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			 _  Publisher's note [Jules Verne's novel: Five Weeks in a Balloon] "Five Weeks in a Balloon" is, in a measure, a satire onmodern books of African travel. So far as the geography,
 the inhabitants, the animals, and the features of the countries
 the travellers pass over are described, it is entirely
 accurate. It gives, in some particulars, a survey of nearly
 the whole field of African discovery, and in this way will
 often serve to refresh the memory of the reader. The mode
 of locomotion is, of course, purely imaginary, and the incidents
 and adventures fictitious. The latter are abundantly
 amusing, and, in view of the wonderful "travellers' tales"
 with which we have been entertained by African explorers,
 they can scarcely be considered extravagant; while the ingenuity
 and invention of the author will be sure to excite the
 surprise and the admiration of the reader, who will find
 M. VERNE as much at home in voyaging through the air as in
 journeying "Twenty Thousand Leagues under the Seas." _
 
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