Danish cover (2012 reprint) | |
| Author | Palle Huld |
|---|---|
| Translator | Eleanor Hard[1] |
| Cover artist | Axel Mathiesen |
| Language | Danish (translated to 11 languages) |
| Genre | Travel book |
| Published | 1928 |
| Publication place | Denmark |
Published in English | 1929 |
| Media type | |
| Pages | 178 (Danish original) |
A Boy Scout Around the World (Danish:Jorden Rundt i 44 dage, literally:Around the World in 44 Days) is a travel description published in October 1928[2] and written by DanishBoy Scout and later actorPalle Huld at the age of 15, following his travel around the world in spring 1928.[3][4]
His trip was sponsored by a Danishnewspaper and made on the occasion of the 100th birthday ofJules Verne, a French author of adventure andscience fiction.[n 1] Palle Huld was chosen after having answered a newspaper advertisement; applicants had to be boys,[n 2] 15 years old, able to manage in English and German and of good health.[3] Like the characters in Jules Verne’s 1873 novelAround the World in 80 days[n 3] he was only allowed to travel by land and sea, not by air. The travel (onfirst class) went from Denmark to Great Britain, across theAtlantic Ocean to Canada. From the American west coast he continued to Japan,China,Soviet Union, Poland,Germany and back to Denmark. He had to travel alone but was helped along the way by reporters of the newspaper, members of Danishembassies and local Boy Scouts.[3] The travel was followed by not only Danish newspapers but newspapers around the world and on his return toCopenhagen he was met by a crowd of 20,000 people.[7]
He travelled towards the west, which was the fastest but also the opposite direction of the one taken inAround the World in 80 Days. Unlike the novel, he had little problems in reaching departures.[6] In western Canada he metFirst Nations, who promised not to take hisscalp, though red scalps were at a premium.[3] He was impressed by the luxury of the Pacific Ocean liner; its restaurant was the size of the hall of a castle in his opinion and onboard he could play tennis and water polo. Around the world he was met by the press and he got increasingly better at handling them as the travel progressed. One question that gave him problems was about his taste in women; he told the journalist that he was too young to think of it.[3] He was met with generosity, many accessories for his travel such as shoes and a camera were given to him for free. He declined one offer: on board the Pacific liner he would not let a young American woman darn his socks. Later, when he visited the famous JapaneseAdmiral Togo, he had to take his shoes off and thereby reveal the holes in his socks, which made him regret not taking the offer.[3][8] Nevertheless, Japan was his favorite country since he found everything pretty.[3]
After his journey he was invited to, among others, Great Britain where he met withRobert Baden-Powell founder of the boyScout Movement and France where he laid flowers on the grave of Jules Verne.[3][5]
The book was translated into 11 languages and is said to have inspired BelgiancartoonistHergé to create theTintincomics.[3] The theory that Palle Huld should be the inspiration for Tintin goes back to 1988 where it was proposed by Tintin collector Stéphane Steeman in an article titledLes Amis d’Hergé. He found striking resemblances between the pictures of Palle Huld's memoires and Hergé's early drawings of Tintin.[2] He was backed byPhilippe Goddin, who found it likely that especially Tintin's staged reception atBrussels'north station in the guise of a 15-year-old Belgian Boy Scout,[9][10] following the 1930 publication ofTintin in the Land of the Soviets, was inspired by Palle Huld's reception in Copenhagen.[11] It has not been possible to verify these claims by the papers left by Hergé, and Palle Huld himself had not heard of them when interviewed in 2009 on Tintin's 80 birthday.[2]
Palle Huld died in 2010 at the age of 98 years. On what would have been his 100th birthday in 2012 the Danish version was reprinted in his honor.[5]
Also translated to:Hungarian, Italian andJapanese.[12]