
The First Men in the Moon
あらすじ
The First Men in the Moon By H. G. Wells Narrated by Graham Scott and Andy Harrington. Travel to Moon was probably the first subject addressed in science fiction literature. The earliest surviving account of a lunar voyage is that described by the Second Century Greek writer Lucian of Samosata in his True History. In the Seventeenth Century, the astronomer Johannes Kepler, Anglican divine Francis Godwin, and natural philosopher Francis Bacon all composed imaginary accounts of lunar travel, and in 1835, Edgar Allan Poe wrote "The Unparalleled Adventure of One Hans Pfaall." In 1865, Jules Verne's presented his account of a trip to the Moon in "From the Earth to the Moon." Here, it was almost inevitable that this subject would attract the interest of H.G Wells in the batch of sci-fi novels that he wrote between 1895 and 1901. In Well's story, the vehicle is not a balloon, as in many of the previous accounts, but a sphere made of a mysterious substance, named "cavorite" after its inventor,