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    Chapter 2 - Page 2

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    it as upon a rocking-chair, a very agreeable fact in
    the very hot weather. Upon the table (a huge iron plate supported
    upon six carronades) stood an inkstand of exquisite elegance, made
    of a beautifully chased Spanish piece, and a sonnette, which, when
    required, could give forth a report equal to that of a revolver.
    During violent debates this novel kind of bell scarcely sufficed
    to drown the clamor of these excitable artillerists.

    In front of the table benches arranged in zigzag form, like the
    circumvallations of a retrenchment, formed a succession of
    bastions and curtains set apart for the use of the members of
    the club; and on this especial evening one might say, "All the
    world was on the ramparts." The president was sufficiently well
    known, however, for all to be assured that he would not put his
    colleagues to discomfort without some very strong motive.

    Impey Barbicane was a man of forty years of age, calm, cold,
    austere; of a singularly serious and self-contained demeanor,
    punctual as a chronometer, of imperturbable temper and immovable
    character; by no means chivalrous, yet adventurous withal, and
    always bringing practical ideas to bear upon the very rashest
    enterprises; an essentially New Englander, a Northern colonist,
    a descendant of the old anti-Stuart Roundheads, and the
    implacable enemy of the gentlemen of the South, those ancient
    cavaliers of the mother country. In a word, he was a Yankee to
    the backbone.

    Barbicane had made a large fortune as a timber merchant.
    Being nominated director of artillery during the war, he proved
    himself fertile in invention. Bold in his conceptions, he
    contributed powerfully to the progress of that arm and gave an
    immense impetus to experimental researches.

    He was personage of the middle height, having, by a rare
    exception in the Gun Club, all his limbs complete. His strongly
    marked features seemed drawn by square and rule; and if it be
    true that, in order to judge a man's character one must look at
    his profile, Barbicane, so examined, exhibited the most certain
    indications of energy, audacity, and _sang-froid_.

    At this moment he was sitting in his armchair, silent, absorbed,
    lost in reflection, sheltered under his high-crowned hat-- a
    kind of black cylinder which always seems firmly screwed upon

    the head of an American.

    Just when the deep-toned clock in the great hall struck eight,
    Barbicane, as if he had been set in motion by a spring, raised
    himself up. A profound silence ensued, and the speaker, in a
    somewhat emphatic tone of voice, commenced as follows:

    "My brave, colleagues, too long already a paralyzing peace has
    plunged the members of the Gun Club in deplorable inactivity.
    After a period of years
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