Part 1: How We Found Dirk Peters The story is set in 1877, forty nine years after the events in
Arthur Gordon Pym, and thirty-nine years after the publication of that book. The narrator is an Englishman traveling in the United States to settle business interests in
Southern Illinois. During his stay in Bellevue, Belleville, he makes acquaintance with two local doctors, an older man, Dr. George F. Castleton, and the younger Dr. Bainbridge. Dr. Castleton is an eccentric local character given to extravagant opinions, and the narrator mentions that he was later the
Prohibition Party candidate for
Governor of Illinois. During a discussion of Poe's works and
Arthur Gordon Pym, Dr. Castleton reveals that Peters is a patient of his. Much of the first section is given to the narrator's observations on
American society and to discussions between him, Castleton, and Bainbridge on topics ranging from
poetry and
literature, to
U.S. and
European politics, to
Christianity and
agnosticism, to
medical science. Bainbridge describes his earlier discovery, at the
Astor Library in
New York, of a book written in 1594 and published in 1728, of a narrative purporting to tell the story of a sailor on
Sir Francis Drake's
voyage of circumnavigation. According to this book,
Drake's ship was driven by a storm for two weeks, until, deep in the
Antarctic, he arrived at a city which the author describes as comparable to
Venice, but more beautiful than any European city of that time.
Part 2: The Story of Dirk Peters Dr. Bainbridge visits Peters each day and elicits the story of his adventures with Pym a half-century earlier. Each night he visits the narrator in his hotel and relates, in episodic form, what he has learned from Peters. The narrator, in turn, passes on the essential points to Dr. Castleton as well as to Arthur, the hotel
factotum. After leaving the island of
Tsalal, Peters and Pym voyage south through a curtain of fog into the area near the
South Pole, which is warmed by volcanic activity. They come to the white figure mentioned by Poe at the end of his narrative. This turns out to be a great
marble statue at the entrance to a harbor. Entering, they arrive in the city of
Hili-li at
89°S latitude. Hili-li Island is one of over 200 islands in a great
inland sea, surrounded by a ring-shaped continent. The continent consists of volcanic mountains and ice, making it impassable except for a 300-mile-wide gap, through which had come Francis Drake, Pym and his shipmates on the
Jane Guy, and the occasional other
castaway from the outside world. The Hili-lites are a white race, descendants from a shipload of
ancient Romans who left Rome and the Mediterranean fleeing from the
barbarian invasions of the 4th century. Hili-li's 100,000 to 200,000 inhabitants are ruled by a Duke. There is also a reclusive,
mystic old sage, Masusaelili, who claims to be a survivor of the original voyage from Rome. Peters and Pym are treated hospitably, and Pym eventually falls in love with the Duke's niece, Lilima. The romantic interlude is interrupted when Lilima is abducted by her ex-lover Ahpilus. Ahpilus is one of a group of exiles who have been banished to the volcanic island at the pole for various offenses, mainly for engaging in forbidden sports or other physically dangerous activities. Ahpilus has gone mad as a result of his exile and unrequited love. Peters, Pym, and the Duke's son Diregus lead a rescue expedition and catch up with Ahpilus on the slopes of the 8-mile-high "Mount Olympus", below the crater lake near its summit. Ahpilus threatens to throw himself and Lilima to their deaths in a gorge, but Peters, in a feat of astounding physical prowess, leaps across the gorge and incapacitates Ahpilus by breaking his back. Returning to Hili-li, Pym and Lilima marry, but their happiness is short-lived. A rare meteorological event brings a period of intense cold and snow to Hili-li. Despite valiant efforts led by Pym, Peters, Diregus, and the returned Olympian exiles to fend off the cold, many of the Hili-lites succumb. Among these is Lilima. The grief-stricken Pym is allowed to depart, along with Peters. They leave in December 1829, are picked up by a large
schooner, and are deposited in
Montevideo, Uruguay in February 1830. There Pym and Peters part company. ==Bellevue vs. Belleville==