[All Around the Moon by Jules Verne]@TWC D-Link bookAll Around the Moon CHAPTER II 1/32
CHAPTER II. THE FIRST HALF HOUR. What had taken place within the Projectile? What effect had been produced by the frightful concussion? Had Barbican's ingenuity been attended with a fortunate result? Had the shock been sufficiently deadened by the springs, the buffers, the water layers, and the partitions so readily ruptured? Had their combined effect succeeded in counteracting the tremendous violence of a velocity of 12,000 yards a second, actually sufficient to carry them from London to New York in six minutes? These, and a hundred other questions of a similar nature were asked that night by the millions who had been watching the explosion from the base of Stony Hill.
Themselves they forgot altogether for the moment; they forgot everything in their absorbing anxiety regarding the fate of the daring travellers.
Had one among them, our friend Marston, for instance, been favored with a glimpse at the interior of the projectile, what would he have seen? Nothing at all at first, on account of the darkness; except that the walls had solidly resisted the frightful shock.
Not a crack, nor a bend, nor a dent could be perceived; not even the slightest injury had the admirably constructed piece of mechanical workmanship endured.
It had not yielded an inch to the enormous pressure, and, far from melting and falling back to earth, as had been so seriously apprehended, in showers of blazing aluminium, it was still as strong in every respect as it had been on the very day that it left the Cold Spring Iron Works, glittering like a silver dollar. Of real damage there was actually none, and even the disorder into which things had been thrown in the interior by the violent shock was comparatively slight.
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