Monday, August 19, 2019
Time Machine :: essays research papers
 The Time Machine    Herbert George Wells was born in 1866 in Bromley, Kent, a few miles from   London, the son of a house-maid and gardener. Wells died in 1946, a   wealthy and famous author, having seen science fiction become a   recognized literary form and having seen the world realize some of   science fiction's fondest dreams and worst fears. Wells mother attempted   to find him a safe occupation as a draper or chemist.    Wells had a quick mind and a good memory that enabled him to pass   subjects by examination and win a scholarship to the Normal School of   Science, where he stayed for three years and, most importantly, was   exposed to biology under the famous Thomas H. Huxley. Wells went into   teaching and writing text books and articles for the magazines that were   of that time. In 1894 he began to write science-fiction stories. -James   Gunn    Wells vision of the future, with its troglodytic Morlocks descended from   the working class of his day and the pretty but helpless Eloi devolved   from the leisure class, may seem antiquated political theory. It emerged   out of the concern for social justice that drew Wells to the Fabian   Society and inspired much of his later writing, but time has not dimmed   the fascination of the situation and the horror of the imagery.    The Time Machine brought these concerns into his fiction. It, too,   involved the future, but a future imagined with greater realism and in   greater detail than earlier stories of the future. It also introduced,   for the first time in fiction, the notion of a machine for traveling in   time.    In this novel the Time Machine by H. G. Wells, starts with the time   traveler trying to persuade his guest's the theory of the fourth   dimension and even the invention. He tries to explain the fourth   dimension before he shows them the time machine so they don't think of   him as a magician. H. G. Wells uses details about the fourth dimension   to teach the reader the theory about it to capture your attention. Also   Wells character the time traveler says "Scientific people", "Know very   well that time is only a kind of space". In this quote he is clearly   using persuasion tactics. He tries to attack there consious by saying   that, scientific people know that this is only a kind of space. He says   this in hopes that they will believe what he says just because other     					    
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