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Journey to the Centre of the Earth, A
Chapter 2. The Mysterious Parchment
Jules Verne
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       _ "I Declare," cried my uncle, striking the table fiercely with his fist, "I declare to you it is Runic--and contains some wonderful secret, which I must get at, at any price."
       I was about to reply when he stopped me.
       "Sit down," he said, quite fiercely, "and write to my dictation."
       I obeyed.
       "I will substitute," he said, "a letter of our alphabet for that of the Runic: we will then see what that will produce. Now, begin and make no mistakes."
       The dictation commenced with the following incomprehensible result:
       mm.rnlls esruel seecJde
       sgtssmf unteief niedrke
       kt,samn atrateS Saodrrn
       emtnaeI nuaect rrilSa
       Atvaar .nscrc ieaabs
       ccdrmi eeutul frantu
       dt,iac oseibo KediiY
       Scarcely giving me time to finish, my uncle snatched the document from my hands and examined it with the most rapt and deep attention.
       "I should like to know what it means," he said, after a long period.
       I certainly could not tell him, nor did he expect me to--his conversation being uniformly answered by himself.
       "I declare it puts me in mind of a cryptograph," he cried, "unless, indeed, the letters have been written without any real meaning; and yet why take so much trouble? Who knows but I may be on the verge of some great discovery?"
       My candid opinion was that it was all rubbish! But this opinion I kept carefully to myself, as my uncle's choler was not pleasant to bear. All this time he was comparing the book with the parchment.
       "The manuscript volume and the smaller document are written in different hands," he said, "the cryptograph is of much later date than the book; there is an undoubted proof of the correctness of my surmise. [An irrefragable proof I took it to be.] The first letter is a double M, which was only added to the Icelandic language in the twelfth century--this makes the parchment two hundred years posterior to the volume."
       The circumstances appeared very probable and very logical, but it was all surmise to me.
       "To me it appears probable that this sentence was written by some owner of the book. Now who was the owner, is the next important question. Perhaps by great good luck it may be written somewhere in the volume."
       With these words Professor Hardwigg took off his spectacles, and, taking a powerful magnifying glass, examined the book carefully.
       On the fly leaf was what appeared to be a blot of ink, but on examination proved to be a line of writing almost effaced by time. This was what he sought; and, after some considerable time, he made out these letters:
       [Illustration: Runic Glyphs]
       "Arne Saknussemm!" he cried in a joyous and triumphant tone, "that is not only an Icelandic name, but of a learned professor of the sixteenth century, a celebrated alchemist."
       I bowed as a sign of respect.
       "These alchemists," he continued, "Avicenna, Bacon, Lully, Paracelsus, were the true, the only learned men of the day. They made surprising discoveries. May not this Saknussemm, nephew mine, have hidden on this bit of parchment some astounding invention? I believe the cryptograph to have a profound meaning--which I must make out."
       My uncle walked about the room in a state of excitement almost impossible to describe.
       "It may be so, sir," I timidly observed, "but why conceal it from posterity, if it be a useful, a worthy discovery?"
       "Why--how should I know? Did not Galileo make a secret of his discoveries in connection with Saturn? But we shall see. Until I discover the meaning of this sentence I will neither eat nor sleep."
       "My dear uncle--" I began.
       "Nor you neither," he added.
       It was lucky I had taken double allowance that day.
       "In the first place," he continued, "there must be a clue to the meaning. If we could find that, the rest would be easy enough."
       I began seriously to reflect. The prospect of going without food and sleep was not a promising one, so I determined to do my best to solve the mystery. My uncle, meanwhile, went on with his soliloquy.
       "The way to discover it is easy enough. In this document there are one hundred and thirty-two letters, giving seventy-nine consonants to fifty-three vowels. This is about the proportion found in most southern languages, the idioms of the north being much more rich in consonants. We may confidently predict, therefore, that we have to deal with a southern dialect."
       Nothing could be more logical.
       "Now," said Professor Hardwigg, "to trace the particular language."
       "As Shakespeare says, 'that is the question,"' was my rather satirical reply.
       "This man Saknussemm," he continued, "was a very learned man: now as he did not write in the language of his birthplace, he probably, like most learned men of the sixteenth century, wrote in Latin. If, however, I prove wrong in this guess, we must try Spanish, French, Italian, Greek, and even Hebrew. My own opinion, though, is decidedly in favor of Latin."
       This proposition startled me. Latin was my favorite study, and it seemed sacrilege to believe this gibberish to belong to the country of Virgil.
       "Barbarous Latin, in all probability," continued my uncle, "but still Latin."
       "Very probably," I replied, not to contradict him.
       "Let us see into the matter," continued my uncle; "here you see we have a series of one hundred and thirty-two letters, apparently thrown pell-mell upon paper, without method or organization. There are words which are composed wholly of consonants, such as mm.rnlls, others which are nearly all vowels, the fifth, for instance, which is unteief, and one of the last oseibo. This appears an extraordinary combination. Probably we shall find that the phrase is arranged according to some mathematical plan. No doubt a certain sentence has been written out and then jumbled up--some plan to which some figure is the clue. Now, Harry, to show your English wit--what is that figure?"
       I could give him no hint. My thoughts were indeed far away. While he was speaking I had caught sight of the portrait of my cousin Gretchen, and was wondering when she would return.
       We were affianced, and loved one another very sincerely. But my uncle, who never thought even of such sublunary matters, knew nothing of this. Without noticing my abstraction, the Professor began reading the puzzling cryptograph all sorts of ways, according to some theory of his own. Presently, rousing my wandering attention, he dictated one precious attempt to me.
       I mildly handed it over to him. It read as follows:
       mmessunkaSenrA.icefdoK.segnittamurtn
       ecertserrette,rotaivsadua,ednecsedsadne
       lacartniiilrJsiratracSarbmutabiledmek
       meretarcsilucoYsleffenSnI.

       I could scarcely keep from laughing, while my uncle, on the contrary, got in a towering passion, struck the table with his fist, darted out of the room, out of the house, and then taking to his heels was presently lost to sight. _
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本书目录

Chapter 1. My Uncle Makes A Great Discovery
Chapter 2. The Mysterious Parchment
Chapter 3. An Astounding Discovery
Chapter 4. We Start On The Journey
Chapter 5. First Lessons In Climbing
Chapter 6. Our Voyage To Iceland
Chapter 7. Conversation And Discovery
Chapter 8. The Eider-Down Hunter--Off At Last
Chapter 9. Our Start--We Meet With Adventures By The Way
Chapter 10. Traveling In Iceland
Chapter 11. We Reach Mount Sneffels--The "Reykir"
Chapter 12. The Ascent Of Mount Sneffels
Chapter 13. The Shadow Of Scartaris
Chapter 14. The Real Journey Commences
Chapter 15. We Continue Our Descent
Chapter 16. The Eastern Tunnel
Chapter 17. Deeper And Deeper--The Coal Mine
Chapter 18. The Wrong Road!
Chapter 19. The Western Gallery--A New Route
Chapter 20. Water, Where Is It? A Bitter Disappointment
Chapter 21. Under The Ocean
Chapter 22. Sunday Below Ground
Chapter 23. Alone
Chapter 24. Lost!
Chapter 25. The Whispering Gallery
Chapter 26. A Rapid Recovery
Chapter 27. The Central Sea
Chapter 28. Launching The Raft
Chapter 29. On The Waters--A Raft Voyage
Chapter 30. Terrific Saurian Combat
Chapter 31. The Sea Monster
Chapter 32. The Battle Of The Elements
Chapter 33. Our Route Reversed
Chapter 34. A Voyage Of Discovery
Chapter 35. Discovery Upon Discovery
Chapter 36. What Is It?
Chapter 37. The Mysterious Dagger
Chapter 38. No Outlet--Blasting The Rock
Chapter 39. The Explosion And Its Results
Chapter 40. The Ape Gigans
Chapter 41. Hunger
Chapter 42. The Volcanic Shaft
Chapter 43. Daylight At Last
Chapter 44. The Journey Ended