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Mr. Blettsworthy on Rampole Island : ウィキペディア英語版
Mr. Blettsworthy on Rampole Island

''Mr. Blettsworthy on Rampole Island'' is a 1928 novel by H. G. Wells.
==Plot summary==
The protagonist of the novel, Arnold Blettsworthy, is the scion of a genteel family prominent "in the south and west of England."〔H.G. Wells, ''Mr. Blettsworthy on Rampole Island'' (New York: Doubleday, Doran, 1928), p. 3.〕 Blettsworthy's father, however, was an adventurer who married a woman from Madeira. Both his mother and his father die early, and the young Blettsworthy is raised in Cheltenham by an aunt and an uncle who is a liberal Anglican priest. A complacent Edwardian worldview that an Oxford education did nothing to shake is undermined when Blettsworthy is betrayed in business and in love by his best friend, Graves, and his mistress, Olive Slaughter. A family solicitor and counselor named Ferndyke advises him to travel in order to recover from disillusionment so severe that it has threatened his sanity. Arnold Blettsworthy follows his advice and embarks for Pernambuco and Rio de Janeiro on a tramp steamer, the ''Golden Lion''. But the captain and crew take a disliking to him, and when the vessel founders off the coast of Brazil there is a mutiny that results in the captain shutting Blettsworthy in a cabin and leaving him to perish with the ship.
Blettsworthy survives only by being captured by cannibals who take him to Rampole Island. There he becomes the "sacred lunatic" of a tribe living in neolithic conditions on an island where metgatheria are still subsisting. The most forward-thinking of the sages who govern the tribe, Chit, makes strategic use of Blettsworthy and his advanced ideas, but when he falls in love with a woman coveted by the tribe's military chief Ardam, he becomes an outcast. He seems about to die in the struggle that results, but awakens to find that he has really been in New York City in the care of Rowena (cf. Wena) and Dr. Minchett (cf. Chit), a psychoanalyst. He learns that he has lived through an extended hallucinatory psychotic episode. World War I has broken out in the meantime, and having recovered his sanity, Blettsworthy believes that the best thing for him to do is to enlist in the British Army as a private. He survives being wounded in combat, but loses a leg. While recovering he meets Graves again, whom he forgives and helps become a success in "the world of post-war marketing."〔H.G. Wells, ''Mr. Blettsworthy on Rampole Island'' (New York: Doubleday, Doran, 1928), p. 333.〕 At the end of the novel, Blettsworthy, "barely forty," is encouraged by Graves to devote the rest of his life to "the general advance of mankind."〔H.G. Wells, ''Mr. Blettsworthy on Rampole Island'' (New York: Doubleday, Doran, 1928), p. 346.〕

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