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In Search of the Castaways
Book III - New Zealand   Book III - New Zealand - CHAPTER XXI - PAGANEL'S LAST ENTANGLEMENT
Jules Verne
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       Book III - New Zealand CHAPTER XXI - PAGANEL'S LAST ENTANGLEMENT
       ON the 19th of March, eleven days after leaving the island,
       the DUNCAN sighted the American coast, and next day dropped
       anchor in the bay of Talcahuano. They had come back again
       after a voyage of five months, during which, and keeping strictly
       along the 37th parallel, they had gone round the world.
       The passengers in this memorable expedition, unprecedented in
       the annals of the Travelers' Club, had visited Chili, the Pampas,
       the Argentine Republic, the Atlantic, the island of Tristan d'Acunha,
       the Indian Ocean, Amsterdam Island, Australia, New Zealand, Isle Tabor,
       and the Pacific. Their search had not been fruitless, for they
       were bringing back the survivors of the shipwrecked BRITANNIA.
       Not one of the brave Scots who set out at the summons of their chief,
       but could answer to their names; all were returning to their old Scotia.
       As soon as the DUNCAN had re-provisioned, she sailed along
       the coast of Patagonia, doubled Cape Horn, and made a swift run up
       the Atlantic Ocean. No voyage could be more devoid of incident.
       The yacht was simply carrying home a cargo of happiness.
       There was no secret now on board, not even John Mangles's
       attachment to Mary Grant.
       Yes, there was one mystery still, which greatly excited
       McNabbs's curiosity. Why was it that Paganel remained always
       hermetically fastened up in his clothes, with a big comforter
       round his throat and up to his very ears? The Major was burning
       with desire to know the reason of this singular fashion.
       But in spite of interrogations, allusions, and suspicions
       on the part of McNabbs, Paganel would not unbutton.
       Not even when the DUNCAN crossed the line, and the heat
       was so great that the seams of the deck were melting.
       "He is so DISTRAIT that he thinks he is at St. Petersburg,"
       said the Major, when he saw the geographer wrapped in an immense
       great-coat, as if the mercury had been frozen in the thermometer.
       At last on the 9th of May, fifty-three days from the time
       of leaving Talcahuano, John Mangles sighted the lights
       of Cape Clear. The yacht entered St. George's Channel,
       crossed the Irish Sea, and on the 10th of May reached the Firth
       of Clyde. At 11 o'clock she dropped anchor off Dunbarton,
       and at 2 P.M. the passengers arrived at Malcolm Castle amidst
       the enthusiastic cheering of the Highlanders.
       As fate would have it then, Harry Grant and his two companions
       were saved. John Mangles wedded Mary Grant in the old cathedral
       of St. Mungo, and Mr. Paxton, the same clergyman who had
       prayed nine months before for the deliverance of the father,
       now blessed the marriage of his daughter and his deliverer.
       Robert was to become a sailor like Harry Grant and John Mangles,
       and take part with them in the captain's grand projects,
       under the auspices of Lord Glenarvan.
       But fate also decreed that Paganel was not to die a bachelor?
       Probably so.
       The fact was, the learned geographer after his heroic exploits,
       could not escape celebrity. His blunders made quite a FURORE among
       the fashionables of Scotland, and he was overwhelmed with courtesies.
       It was then that an amiable lady, about thirty years of age,
       in fact, a cousin of McNabbs, a little eccentric herself, but good
       and still charming, fell in love with the geographer's oddities,
       and offered him her hand. Forty thousand pounds went with it,
       but that was not mentioned.
       Paganel was far from being insensible to the sentiments of Miss Arabella,
       but yet he did not dare to speak. It was the Major who was the medium
       of communication between these two souls, evidently made for each other.
       He even told Paganel that his marriage was the last freak he would be
       able to allow himself. Paganel was in a great state of embarrassment,
       but strangely enough could not make up his mind to speak the fatal word.
       "Does not Miss Arabella please you then?" asked McNabbs.
       "Oh, Major, she is charming," exclaimed Paganel, "a thousand times
       too charming, and if I must tell you all, she would please me better
       if she were less so. I wish she had a defect!"
       "Be easy on that score," replied the Major, "she has, and more than one.
       The most perfect woman in the world has always her quota.
       So, Paganel, it is settled then, I suppose?"
       "I dare not."
       "Come, now, my learned friend, what makes you hesitate?"
       "I am unworthy of Miss Arabella," was the invariable reply
       of the geographer. And to this he would stick.
       At last, one day being fairly driven in a corner by the intractable Major,
       he ended by confiding to him, under the seal of secrecy, a certain
       peculiarity which would facilitate his apprehension should the police
       ever be on his track.
       "Bah!" said the Major.
       "It is really as I tell you," replied Paganel.
       "What does it matter, my worthy friend?"
       "Do you think so, Major?"
       "On the contrary, it only makes you more uncommon.
       It adds to your personal merits. It is the very thing to make
       you the nonpareil husband that Arabella dreams about."
       And the Major with imperturbable gravity left Paganel in a state
       of the utmost disquietude.
       A short conversation ensued between McNabbs and Miss Arabella.
       A fortnight afterwards, the marriage was celebrated in grand style
       in the chapel of Malcolm Castle. Paganel looked magnificent,
       but closely buttoned up, and Miss Arabella was arrayed in splendor.
       And this secret of the geographer would have been forever buried
       in oblivion, if the Major had not mentioned it to Glenarvan,
       and he could not hide it from Lady Helena, who gave a hint
       to Mrs. Mangles. To make a long story short, it got in the end
       to M. Olbinett's ears, and soon became noised abroad.
       Jacques Paganel, during his three days' captivity among
       the Maories, had been tattooed from the feet to the shoulders,
       and he bore on his chest a heraldic kiwi with outspread wings,
       which was biting at his heart.
       This was the only adventure of his grand voyage that Paganel could never
       get over, and he always bore a grudge to New Zealand on account of it.
       It was for this reason too, that, notwithstanding solicitation
       and regrets, he never would return to France. He dreaded lest
       he should expose the whole Geographical Society in his person
       to the jests of caricaturists and low newspapers, by their secretary
       coming back tattooed.
       The return of the captain to Scotland was a national event,
       and Harry Grant was soon the most popular man in old Caledonia. His son
       Robert became a sailor like himself and Captain Mangles, and under
       the patronage of Lord Glenarvan they resumed the project of founding
       a Scotch colony in the Southern Seas.
       Jules Verne's novel: In Search of the Castaways
       Content of Book III - New Zealand CHAPTER XXI - PAGANEL'S LAST ENTANGLEMENT [Jules Verne's novel: In Search of the Castaways]
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Introduction
Book I - South America
   Book I - South America - CHAPTER I - THE SHARK
   Book I - South America - CHAPTER II - THE THREE DOCUMENTS
   Book I - South America - CHAPTER III - THE CAPTAIN'S CHILDREN
   Book I - South America - CHAPTER IV - LADY GLENARVAN'S PROPOSAL
   Book I - South America - CHAPTER V - THE DEPARTURE OF THE "DUNCAN"
   Book I - South America - CHAPTER VI - AN UNEXPECTED PASSENGER
   Book I - South America - CHAPTER VII - JACQUES PAGANEL IS UNDECEIVED
   Book I - South America - CHAPTER VIII - THE GEOGRAPHER'S RESOLUTION
   Book I - South America - CHAPTER IX - THROUGH THE STRAITS OF MAGELLAN
   Book I - South America - CHAPTER X - THE COURSE DECIDED
   Book I - South America - CHAPTER XI - TRAVELING IN CHILI
   Book I - South America - CHAPTER XII - ELEVEN THOUSAND FEET ALOFT
   Book I - South America - CHAPTER XIII - A SUDDEN DESCENT
   Book I - South America - CHAPTER XIV - PROVIDENTIALLY RESCUED
   Book I - South America - CHAPTER XV - THALCAVE
   Book I - South America - CHAPTER XVI - THE NEWS OF THE LOST CAPTAIN
   Book I - South America - CHAPTER XVII - A SERIOUS NECESSITY
   Book I - South America - CHAPTER XVIII - IN SEARCH OF WATER
   Book I - South America - CHAPTER XIX - THE RED WOLVES
   Book I - South America - CHAPTER XX - STRANGE SIGNS
   Book I - South America - CHAPTER XXI - A FALSE TRAIL
   Book I - South America - CHAPTER XXII - THE FLOOD
   Book I - South America - CHAPTER XXIII - A SINGULAR ABODE
   Book I - South America - CHAPTER XXIV - PAGANEL'S DISCLOSURE
   Book I - South America - CHAPTER XXV - BETWEEN FIRE AND WATER
   Book I - South America - CHAPTER XXVI - THE RETURN ON BOARD
Book II - Australia
   Book II - Australia - CHAPTER I - A NEW DESTINATION
   Book II - Australia - CHAPTER II - TRISTAN D'ACUNHA AND THE ISLE OF AMSTERDAM
   Book II - Australia - CHAPTER III - CAPE TOWN AND M. VIOT
   Book II - Australia - CHAPTER IV - A WAGER AND HOW DECIDED
   Book II - Australia - CHAPTER V - THE STORM ON THE INDIAN OCEAN
   Book II - Australia - CHAPTER VI - A HOSPITABLE COLONIST
   Book II - Australia - CHAPTER VII - THE QUARTERMASTER OF THE "BRITANNIA"
   Book II - Australia - CHAPTER VIII - PREPARATION FOR THE JOURNEY
   Book II - Australia - CHAPTER IX - A COUNTRY OF PARADOXES
   Book II - Australia - CHAPTER X - AN ACCIDENT
   Book II - Australia - CHAPTER XI - CRIME OR CALAMITY
   Book II - Australia - CHAPTER XII - TOLINE OF THE LACHLAN
   Book II - Australia - CHAPTER XIII - A WARNING
   Book II - Australia - CHAPTER XIV - WEALTH IN THE WILDERNESS
   Book II - Australia - CHAPTER XV - SUSPICIOUS OCCURRENCES
   Book II - Australia - CHAPTER XVI - A STARTLING DISCOVERY
   Book II - Australia - CHAPTER XVII - THE PLOT UNVEILED
   Book II - Australia - CHAPTER XVIII - FOUR DAYS OF ANGUISH
   Book II - Australia - CHAPTER XIX - HELPLESS AND HOPELESS
Book III - New Zealand
   Book III - New Zealand - CHAPTER I - A ROUGH CAPTAIN
   Book III - New Zealand - CHAPTER II - NAVIGATORS AND THEIR DISCOVERIES
   Book III - New Zealand - CHAPTER III - THE MARTYR-ROLL OF NAVIGATORS
   Book III - New Zealand - CHAPTER IV - THE WRECK OF THE "MACQUARIE"
   Book III - New Zealand - CHAPTER V - CANNIBALS
   Book III - New Zealand - CHAPTER VI - A DREADED COUNTRY
   Book III - New Zealand - CHAPTER VII - THE MAORI WAR
   Book III - New Zealand - CHAPTER VIII - ON THE ROAD TO AUCKLAND
   Book III - New Zealand - CHAPTER IX - INTRODUCTION TO THE CANNIBALS
   Book III - New Zealand - CHAPTER X - A MOMENTOUS INTERVIEW
   Book III - New Zealand - CHAPTER XI - THE CHIEF'S FUNERAL
   Book III - New Zealand - CHAPTER XII - STRANGELY LIBERATED
   Book III - New Zealand - CHAPTER XIII - THE SACRED MOUNTAIN
   Book III - New Zealand - CHAPTER XIV - A BOLD STRATAGEM
   Book III - New Zealand - CHAPTER XV - FROM PERIL TO SAFETY
   Book III - New Zealand - CHAPTER XVI - WHY THE "DUNCAN" WENT TO NEW ZEALAND
   Book III - New Zealand - CHAPTER XVII - AYRTON'S OBSTINACY
   Book III - New Zealand - CHAPTER XVIII - A DISCOURAGING CONFESSION
   Book III - New Zealand - CHAPTER XIX - A CRY IN THE NIGHT
   Book III - New Zealand - CHAPTER XX - CAPTAIN GRANT'S STORY
   Book III - New Zealand - CHAPTER XXI - PAGANEL'S LAST ENTANGLEMENT