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20000 Leagues Under the Seas by Jules Verne


Electric wires linked the pilothouse with the engine room, and...

TABLE OF CONTENTS



TWENTY THOUSAND LEAGUES UNDER THE SEAS
Chap 1 A RUNAWAY REEF
Chap 2 THE PROS AND CONS
Chap 3 AS MASTER WISHES
Chap 4 NED LAND
Chap 5 AT RANDOM
Chap 6 AT FULL STEAM
Chap 7 A WHALE OF UNKNOWN...
Chap 8 "MOBILIS IN MOBILI"
Chap 9 THE TANTRUMS OF NED...
Chap 10 THE MAN OF THE...
Chap 11 THE NAUTILUS
Chap 12 EVERYTHING THROUGH ELECTRICITY
Chap 13 SOME FIGURES
Chap 14 THE BLACK CURRENT
Chap 15 AN INVITATION IN WRITING
Chap 16 STROLLING THE PLAINS
Chap 17 AN UNDERWATER FOREST
Chap 18 FOUR THOUSAND LEAGUES UNDER...
Chap 19 VANIKORO
Chap 20 THE TORRES STRAIT
Chap 21 SOME DAYS ASHORE
Chap 22 THE LIGHTNING BOLTS OF CAPTAIN...
Chap 23 "AEGRI SOMNIA"*
Chap 24 THE CORAL REALM
SECOND PART
Chap 1 THE INDIAN OCEAN
Chap 2A NEW PROPOSITION FROM CAPTAIN NEMO
Chap 3A PEARL WORTH TEN MILLION
Chap 4 THE RED SEA
Chap 5 ARABIAN TUNNEL
Chap 6 THE GREEK ISLANDS
Chap 8 THE BAY OF VIGO
Chap 9 A LOST CONTINENT
Chap 10 THE UNDERWATER COALFIELDS
Chap 11 THE SARGASSO SEA
Chap 12 SPERM WHALES AND BALEEN WHALES
Chap 13 THE ICE BANK
Chap 14 THE SOUTH POLE
Chap 15 ACCIDENT OR INCIDENT?
Chap 16 SHORTAGE OF AIR
Chap 17 FROM CAPE HORN TO THE AMAZON
Chap 18 THE DEVILFISH
Chap 19 THE GULF STREAM
Chap 20 IN LATITUDE 47 DEGREES 24' AND...
Chap 21 A MASS EXECUTION
Chap 22 THE LAST WORDS OF CAPTAIN NEMO
Chap 23 CONCLUSION

Electric wires linked the pilothouse with the engine room, and from this cabin the captain could simultaneously signal heading and speed to his Nautilus. He pressed a metal button and at once the propeller slowed down significantly.

I stared in silence at the high, sheer wall we were skirting just then, the firm base of the sandy mountains on the coast. For an hour we went along it in this fashion, staying only a few meters away. Captain Nemo never took his eyes off the two concentric circles of the compass hanging in the cabin. At a mere gesture from him, the helmsman would instantly change the Nautilus's heading.

Standing by the port deadlight, I spotted magnificent coral substructures, zoophytes, algae, and crustaceans with enormous quivering claws that stretched forth from crevices in the rock.

At 10:15 Captain Nemo himself took the helm. Dark and deep, a wide gallery opened ahead of us. The Nautilus was brazenly swallowed up. Strange rumblings were audible along our sides. It was the water of the Red Sea, hurled toward the Mediterranean by the tunnel's slope. Our engines tried to offer resistance by churning the waves with propeller in reverse, but the Nautilus went with the torrent, as swift as an arrow.

Along the narrow walls of this passageway, I saw only brilliant streaks, hard lines, fiery furrows, all scrawled by our speeding electric light. With my hand I tried to curb the pounding of my heart.

At 10:35 Captain Nemo left the steering wheel and turned to me:

"The Mediterranean," he told me.

In less than twenty minutes, swept along by the torrent, the Nautilus had just cleared the Isthmus of Suez.

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