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    Chapter 19 - Page 2

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    "Have you nothing to say either, Captain?" asked Ardan, beginning to be
    a little vexed at the apparent apathy of his companions.

    "Nothing whatever," replied M'Nicholl, giving point to his words by a
    despairing shake of his head.

    "You don't mean surely that we're going to sit here, like bumps on a
    log, doing nothing until it will be too late to attempt anything?"

    "Nothing whatever can be done," said Barbican gloomily. "It is vain to
    struggle against the impossible."

    "Impossible! Where did you get that word? I thought the American
    schoolboys had cut it out of their dictionaries!"

    "That must have been since my time," said Barbican smiling grimly.

    "It still sticks in a few old copies anyhow," drawled M'Nicholl drily,
    as he carefully wiped his glasses.

    "Well! it has no business _here_!" said Ardan. "What! A pair of live
    Yankees and a Frenchman, of the nineteenth century too, recoil before an
    old fashioned word that hardly scared our grandfathers!"

    "What can we do?"

    "Correct the movement that's now running away with us!"

    "Correct it?"

    "Certainly, correct it! or modify it! or clap brakes on it! or take
    some advantage of it that will be in our favor! What matters the exact
    term so you comprehend me?"

    "Easy talking!"

    "As easy doing!"

    "Doing what? Doing how?"

    "The what, and the how, is your business, not mine! What kind of an
    artillery man is he who can't master his bullets? The gunner who cannot
    command his own gun should be rammed into it head foremost himself and
    blown from its mouth! A nice pair of savants _you_ are! There you sit as
    helpless as a couple of babies, after having inveigled me--"

    "Inveigled!!" cried Barbican and M'Nicholl starting to their feet in an
    instant; "WHAT!!!"

    "Come, come!" went on Ardan, not giving his indignant friends time to

    utter a syllable; "I don't want any recrimination! I'm not the one to
    complain! I'll even let up a little if you consider the expression too
    strong! I'll even withdraw it altogether, and assert that the trip
    delights me! that the Projectile is a thing after my own heart! that I
    was never in better spirits than at the present moment! I don't
    complain, I only appeal to your own good sense, and call upon you with
    all my voice to do everything possible, so that we may go _somewhere_,
    since it appears we can't get to the Moon!"

    "But that's exactly what we want to do ourselves, friend Ardan," said
    Barbican, endeavoring to give an example of
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