )
KINGSLEY
AMIS
With Verne we reach the first great progenitor of modern science fiction. In its literary aspect his work is, of course, of poor quality, a feature certainly reproduced with great fidelity by most of his successors.
—from New Maps
of Hell: A
Survey of Science Fiction ( 1960)
WILLIAM GOLDING
Verne’s verbal surface lacks the slickness of the professional; it is turgid and slack by turns. Only the brio of his enthusiasm carries us forward from one adventure to another.
—from The Hot Gates (1961)
JORGE LUIS BORGES
Before Wells resigned himself to the role of sociological spectator, he was an admirable storyteller, an heir to the concise style of Swift and Edgar Allan Poe; Verne was a pleasant and industrious journeyman. Verne wrote for adolescents; Wells, for all ages.
—as translated by Ruth L. C. Simms, from Other Inquisitions
1937 1952
( 1964)
ISAAC ASIMOV
[Verne] gives careful detail, when detail is advisable, and makes omissions when it is safe. He carefully overcomes a known difficulty by reference to some authentic scientific hypothesis which, for the purposes of the story, turns out to be true. He uses currently impressive words and phrases at key points.
Done well enough, as Verne does, a story, however fantastic it may seem, becomes acceptable not only in its own time but also a century later when its science is as outmoded as Dante’s descriptions of the Inferno.—from his introduction to A Journey to the Center of the Earth (1966)
Questions
1. What is the appeal of fiction, movies, and paintings that depict events that could never occur or things that could never exist? Is it pure escapism? Or is there something more fulfilling about these fantasies? Do they somehow reflect on the world around us?
2. Think of the metaphoric implications of digging deeper and deeper until you come to a hidden world within the world, a world in which monsters roam. In part, is Verne’s story about what lies at the hidden center of the human mind? Or does it concern the monstrous at the heart of the day-to-day workings of human society?
3. In what ways is Journey to the Center of the Earth tied to its own time, and in what ways does it represent universal, timeless concerns?
4. How does Journey to the Center of the Earth compare to other works of science fiction? Is it as compelling as, say, Star Trek or Jurassic Park?
5. How does the novel foreground the contrast between animate beings and the inanimate world? How do Verne’s metaphors complicate or blur this opposition?
6. Are the characters intended as realistic figures, or are they symbolic representations of certain mindsets? How do their relations to one another affect the outcome of the story?
For Further Reading
Biographical Materials
Allotte de la Fuye, Marguerite.
Jules Verne.
Translated by Erik de Mauny. New York: Coward-McCann, 1956.
Jules-Verne, Jean.
Jules Verne:
A Biography. Translated by Roger Greaves. New York: Taplinger, 1976. Written by the author’s grandson.
Lottmann, Herbert R.
Jules Verne:
An Exploratory Biography. New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1996.
Critical Materials
Barthes, Roland. “The Nautilus and the Drunken Boat.” In Mythologies, translated by Annette Lavers. New York: Noonday, 1972, pp. 65-67.
Butcher, William.
verne’s
Journey to the Centre of the
Self:
Space and Time in the Voyages Extraordinaires. New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1990.
Chesneaux, Jean. The Political and Social Ideas of Jules Verne. Translated by Thomas Wikeley. London: Thames and Hudson, 1972.
Costello, Peter.
Jules Verne:
Inventor of Science Fiction. London: Hodder and Stoughton, 1978.
Evans, Arthur B.
Jules
Verne Rediscovered: Didacticism and the
Scientific
Novel. New York: Greenwood, 1988.
Lynch, Lawrence W.
Jules
Verne. New York: Twayne Publishers,1992.
Macherey, Pierre. A Theory of Literary Production. Translated by Geoffrey Wall. London: Routledge, 1978, pp. 159-248.
Martin, Andrew. The Knowledge of Ignorance: From Genesis to Jules Verne. Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press, 1985.
Martin, Andrew. The Mask of the
Prophet:
The Extraordinary Fictions of Jules Verne. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press, 1992.
Smyth, Edmund, ed.
Jules Verne:
Narratives of Modernity. Liverpool, UK: Liverpool University Press, 2000.
Materials in French
Bessière, Jean.
Modernites de
Jules Verne. Paris: Presses Universitaires de France, 1988.
Butor, Michel. Essais sur
les
modernes. Paris: Gallimard, 1960. Contains the important essay “Le point supreme et l‘âge d’or a travers quelques oeuvres de Jules Verne.”
Chesneaux, Jean. Jules
Verne, un
regard
sur le
monde: Nouvelles lectures politiques. Paris: Bayard, 2001.
Compere, Daniel. Un voyage imaginaire de Jules Verne :
Voyage
au centre
de la terre.
Paris: Lettres Modernes, 1977.
Fabre, Michel.
Le problème et l’epreuve: Formation et modernité chez Jules Verne.
Paris: Harmattan, 2004.
Raymond, Francois, ed.
La science en question.
Paris: Minard, 1992. Serres, Michel.
Jouvences sur Jules Verne.
Paris: Minuit, 1974.
_ Jules Verne, la science et l’homme contemporain.
Paris: Pommier, 2003.
Vierne, Simone.
Jules Verne.
Paris: Balland, 1986.
a
Famous school in Hamburg.
b
Literally, “League of Virtue”; a civic association in early-nineteenth-century Germany.
c
Town and province in modern Estonia.
d
Nineteenth-century bookbinders.
e
Snorri Sturluson (1179-1241) was an Icelandic poet, historian, and leader; his work
Heimskringla
is a collection of sagas.
f
The runic alphabet was used by Germanic peoples in Britain, northern Europe, and Iceland from approximately the third century to the sixteenth century.
g
Galileo discovered the rings of Saturn with a primitive telescope in 1610 but misinterpreted the unclear images he perceived as being those of a triple planet system.
h
District of Hamburg.
i
The two principal rivers flowing through Hamburg.
j
First day of the month in the Roman calendar.
k
Device that stores static electricity.
l
Perhaps a reference to the German geographer August Heinrich Petermann (1822-1878), a specialist on Africa and the Arctic.
m
Name given to narrow gulfs in the Scandinavian countries (author’s note).
n
Jean-Baptiste-Joseph Fourier (1768-1830), French mathematician who became famous through his work The Analytical Theory of Heat ( 1822).
o
Siméon-Denis Poisson (1781-1840), French mathematician who wrote extensively on the application of mathematics to such areas of physics as electricity and mechanics. Lidenbrock is referring to his Mathematical Theory of Heat (1835).
p
Lübeck is a city in northern Germany; Helgoland is a German island and vacation resort in the North Sea.
q
Kiel is a port city in northern Germany. The Belts are two straits in Denmark that connect the Baltic Sea with the large strait called the Kattegat. Holstein is the region between the Eider and Elbe Rivers, now the southern part of the German state of Schleswig-Holstein.
r
Approximately 2 francs and 75 centimes (author’s note).
s
Bertel Thorvaldsen, Danish neoclassical sculptor (c.1770-1844).
t
English name for the Danish city of Helsingør, the site of Castle Kronberg, the original setting of Shakespeare’s tragedy Hamlet.
u
Castle Kronberg and the city of Helsingør lie across a sound from Helsingborg. Both these Swedish cities are at the entrance to the Kattegat, a strait between Sweden and Denmark that forms part of the connection between the Baltic Sea and the North Sea.
v
The Skagerrak is an arm of the North Sea that lies between Denmark and Norway; Cape Lindesnes is located at the southernmost tip of Norway.
w
Mykines is actually the island farthest to the west.
x
The geographical reference point is unclear.
y
Yet in the process of deciphering Saknussemm’s manuscript, Axel had in fact identified what he thought were French and Hebrew elements.
z
The Index Prohibitorius, which specified books forbidden by the Roman Catholic Church.
BOOK: Journey to the Center of the Earth (Barnes & Noble Classics Series)
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