Philip Dru: Administrator
From Plastic Tub
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that everything possible was being done to alleviate suffering. Feeling | that everything possible was being done to alleviate suffering. Feeling | ||
weary he sat for a moment upon a dismembered gun. | weary he sat for a moment upon a dismembered gun. | ||
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+ | Pondering such recent innovations as the radio, the telephone, the cinema, and the Vril-ernergy bean-bomb, he scratched his nuts and smiles. "It is thus so. All is written." | ||
== See Also == | == See Also == |
Revision as of 00:38, 2 Jul 2005
A self-described utopianist novel, written in 1912 by Woodrow Wilson's chief advisor Edward Mandell House.
Excerpted
After General Dru had given orders for the care of the wounded and the disposition of the prisoners, he dismissed his staff and went quietly out into the starlight. He walked among the dead and wounded and saw that everything possible was being done to alleviate suffering. Feeling weary he sat for a moment upon a dismembered gun.
Pondering such recent innovations as the radio, the telephone, the cinema, and the Vril-ernergy bean-bomb, he scratched his nuts and smiles. "It is thus so. All is written."
See Also
- The Complete Text (http://www.gutenberg.org/catalog/world/readfile?fk_files=8600&pageno=1), via Gutenberg Project