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    Mr Belloc Objects to

    Mr Belloc Objects to "The Outline of History"

    by H. G. Wells


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      BN ID: 2940013691216
    • Publisher: WDS Publishing
    • Publication date: 01/17/2012
    • Sold by: Barnes & Noble
    • Format: eBook
    • File size: 57 KB

    Social philosopher, utopian, novelist, and "father" of science fiction and science fantasy, Herbert George Wells was born on September 21, 1866, in Bromley, Kent. His father was a poor businessman, and young Bertie's mother had to work as a lady's maid. Living "below stairs" with his mother at an estate called Uppark, Bertie would sneak into the grand library to read Plato, Swift, and Voltaire, authors who deeply influenced his later works. He shoed literary and artistic talent in his early stories and paintings, but the family had limited means, and when he was fourteen years old, Bertie was sent as an apprentice to a dealer in cloth and dry goods, work he disliked.

    He held jobs in other trades before winning a scholarship to study biology at the Normal School of Science in London. The eminent biologist T. H. Huxley, a friend and proponent of Darwin, was his teacher; about him Wells later said, "I believed then he was the greatest man I was ever likely to meet." Under Huxley's influence, Wells learned the science that would inspire many of his creative works and cultivated the skepticism about the likelihood of human progress that would infuse his writing.

    Teaching, textbook writing, and journalism occupied Wells until 1895, when he made his literary debut with the now-legendary novel The Time Machine, which was followed before the end of the century by The Island of Dr. Moreau, The Invisible Man, and The War of the Worlds, books that established him as a major writer. Fiercely critical of Victorian mores, he published voluminously, in fiction and nonfiction, on the subject of politics and social philosophy. Biological evolution does not ensure moral progress, as Wells would repeat throughout his life, during which he witnessed two world wars and the debasement of science for military and political ends.

    In addition to social commentary presented in the guise of science fiction, Wells authored comic novels like Love and Mrs. Lewisham, Kipps, and The History of Mister Polly that are Dickensian in their scope and feeling, and a feminist novel, Ann Veronica. He wrote specific social commentary in The New Machiavelli, an attack on the socialist Fabian Society, which he had joined and then rejected, and literary parody (of Henry James) in Boon. He wrote textbooks of biology, and his massive The Outline of History was a major international bestseller.

    By the time Wells reached middle age, he was admired around the world, and he used his fame to promote his utopian vision, warning that the future promised "Knowledge or extinction." He met with such preeminent political figures as Lenin, Roosevelt, and Stalin, and continued to publish, travel, and educate during his final years. Herbert George Wells died in London on August 13, 1946.

    Author biography from the Barnes & Noble Classics edition of The War of the Worlds.

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    Brief Biography

    Date of Birth:
    September 21, 1866
    Date of Death:
    August 13, 1946
    Place of Birth:
    Bromley, Kent, England
    Place of Death:
    London, England
    Education:
    Normal School of Science, London, England

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    I am the least controversial of men. Public disputations have rarely
    attracted me. For years I have failed to respond to Mr. Henry Arthur
    Jones, who long ago invented a set of opinions for me and invited me to
    defend them with an enviable persistence and vigour. Occasionally I may
    have corrected some too gross public mis-statement about me--too often
    I fear with the acerbity of the inexperienced. But now, in my sixtieth
    year, I find myself drawn rather powerfully into a disputation with Mr.
    Hilaire Belloc. I bring an unskilled pen to the task.

    I am responsible for an Outline of History which has had a certain
    vogue. I will assume that it is known by name to the reader. It is a
    careful summary of man's knowledge of past time. It has recently been
    re-issued with considerable additions in an illustrated form, and Mr.
    Belloc has made a great attack upon it. He declares that I am violently
    antagonistic to the Catholic Church, an accusation I deny very
    earnestly, and he has produced a "Companion" to this Outline of mine,
    following up the periodical issue, part by part, in the Universe of
    London, in the Catholic Bulletin of St. Paul, Minnesota, in the Southern
    Cross of Cape Colony, and possibly elsewhere, in which my alleged
    errors are exposed and confuted.

    In the enthusiasm of advertisement before the "Companion" began to
    appear, these newspapers announced a work that would put Mr. Belloc
    among the great classical Catholic apologists, but I should imagine that
    this was before the completed manuscript of Mr. Belloc's work had come
    to hand, and I will not hold Catholics at large responsible for all Mr.
    Belloc says and does.

    It is with this Companion to the Outline of History that I am to deal
    here. It raises a great number of very interesting questions, and there
    is no need to discuss the validity of the charge of Heresy that is
    levelled against me personally. I will merely note that I am conscious
    of no animus against Catholicism, and that in my Outline I accept the
    gospels as historical documents of primary value, defend Christianity
    against various aspersions of Gibbon's, and insist very strongly upon
    the role of the Church in preserving learning in Europe, consolidating
    Christendom, and extending knowledge from a small privileged class to
    the whole community. I do not profess to be a Christian. I am as little
    disposed to take sides between a Roman Catholic and a Protestant (Mr.
    Belloc will protest against that "Roman," but he must forgive it; I
    know no other way of distinguishing between his Church and Catholics not
    in communion with it) as I am to define the difference between a
    pterodactyl and a bird.

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