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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library-The Time Machine by H.G. Wells


37

some greyish animal had just rushed out of the chamber. I tried to
get to sleep again, but I felt restless and uncomfortable.

It was that dim grey hour when things are just creeping out of
darkness, when everything is colourless and clear cut, and yet
unreal. I got up, and went down into the great hall, and so out
upon the flagstones in front of the palace. I thought I would make a
virtue of necessity, and see the sunrise.

‘The moon was setting, and the dying moonlight and the first
pallor of dawn were mingled in a ghastly half-light. The bushes
were inky black, the ground a sombre grey, the sky colourless and
cheerless. And up the hill I thought I could see ghosts. There
several times, as I scanned the slope, I saw white figures. Twice I
fancied I saw a solitary white, ape-like creature running rather
quickly up the hill, and once near the ruins I saw a leash of them
carrying some dark body. They moved hastily. I did not see what
became of them. It seemed that they vanished among the bushes.
The dawn was still indistinct, you must understand. I was feeling
that chill, uncertain, early-morning feeling you may have known. I
doubted my eyes.

‘As the eastern sky grew brighter, and the light of the day came on
and its vivid colouring returned upon the world once more, I
scanned the view keenly.

But I saw no vestige of my white figures. They were mere creatures
of the halflight. “They must have been ghosts,” I said; “I wonder
whence they dated.” For a queer notion of Grant Allen’s came into
my head, and amused me. If each generation die and leave ghosts,
he argued, the world at last will get over-crowded with them. On
that theory they would have grown innumerable some Eight
Hundred Thousand Years hence, and it was no great wonder to see
four at once. But the jest was unsatisfying, and I was thinking of
these figures all the morning, until Weena’s rescue drove them out
of my head. I associated them in some indefinite way with the
white animal I had startled in my first passionate search for the
Time Machine. But Weena was a pleasant substitute. Yet all the
same, they were soon destined to take far deadlier possession of
my mind.

‘I think I have said how much hotter than our own was the weather
of this Golden Age. I cannot account for it. It may be that the sun
was hotter, or the earth nearer the sun. It is usual to assume that
the sun will go on cooling steadily in the future. But people,
unfamiliar with such speculations as those of the younger Darwin,
forget that the planets must ultimately fall back one by one into the
parent body. As these catastrophes occur, the sun will blaze with
renewed energy; and it may be that some inner planet had suffered
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