All Around the Moon by Jules Verne
page 102 of 383 (26%)
page 102 of 383 (26%)
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"Oh! I'm a plagiarist, am I?" asked the Frenchman, pretending to be
irritated. "Well, something very like it," observed M'Nicholl quietly. "Apollonius Rhodius, as I read one evening in the Philadelphia Library, speaks of the Arcadians of Greece having a tradition that their ancestors were so ancient that they inhabited the Earth long before the Moon had ever become our satellite. They therefore called them [Greek: _ProselĂȘnoi_] or _Ante-lunarians_. Now starting with some such wild notion as this, certain scientists have looked on the Moon as an ancient comet brought close enough to the Earth to be retained in its orbit by terrestrial attraction." "Why may not there be something plausible in such a hypothesis?" asked Ardan with some curiosity. "There is nothing whatever in it," replied Barbican decidedly: "a simple proof is the fact that the Moon does not retain the slightest trace of the vaporous envelope by which comets are always surrounded." "Lost her tail you mean," said Ardan. "Pooh! Easy to account for that! It might have got cut off by coming too close to the Sun!" "It might, friend Michael, but an amputation by such means is not very likely." "No? Why not?" "Because--because--By Jove, I can't say, because I don't know," cried Barbican with a quiet smile on his countenance. |
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