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The city in the sea

Chapter 2: FOREWORD
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About This Book

A young writer partners with a literary agency and wealthy backers to buy and outfit a yacht for an expedition to Hyalos, an island near reefs that hides ruins beneath the sea. The narrative traces preparation of deep-sea gear, the assembling of an unusual crew, the voyage and underwater exploration, and the revelation of Martia's secret. Encounters include salvage attempts, legal and commercial tensions with art dealers and authorities, personal dangers aboard ship and on the island, and the moral and practical consequences that follow the quest for a submerged city.

FOREWORD

In June of last year, 1925, long after this book was finished, the Morning Post published an account of how an Arab fisherman off the Isle of Jerba had discovered a city under the sea, giving intimate details that might have been taken from my little town Hyalos—details vouched for by Count de Prohak and Sir Dennison Ross.

Five months later—November 1925—an American reader of "The City in the Sea," then appearing serially in the States, sent me the following cutting from a Hartford Paper:

"Moscow, October 29.—Discovery of an ancient submerged city near Shikov, a sandy bank on the Caspian Sea, was made Wednesday by Alexis Atayeff, a captain in the Soviet mercantile fleet. Atayeff's ship, bound from Persia to Baku, accidentally changed its usual course, and while soundings were being made he noticed buildings on the sea floor. Atayeff asserts that under the bright sunshine he could distinguish streets and buildings of ancient Asiatic architecture. Archæologists believe the discovery reveals the lost city of Karadasheger, which is believed to have been submerged centuries ago by an earthquake."

I make no complaint at these two old cities, one from the Caspian, the other from the Mediterranean, presenting themselves like this to the public; the desire for the limelight is excusable and understandable in a way, but I think with some propriety they might have delayed their appearance. As matters stand, many readers of the Press might fancy they were first on the stage—this is not so. Hyalos was discovered by me long before these venerable antiquities thought fit to appear at the wings to be brought before the footlights by their producers, Sir Dennison Ross and Captain Atayeff.


CONTENTS

  FOREWORD
I. A MODERN BUSINESS GIRL
II. A SMALL YACHTSMAN AND AN OLD DEALER
III. THE QUESTION
IV. THE REVELATION
V. HOW?
VI. MISS BEAMAN
VII. POOLE
VIII. THE PURCHASE OF THE "LORNA DOONE"
IX. MARTIA
X. DEEP SEA GEAR
XI. THE CREW OF BLIND MEN
XII. MARTIA'S SECRET
XIII. THE START
XIV. GENOA
XV. TOWARDS HYALOS
XVI. HYALOS
XVII. THE HOUSES
XVIII. A TERRIBLE DANGER
XIX. ONE OF THE DELIGHTFUL PEOPLE
XX. PLANS
XXI. THE SHIP
XXII. THE DUMPING OF THE VICTORY
XXIII. THE BOAT FROM ÆGINA
XXIV. A MAN OF WAR
XXV. GENOA AGAIN
XXVI. THE CUSTOMS
XXVII. THE GREAT ATTEMPT
XXVIII. WEST
XXIX. VISCONTI
XXX. CORNERED
XXXI. BEHRENS
XXXII. A GREAT ART DEALER
XXXIII. LONDON
XXXIV. THE END

The City in the Sea