Back to Methuselah

Back to Methuselah

by George Bernard Shaw

19 chapters12h 34mEnglish1921

About this book

In this late work, Shaw examines many contemporary issues under the broad rubric of evolution and then illustrates his opinions in five brief plays set in widely separated historical periods, beginning in the Garden of Eden and ending in the year 31,920 A.D. The unifying principle in this historical survey is the notion that the survival of humankind depends on increasing our lifespan to at least 300 years, a period permitting us to grow to maturity. The ultimate question that the mature cast of characters grapple with is what is to be the next significant step in evolution. Mere longevity simply enables them to ask this question. We see in the final play the beginning of the answer: first, escape from the social experiment, which began with Cain, a long and toilsome journey towards anarchy, and then gradual liberation from the grossness of physical imperfection and at last from bondage to flesh itself into immortality. What might lie beyond that, the author leaves to the imagination. - Summary by Thomas A. Copeland

Chapters (19)

1Section 1
1988
2Section 2
1945
3Section 3
2103
4Section 4
1846
5Section 5
2081
6Section 6
1866
7Section 7
2403
8Section 8
2199
9Section 9
3333
10Section 10
3394
11Section 11
2911
12Section 12
2880
13Section 13
2500
14Section 14
2354
15Section 15
2582
16Section 16
1144
17Section 17
2883
18Section 18
2489
19Section 19
2376

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