[All Around the Moon by Jules Verne]@TWC D-Link bookAll Around the Moon CHAPTER V 9/17
Excuse us, Diana; it is not the first time the little suffer from the senseless disputes of the great." So saying he laid before the animal a very toothsome pie, and contemplated with evident pleasure her very successful efforts towards its hasty and complete disappearance. "Looking at Diana," he went on, "makes me almost wish we had made a Noah's Ark of our Projectile by introducing into it a pair of all the domestic animals!" "Not room enough," observed Barbican. "No doubt," remarked the Captain, "the ox, the cow, the horse, the goat, all the ruminating animals would be very useful in the Lunar continent. But we couldn't turn our Projectile into a stable, you know." "Still, we might have made room for a pair of poor little donkeys!" observed Ardan; "how I love the poor beasts.
Fellow feeling, you will say.
No doubt, but there really is no animal I pity more.
They are the most ill-treated brutes in all creation.
They are not only banged during life; they are banged worse after death!" "Hey! How do you make that out ?" asked his companions, surprised. "Because we make their skins into drum heads!" replied Ardan, with an air, as if answering a conundrum. Barbican and M'Nicholl could hardly help laughing at the absurd reply of their lively companion, but their hilarity was soon stopped by the expression his face assumed as he bent over Satellite's body, where it lay stretched on the sofa. "What's the matter now ?" asked Barbican. "Satellite's attack is over," replied Ardan. "Good!" said M'Nicholl, misunderstanding him. "Yes, I suppose it is good for the poor fellow," observed Ardan, in melancholy accents.
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