Epilogue
ONE CANNOT CHOOSE BUT wonder. Will he ever return?
It may be that he swept back into the past,1 and fell
among the blood-drinking, hairy savages of the Age of Unpolished
Stone; into the abysses of the Cretaceous Sea; or among the
grotesque saurians, the huge reptilian brutes of the Jurassic
times. He may even now—if I may use the phrase—be wandering on some
plesiosaurus-haunted Oolitic coral reef, or beside the lonely
saline lakes of the Triassic Age. Or did he go forward, into one of
the nearer ages, in which men are still men, but with the riddles
of our own time answered and its wearisome problems solved? Into
the manhood of the race: for I, for my own part, cannot think that
these latter days of weak experiment, fragmentary theory, and
mutual discord are indeed man’s culminating time! I say, for my own
part. He, I know—for the question had been discussed among us long
before the Time Machine was made—thought but cheerlessly of the
Advancement of Mankind, and saw in the growing pile of civilization
only a foolish heaping that must inevitably fall back upon and
destroy its makers in the end. If that is so, it remains for us to
live as though it were not so. But to me the future is still black
and blank—is a vast ignorance, lit at a few casualdm
places by the memory of his story. And I have by me, for my
comfort, two strange white flowers—shrivelled now, and brown and
flat and brittle—to witness that even when mind and strength had
gone, gratitude and a mutual tenderness2 still
lived on in the heart of man.