Bill,
As usual, many thanks for your insights! By now I expect misspellings, mixups, and obscurities in the MSs and Hetzels of ANY Verne novel I work with, and I'm sure you do as well ... they come with the territory.
I'd asked about sources for MDM out of plain curiosity, since by the time of its writing Verne was an armchair-traveling septuagenarian. I was wondering if there was any possibility of actually pinpointing the mountain in question, as this year's NAJVS conference hopes to do -- whaddya think?
Thanks again and warmest regards,
Rick
Frederick Paul Walter
Albuquerque, New Mexico
----- Original Message -----
From: wbutcher
To: 'Jules Verne Forum'
Sent: Monday, May 07, 2012 8:50 PM
Subject: Re: Master of the World
PS probably not relevant, but Verne sometimes writes "Great-eary" in the MS, the name of a geological age.
From: wbutcher [mailto:wbutcher~at~netvigator.com]
Sent: 08 May 2012 10:34
To: 'Jules Verne Forum'
Subject: RE: Master of the World
Rick,
I'm not aware of any research done on this question of why MM is set in Morganton etc.
In the manuscript, Verne writes "Satawba-river" (i 3), an attested variant of "Catawba", whereas Hetzel fils (and most subsequent editions) published the erroneous "Sarawba". If you Google-books Satawba and Morganton in French pre 1920, you get only Baedeker and L Drapeyron, in the Revue de géographie.
Another clue is that Verne wrote both "Alleghanis" (i 1) and "Alleghanys" (i 3).
Hoping this helps...
Best
Bill
From: owner-jvf~at~Gilead.org.il [mailto:owner-jvf~at~Gilead.org.il] On Behalf Of Jean-Michel Margot
Sent: 08 May 2012 08:18
To: Jules Verne Forum
Subject: Re: Master of the World
On 5/7/2012 5:28 PM, Rick Walter wrote:
Bill & J-M,
What geographic sources did Verne consult while writing MDM? Is this known?
All the best,
Rick
That's the problem. We don't know which source JV used to get a description of the mountains of North Caroline.
Jean-Michel Margot
Received on Tue 08 May 2012 - 06:53:10 IDT