Júlio Verne

Biography

Early life

Nantes from Île Feydeau, around the time of Verne's birth

In 1834, at the age of six, Verne was sent to boarding school at 5 Place du Bouffay in Nantes. The teacher, Madame Sambin, was the widow of a naval captain who had disappeared some 30 years before. Madame Sambin often told the students that her husband was a shipwrecked castaway and that he would eventually return like Robinson Crusoe from his desert island paradise.[10] The theme of the Robinsonade would stay with Verne throughout his life and appear in many of his novels, including The Mysterious Island (1874), Second Fatherland (1900), and The School for Robinsons (1882).

In 1836, Verne went on to École Saint‑Stanislas, a Catholic school suiting the pious religious tastes of his father. Verne quickly distinguished himself in mémoire (recitation from memory), geography, Greek, Latin, and singing. In the same year, 1836, Pierre Verne bought a vacation house at 29 Rue des Réformés in the village of Chantenay (now part of Nantes) on the Loire River. In his brief memoir "Souvenirs d'enfance et de jeunesse" ("Memories of Childhood and Youth", 1890), Verne recalled a deep fascination with the river and with the many merchant vessels navigating it. He also took vacations at Brains, in the house of his uncle Prudent Allotte, a retired shipowner, who had gone around the world and served as mayor of Brains from 1828 to 1837. Verne took joy in playing interminable rounds of the Game of the Goose with his uncle, and both the game and his uncle's name would be memorialized in two late novels (The Will of an Eccentric (1900) and Robur the Conqueror (1886), respectively).

Legend has it that in 1839, at the age of 11, Verne secretly procured a spot as cabin boy on the three-mast ship Coralie with the intention of traveling to the Indies and bringing back a coral necklace for his cousin Caroline. The evening the ship set out for the Indies, it stopped first at Paimboeuf where Pierre Verne arrived just in time to catch his son and make him promise to travel "only in his imagination". It is now known that the legend is an exaggerated tale invented by Verne's first biographer, his niece Marguerite Allotte de la Füye, though it may have been inspired by a real incident.

In 1840, the Vernes moved again to a large apartment at No. 6 Rue Jean-Jacques-Rousseau, where the family's youngest child, Marie, was born in 1842. In the same year Verne entered another religious school, the Petit Séminaire de Saint-Donatien, as a lay student. His unfinished novel Un prêtre en 1839 (A Priest in 1839), written in his teens and the earliest of his prose works to survive, describes the seminary in disparaging terms. From 1844 to 1846, Verne and his brother were enrolled in the Lycée Royal (now the Lycée Georges-Clemenceau) in Nantes. After finishing classes in rhetoric and philosophy, he took the baccalauréat at Rennes and received the grade "Good Enough" on 29 July 1846.

By 1847, when Verne was 19, he had taken seriously to writing long works in the style of Victor Hugo, beginning Un prêtre en 1839 and seeing two verse tragedies, Alexandre VI and La Conspiration des poudres (The Gunpowder Plot), to completion. However, his father took it for granted that Verne, being the firstborn son of the family, would not attempt to make money in literature but would instead inherit the family law practice.

In 1847, Verne's father sent him to Paris, primarily to begin his studies in law school, and secondarily (according to family legend) to distance him temporarily from Nantes. His cousin Caroline, with whom he was in love, was married on 27 April 1847, to Émile Dezaunay, a man of 40, with whom she would have five children.

After a short stay in Paris, where he passed first-year law exams, Verne returned to Nantes for his father's help in preparing for the second year (provincial law students were in that era required to go to Paris to take exams). While in Nantes, he met Rose Herminie Arnaud Grossetière, a young woman one year his senior, and fell intensely in love with her. He wrote and dedicated some 30 poems to her, including "La Fille de l'air" ("The Daughter of Air"), which describes her as "blonde and enchanting / winged and transparent". His passion seems to have been reciprocated, at least for a short time, but Grossetière's parents frowned upon the idea of their daughter marrying a young student of uncertain future. They married her instead to Armand Terrien de la Haye, a rich landowner 10 years her senior, on 19 July 1848.

The sudden marriage sent Verne into deep frustration. He wrote a hallucinatory letter to his mother, apparently composed in a state of half-drunkenness, in which under pretext of a dream he described his misery. This requited but aborted love affair seems to have permanently marked the author and his work, and his novels include a significant number of young women married against their will (Gérande in "Master Zacharius" (1854), Sava in Mathias Sandorf (1885), Ellen in A Floating City (1871), etc.), to such an extent that the scholar Christian Chelebourg attributed the recurring theme to a "Herminie complex". The incident also led Verne to bear a grudge against his birthplace and Nantes society, which he criticized in his poem "La sixième ville de France" ("The Sixth City of France").

Júlio Verne

A Drama In Mexico A Drama In The Air Martin Paz Master Zacharius, Or, The Clockmaker Who Lost His Soul A Winter amid the Ice Five Weeks In A Balloon, Or, Journeys And Discoveries In Africa By Three Englishmen The Adventures Of Captain Hatteras The Count Of Chanteleine: A Tale Of The French Revolution Journey To The Centre Of The Earth From The Earth To The Moon The Blockade Runners In Search Of The Castaways/The Children Of Captain Grant Twenty-Thousand Leagues Under The Sea: A Tour Of The Underwater World Around The Moon A Floating City Dr. Ox's Experiment/A Fantasy Of Doctor Ox The Adventures Of Three Russians And Three Englishmen In South Africa The Fur Country Around The World In Eighty Days Doctor Ox The Mysterious Island An Ideal City The Survivors Of The Chancellor: Diary Of J. R. Kazallon, Passenger Michael Strogoff: The Courier Of The Czar Off On A Comet The Child Of The Cavern/The Black Indies Dick Sand, A Captain At Fifteen The Begum's Fortune / The Begum's Millions The Tribulations Of A Chinaman In China The Mutineers Of The Bounty The Steam House Eight Hundred Leagues On The Amazon/The Giant Raft The Green Ray Godfrey Morgan:A Californian Mystery / The School For Robinsons Kéraban The Inflexible The Vanished Diamond/The Southern Star The Archipelago On Fire Frritt-Flacc A Winter Amid The Ice The Waif Of The Cynthia Mathias Sandorf Robur The Conquerer/The Clipper Of The Clouds The Lottery Ticket/Ticket No. "9672" Gil Braltar Texar's Revenge, Or, North Against South The Flight To France Two Years' Vacation The Purchase Of The North Pole Family Without A Name César Cascabel Mistress Branican The Carpathian Castle Claudius Bombarnac Foundling Mick Captain Antifer / The Wonderful Adventures Of Captain Antifer Propeller Island Facing The Flag Clovis Dardentor An Antarctic Mystery/The Sphinx Of The Ice Fields The Mighty Orinoco The Will Of An Eccentric The Castaways Of The Flag / Second Fatherland The Village In The Treetops/The Aerial Village The Sea Serpent / The Stories Of Jean-Marie Cabidoulin The Kip Brothers Travel Scholarships Master Of The World A Drama In Livonia Invasion Of The Sea