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All Aboard for Ararat : ウィキペディア英語版
All Aboard for Ararat

''All Aboard for Ararat'' is a 1940 allegorical novella by H. G. Wells that tells a modernized version of the story of Noah and the Flood. Wells was 74 when it was published, and it is the last of his utopian writings.〔Norman and Jeanne Mackenzie, ''H.G. Wells: A Biography'' (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1973), p. 428.〕
==Plot summary==
God Almighty pays a visit to Noah Lammock, a well-known author whom the outbreak of war has convinced that "madness had taken complete possession of the earth."〔H.G. Wells, ''All Aboard for Ararat'' (New York: Alliance Book Corporation, 1941), p. 9.〕 At first God is thought to be a mental patient from a nearby asylum, but his dignified air earns him a reception in the writer's study. God explains that he has been "surprised" and "disappointed" by humanity, and tells Noah Lammock: "What I propose is that you should construct, with my help and under my instruction, an Ark."〔H.G. Wells, ''All Aboard for Ararat'' (New York: Alliance Book Corporation, 1941), p. 25.〕
Lammock is intrigued, but first, since God tells him that the Bible is "wonderfully trustworthy" and possesses "substantial truth," demands an accounting for his decision to destroy the Tower of Babel.〔H.G. Wells, ''All Aboard for Ararat'' (New York: Alliance Book Corporation, 1941), p. 22.〕 God has already explained that the creation of light entailed as well the creation of "a shadow," and "since I had come into our Universe as a Person, it is evident that my shadow also had to be a Person."〔H.G. Wells, ''All Aboard for Ararat'' (New York: Alliance Book Corporation, 1941), p. 19.〕 Now God explains that he and Satan panicked at the prospect of "Man keeping together on the plain of Shinar in one world state, working together, building up and up," and "together . . . acted in such haste that frankly the covenant with Noah and all that was completely overlooked."〔H.G. Wells, ''All Aboard for Ararat'' (New York: Alliance Book Corporation, 1941), p. 43.〕 God is repentant, however, and tells Lammock that still wants to "bring Adam into free, expanding fellowship with myself -- that old original idea."〔H.G. Wells, ''All Aboard for Ararat'' (New York: Alliance Book Corporation, 1941), p.44.〕 Lammock takes pity, in part because he notices the deity is "quivering on the very verge of non-existence."〔H.G. Wells, ''All Aboard for Ararat'' (New York: Alliance Book Corporation, 1941), p. 45.〕
God returns to Noah Lammock a week later, and, after some literary chit-chat that reveals that God is under the misapprehension that Noah Lammock is the author of The Time Machine The Work, Wealth and Happiness of Mankind, and World Brain, the two discuss the plan for the Ark. God is enthused about the potential of microphotography, having met Kenneth Mees, but Lammock demands to know: are they to "reinstate or do we start afresh?"〔H.G. Wells, ''All Aboard for Ararat'' (New York: Alliance Book Corporation, 1941), p. 62.〕 Lammock believes it is necessary "to begin over again," because the "primary danger" to the new world is "that the élite will become a self-conscious, self-protective organisation within the State."〔H.G. Wells, ''All Aboard for Ararat'' (New York: Alliance Book Corporation, 1941), p. 75.〕 "()t is a new religion and a new manner of life I am obliged to stand for."〔H.G. Wells, ''All Aboard for Ararat'' (New York: Alliance Book Corporation, 1941), p. 76.〕 "The core of the new world must be (listen to the words!) Atheist, Creative, Psycho-synthetic," he declares, but God can come along as "an inspiring delusion."〔H.G. Wells, ''All Aboard for Ararat'' (New York: Alliance Book Corporation, 1941), p. 79.〕
Choosing a crew for the Ark is an enormous problem because no one Lammock knows seems to be equal to the task, but before he has resolved it he awakens to discover that he is already in the cabin of the Ark, which is "thirty days out."〔H.G. Wells, ''All Aboard for Ararat'' (New York: Alliance Book Corporation, 1941), p. 93.〕 An excerpt from the ship's log explains that a leak has delayed its landing, and that Jonah, a stowaway, has caused no end of problems. The novella ends inconclusively ("The final pages of this story do not appear to be forthcoming"〔H.G. Wells, ''All Aboard for Ararat'' (New York: Alliance Book Corporation, 1941), p. 103.〕) with a further conversation between God and Noah Lammock. They agree that they "will make Ararat," and God says, "On the whole, I am not sorry I created you."〔H.G. Wells, ''All Aboard for Ararat'' (New York: Alliance Book Corporation, 1941), p. 101.〕 As for Noah, he declares: "No man is beaten until he knows and admits he is beaten, and that I will never know nor admit."〔H.G. Wells, ''All Aboard for Ararat'' (New York: Alliance Book Corporation, 1941), p. 102.〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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