ntured to call monstrous conceit we can surely say that we are the
highest thing in nature."
"The highest of which we have cognizance."
"That, sir, goes without saying."
"Think of all the millions and possibly billions of years that the earth
swung empty through space--or, if not empty, at least without a sign or
thought of the human race. Think of it, washed by the rain and scorched
by the sun and swept by the wind for those unnumbered ages. Man only
came into being yesterday so far as geological times goes. Why, then,
should it be taken for granted that all this stupendous preparation was
for his benefit?"
"For whose then--or for what?"
Summerlee shrugged his shoulders.
"How can we tell? For some reason altogether beyond our conception--and
man may have been a mere accident, a by-product evolved in the process.
It is as if the scum upon the surface of the ocean imagined that the
ocean was created in order to produce and sustain it or a mouse in a
cathedral thought that the building was its own proper ordained
residence."
I have jotted down the very words of their argument, but now it
degenerates into a mere noisy wrangle with much polysyllabic scientific
jargon upon each side. It is no doubt a privilege to hear two such
brains discuss the highest questions; but as they are in perpetual
disagreement, plain folk like Lord John and I get little that is positive
from the exhibition. They neutralize each other and we are left as they
found us. Now the hubbub has ceased, and Summerlee is coiled up in his
chair, while Challenger, still fingering the screws of his microscope, is
keeping up a continual low, deep, inarticulate growl like the sea after a
storm. Lord John comes over to me, and we look out together into the
night.
There is a pale new moon--the last moon that human eyes will ever rest
upon--and the stars are most brilliant. Even in the clear plateau air of
South America I have never seen them brighter. Possibly this etheric
change has some effect upon light. The funeral pyre of Brighton is still
blazing, and there is a very distant patch of scarlet in the western sky,
which may mean trouble at Arundel or Chichester, possibly even at
Portsmouth. I sit and muse and make an occasional note. There is a
sweet melancholy in the air. Youth and beauty and chivalry and love--is
this to be the end of it all? The starlit earth looks a dreamland of
gentle peace. Who would imagine it as the ter
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