The Golden Volcano

(Redirected from Le Volcan d’or)

The Golden Volcano (French: Le Volcan d'or) is a novel by Jules Verne, edited by his son Michel Verne, and published posthumously in 1906.

The Golden Volcano
Cover illustration for the original edition
AuthorJules Verne
Original titleLe Volcan d'or
IllustratorGeorge Roux
LanguageFrench
SeriesVoyages Extraordinaires
GenreAdventure novel
PublisherPierre-Jules Hetzel
Publication date
1906[1]
Publication placeFrance
Published in English
1962

The story takes place in the middle of the Gold Rush, and features two French-Canadian cousins, who inherit a mining claim on the shores of the Klondike.[2]

Plot

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Two Canadians, Summy Skim and Ben Raddle, are unexpectedly bequeathed a mining claim in the Klondike.[3] They encounter many things such as disaster, disease, and extreme weather. On the way back to Montreal, where the two cousins reside, Ben Raddle and Summy Skim are trapped in a large flood that floods the entire Klondike. Ben has a disease and a broken leg, and needs to be taken to the hospital to be seen by the trustful Dr. Pilcox. Summy Skim and their guide, Bill Steel, bring the unfortunate man to the hospital, where he is healed a few months later.

On the way out to a hunt, Summy Skim, Bill Steel, and the trusted Indian, Neluto, discover a man, torn apart, and lying under a tree. They come to the man's rescue, and bring him back to the hospital, where he dies a few days later. Before he dies, the man tells Ben Raddle and Summy Skim of a volcano of pure gold named the "Golden Mount". The cousins and their guides then get a caravan together to return to the Golden Mount. While out on a hunt, Summy Skim and Neluto discover the two villains and their caravan, plotting to take over the volcano.

Summy Skim and Neluto return to camp, where they tell the others, and a plan is formulated. Ben Raddle plans to force the volcano to erupt by emptying the river into a hole he will dig into the volcano. The plan succeeds; the villains, having made their way to the top of the mountain, are immediately forced down by the eruption. Summy Skim shoots the Texans, Hunter and Malone, the leader of the villains. The volcano erupts into the sea, causing Summy Skim and Ben Raddle to leave with less money than they came with.

History

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The novel was written by Jules Verne in 1899. A revised version, by his son, Michel, was published in 1906. Thanks to Piero Gondolo della Riva, an unaltered version, using the original manuscript, was published in 1989 by the Société Jules-Verne.

Circumstances of the book's creation

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In 1886, after the death of Pierre-Jules Hetzel, Verne was partially freed from the constraints that had previously been imposed on the content of his novels (both scientific and geographical). He took advantage of this new freedom to create more original novels with a more satirical or philosophical tone. In 1896, the shores of the Klondike were inundated with gold seekers. Verne could not help but be attracted to this development, especially since his own son was involved in prospecting. However, Verne did not carry this same thirst for gold in his heart, believing instead that it was the cause of civilization's decline. This thesis is evoked by Verne in some of his other novels, including The Survivors of the "Jonathan", The Chase of the Golden Meteor, and The Castaways of the Flag; the novel is thus his critique of what he sees as the plague of greed.

Characters

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Characters in the original manuscript

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  • Summy Skim, French-Canadian, 32 years old; a landowner and skilled hunter
  • Ben Raddle, Summy Skim's first cousin, 34 years old; an engineer
  • Josias Lacoste, uncle of Summy Skim and Ben Raddle; an adventurer and prospector, he left them a claim in the Klondike when he died
  • Mr. Snubbin, a notary in Montreal; Canadian by birth.[4]
  • Captain Healy, president of the Anglo-American syndicate Transportation and Trading Co. in Dawson City
  • Hunter, a rough-looking, half-American, half-Spanish adventurer from Texas
  • Malone, Hunter's companion, with a similar look and background to him
  • Boyen, a Norwegian prospector from Christiana; a peaceful man
  • Sister Martha, of the Congregation of the Sisters of Mercy; of French-Canadian origin; 32 years old
  • Sister Madeleine, her companion; of the same order and origin; 20 years old.
  • Bill Stell, Canadian, former scout and scout for the Dominion troops; now a convoy man and leader of an experienced staff; 50 years old
  • Néluto, a member of Bill Stell's staff, pilot, Klondike Indian, age 40; previously served as a guide to Hudson's Bay Company fur traders
  • Doctor Pilcox, Anglo-Canadian, about 40 years old; physician, surgeon, apothecary, and dentist of Dawson City
  • William Broll, deputy director of the Anglo-American syndicate Transportation and Trading Co.
  • Major James Walsh, Commissioner General of the Yukon Territories; about 50 years old
  • Lorique, foreman in the service of Josias Lacoste and then of Ben Raddle; French-Canadian, about 40 years old
  • Jacques Laurier, French prospector, 42 years old, born in Nantes; found half-dead by Summy Skim, but before he dies, he gives Ben Raddle the location of the "Golden Mount"
  • Harry Brown, Anglo-Canadian prospector and partner of Jacques Laurier
  • Krasak, an Alaskan Indian, about 40 years old, with a fierce face; Hunter and Malone's cellmate
  • Stop, Summy Skim's dog
  • The chief agent of Fort McPherson

Characters added by Michel Verne

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  • Jane Edgerton, 22 years old, prospector
  • Edith Edgerton, 22 years old; Jane's first cousin[5]
  • Patrick Richardson, Irish blacksmith; six feet tall, but crazy. Jane Edgerton takes him into her service.

Also:

  • Néluto, the ever-perceptive Indian in the original manuscript, gives evasive answers in this version
  • Jacques Laurier, the French prospector, is renamed Ledun for no apparent reason[6]

The Great North

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Without imitating the work of Jack London to describe the beauty and the harshness of the Great North, Verne succeeds in making the reader shiver for the great outdoors. How can one survive the snowstorms of Dawson City or the crossing of the Chilkoot Pass? "It was not uncommon to see some poor emigrant, killed by cold and fatigue, abandoned under the trees..." The cities of the Great North are described with all the precision that Verne is known for. What a perfume of adventure in these bear attacks or these moose hunts!

Forces of nature

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In this novel, as in Five Weeks in a Balloon, Captain Grant's Children, and The Mysterious Island, the reader discovers Verne's fascination for extreme natural phenomena. It is two cataclysms that crush the hopes of the two cousins: the earthquake in Forty Miles Creek and the explosion of the Golden Volcano. It is remarkable that these two manifestations of nature intervene at the exact moment when the two heroes are determined to come to blows (and arms) with rival prospectors – perfect examples of how wealth can corrupt humanity, as if nature made itself an arbiter and decided to send the protagonists home, punishing the wicked and chastising the innocent.

Michel Verne's changes

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The dark character of the novel and its unequivocal condemnation of the thirst for gold make it a work that stands out very clearly from most of the others in Verne's Amazing Journeys series. It is highly probable that Verne would not have been able to publish this work during his lifetime, which was contrary to what the public expected of him. Michel Verne's softening of the novel thus allowed its publication. In Michel Verne's version, the two nuns become two prospector cousins, and the whole thing ends in a double wedding. A lighter character is created in the cousins' servant, while the taciturn expert, Néluto, now more of a negative caricature of Indians, loses his dignity. Finally, a more serious twist is made in Jules Verne' message: the heroes do not return from this journey completely empty-handed, and this means, perhaps, that the reviled metal (gold) is not quite as awful as it seems. It is therefore fortunate that the Société Jules-Verne was able to recover this almost-complete original manuscript of Jules Verne's work.

Notes

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  1. ^ For Michel Verne's version
  2. ^ "Information and reviews for "The Golden Volcano"". www.najvs.org. Retrieved 2023-11-26.
  3. ^ "Information and reviews for "The Golden Volcano"". www.najvs.org. Retrieved 2023-11-26.
  4. ^ He is the successor of Master Nick (Nicolas Sagamore), one of the characters in Family Without a Name.
  5. ^ The Edgerton cousins replace the two nuns from the original work.
  6. ^ Olivier Dumas suspects, however, that Jules Verne created this character to make his son, who was busy chasing his fortune, reconsider. Indeed, the family name is taken from that of a tree, as "Verne" comes from the word for "alder". Michel must have understood his father's allusion and thus changed the character's name. (See Olivier Dumas, "Preface to the original version." Éditions de l'Archipel. 1995. Page 10.)