[All Around the Moon by Jules Verne]@TWC D-Link book
All Around the Moon

CHAPTER IX
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CHAPTER IX.
A LITTLE OFF THE TRACK.
Barbican's mind was now completely at rest at least on one subject.

The original force of the discharge had been great enough to send the Projectile beyond the neutral line.

Therefore, there was no longer any danger of its falling back to the Earth.

Therefore, there was no longer any danger of its resting eternally motionless on the point of the counteracting attractions.

The next subject to engage his attention was the question: would the Projectile, under the influence of lunar attraction, succeed in reaching its destination?
The only way in which it _could_ succeed was by falling through a space of nearly 24,000 miles and then striking the Moon's surface.


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