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Facing the Flag [Kindle Edition]

Jules Verne
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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This book was converted from its physical edition to the digital format by a community of volunteers. You may find it for free on the web. Purchase of the Kindle edition includes wireless delivery.

About the Author

Jules Verne studied law but began writing stories and working in theatre as well. When Verne's father discovered his son was writing, he promptly withdrew his financial support. Verne then worked as a stockbroker.His wife encouraged him to pursue his writing, and he became acquainted with Pierre-Jules Hetzel, an important French publisher. Hetzel helped improve Verne's writings, which until then had been repeatedly rejected by other publishers. He died a wealthy man in 1905.

Product Details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 216 KB
  • Publisher: Public Domain Books (March 1, 2004)
  • Sold by: Amazon Digital Services
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B000SN6I3M
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #4,254 Free in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Free in Kindle Store)
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2 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Mad Scientist runs amok!!!, June 2, 2009
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia- FACING THE FLAG-

Thomas Roch is a genius French inventor, who came up with the idea of the Fulgurator, a weapon "whose action upon the atmospheric strata was so terrific that any construction, warship or floating battery, within a zone of twelve thousand square yards, would be blown to atoms", so that "the state which acquired it would become absolute master of earth and ocean".

For all of the above, however, there is nothing to show but Roch's own word, backed by no experimental proof whatever, and he demands to have huge sums delivered to him before making any details known and certainly before any tests were made of the weapon's feasibility. While Roch is not an unknown, having had some earlier inventions to his credit, no official could justify spending such sums to buy a pig in a poke.

Upon the failure of his negotiations with his own government, Roch "forgets what could never be forgotten" - i.e., France's defeat in Franco-German War of 1870-71 and the loss of Alsace-Lorraine, a wound still deeply nursed by many French in their mindset of Revanchism - and crosses the border to offer his weapon at Berlin. But he meets no greater success there then in Paris, nor are the British and Americans which he later tries any more amendable.

In the process, Roch increasingly loses his sanity, becoming - as depicted by Verne - more and more bitter, magalomanic and paranoid - until the US Government finally tucks him away at a luxurious asylum in New Bern, North Carolina, where he had spent eighteen months at the start of the book and looks likely to spend the rest of his life.

When first introduced to the reader, Roch seems endlessly greedy, asserting that millions would be "a paltry sum" for his invention which was worth "billions". But as becomes clear later, Roch is less after money as such than in search of respect and recognition. The four sets of government officials and military officers which he successively met evidently rubbed Roch the wrong way, their repeated demands of concrete proof making him feel that they were trying to steal his invention, while the pirate Ker Karraje - the story's main villain - would soon prove able to cater to Roch's vanity - and his desire for revenge upon those who humiliated him.

Ker Karraje is a pirate of Malay origin who started his career closer to his homeland, in the islands of the Western Pacific - with a band which he had collected during a sojourn at one of the Australian gold rushes (where, evidently, he failed to strike gold, and turned to other means of getting rich). His heterogeneous crew of audacious rogues, drawn from "escaped convicts, military and naval deserters, and the scum of Europe", includes Malays like himself, Arabs and "Levantines", Europeans of various nationalities (An Irishman, an Italian and a Greek are explicitly mentioned), and even some Australian Aborigines.

Captain Spade and Engineer Serko, Karraje's two principal lieutenants, are described as "intelligent, well educated, resolute men who would most assuredly have succeeded in any career" but "being without conscience or scruples, and determined to get rich at all costs" they turned first to gambling and speculation and finally to outright piracy under Karraje.

After a wild career of robbery and mayhem around the Pacific Islands which made his name known and feared around the world, Karraje suddenly disappeared. Nobody knew that he did not change profession, but rather moved his operations to richer hunting grounds around the east coast of North America. There Karraje and crew live a double life. Karraje goes around openly, under the alias of "Count d'Artigas" - pleasure loving, slightly eccentric but eminently respectable, a regular visitor to the ports of the East Coast onboard his schooner "Ebba" which he had ordered, in a completely legal and aboveboard way, from a shipyard in Gothenburg, Sweden.

To outward appearance, "Ebba" has no other means of propulsion than its sails - but in fact it is pulled by an underwater tug. By these means, Karraje and his crew can pull up to unsuspecting becalmed sailing ships, board and rob their cargoes, massacre the crews and scuttle them, adding to the statistics of "unexplained disappearances". (In Verne's time the term Bermuda Triangle did not yet have a wide popular currency, but the geographical location of Karraje's operations seems quite appropriate to this myth).

Karraje is cunning, suave and completely ruthless. He uses the most advanced technologies available at the end of Nineteenth Century, such as the aforementioned submarine, to aid his career of robbery on the high seas. His heterogeneous crew works smoothly and efficiently, in both their ostensible honest seamanship and their clandestine deadly piracy - which immediately recalls the crew of the "Nautilus" under Captain Nemo.

However, unlike Nemo, Karraje is a pure villain, motivated by nothing but greed, to satisfy which he is willing to kill ruthlessly and indiscriminatingly - with none of the redeeming qualities and complex ambiguities which made Capain Nemo, in the view of many, the most intriguing of Verne's characters.

Also, in the decades between the publication of Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea in 1870 and that of the present book, the idea of a submarine in itself has evidently stopped being so fantastic as to deserve attention. Rather, the presence of submarines - in the hands of both the pirates and the Royal Navy - is taken for granted as a useful narration plot, while Roch and his fearsome super-weapon are given the center stage.

Karraje hears of Roch and his invention, takes it seriously and decides to gain possession of it. Actually, his aim is rather modest, not to gain world mastery, but just to make his hide-out impregnable. He and his men successfully kidnap Roch from his American asylum and bring him to their hide-out, the desolate island of Back Cup in the Bahamas. Here a wide cavern, accessible solely by submarine, has been made into a well-equipped pirate base, with its own electrical power plant, completely unknown to the rest of the world.

During the kidnapping, however, Karraje orders his men to also take along Gaydon, Roch's attendant "to whom he was used for the past fifteen months". The reader knows - and as is later shown, Karraje is also aware - that Gaydon was actually Simon Hart, a French engineer and explosives expert who had decided "to perform the menial and exacting duties of an insane man's attendant" in the hope of learning Roch's secret and saving it for France, actuated (as Verne puts it) by "a spirit of the purest and noblest patriotism".

Hart bears considerable resemblance to Marcel Bruckmann, the protagonist in "The Begum's Millions", who penetrates the fearsome stronghold of that book's arch-villain. Both characters are engineers by training, and boundlessly dedicated, resourceful and brave French patriots by inclination. Both act as self-appointed spies belonging to no official agency, but showing considerable skill and ingenuity in that role. (Except for the completely unreasonable risk of regularly keeping a written diary while in the enemy stronghold and putting down in writing all their secrets and plans - a risk which Verne evidently imposed on both protagonists in the interest of providing the reader with a first-person narrative.) Bruckmann is in his mid-twenties, Hart in his mid-forties - which is precisely the amount by which Bruckmann would had aged in the time elapsed between the writing of the two books.

Hart is kept imprisoned at the pirate base, though in quite comfortable conditions. He can only watch in dismay as the pirate chief easily manages what four governments in succession have failed to do: win Roch over. Roch is given "many rolls of dollar bills and banknotes, and handfuls of English, French, American and German gold coins" with which to fill his pockets. Further, Roch is formally informed that the entire secret cavern and all in it are henceforward his property, and egged on to "defend his property" against the world which has so wronged him.

Soon, the inventor is busy constructing his fearsome weapon, happily unaware that he is nothing but a glorified prisoner in the pirate's hands. Chemical ingredients are purchased at his specifications and paid for quite openly at US stores, as are mechanical parts ordered from American foundries completely unaware of their true purpose, and so construction of the Fulgurator moves ahead.

As is proven by practice, a few grams of Roch's explosive suffice to blow a passable tunnel through many metres of tough volcanic rock. Engineer Serko remarks in talking with Hart that several thousands tons might be enough to blow up the entire Earth and render it into a new Asteroid Belt - which seems to be the first time that such a suggestion was made in Science Fiction (see Asteroids in fiction) - though no one in the book wants to put that to the test. But Karraje does ring his island with artillery pieces of a kind, which need not be very accurate - since the projectile powered by that enormous explosive, would generate such shock-waves as to destroy everything in an enormous radius around its path. There is no need to hit the enemy ship in order to destroy it.

The paranoid Roch does, however, keep to himself the secret of the detonator or "Deflagrator", a liquid without which the explosive is merely an inert powder. By holding fast to that last secret, Roch unwittingly preserves the life of his ex-keeper Gaydon/Simon Hart. Karraje suspects (wrongly) that Hart knows much more of Roch's secrets than he is willing to let on. It serves the purposes of the pirate chief, a completely ruthless killer, to let Hart live. The pirate engineer Serko,... Read more ›
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