Convergent Evolution in Post-Holocaust SF
Dedicated to Shoshana Milgram
The
north and the west and the south are good hunting ground, but it is forbidden
to go east. It is forbidden to go to any of the Dead Places except to search
for metal and then he who touches the metal must be a priest or the son of a
priest. Afterwards, both the man and the metal must be purified. These are the
rules and the laws; they are well made. It is forbidden to cross the great
river and look upon the place that was the Place of the Gods -- this is most
strictly forbidden. We do not even say its name though we know its name. It is
there that spirits live, and demons -- it is there that there are the ashes of
the Great Burning. These things are forbidden -- they have been forbidden since
the beginning of time.[1]
It’s a familiar passage from a familiar story, Stephen
Vincent Benét’s “By the Waters of Babylon” (1937). First published in the Saturday Evening Post, as “The Place of
the Gods” (Benét changed its title for his 1937 collection, Thirteen O’Clock.), it was reprinted as
the lead story in The Pocket Book of
Science Fiction (1943), the very first sf anthology, edited by Donald A.
Wollheim – and it has since been a seminal influence on what is generally
called post-holocaust sf. “By the Waters of Babylon” was not the first story of
its kind, yet while it can easily be seen as a deliberate contribution to a
literary tradition we know now that it was not
inspired by any previous examples.
The history of science fiction is one of not only
invention but reinvention. Most
readers today take the tale of the future, seemingly addressed to readers of
the future, for granted. But it was not always so. As
German sf scholar Franz Rottensteiner puts it, “Before the establishment of a
genre, there were only writers creating in isolation, and it was mostly by
chance when they happened to know what others did before them in a similar
vein.”[2]
Examples of futuristic sf stories (as
opposed to plotless utopias) from before “scientific fiction” or the
“scientific romance” was recognized as a genre include Julius von Voss’ Ini (1810) in Germany, Jane Webb’s The Mummy (1827) in England, Felix
Bodin’s The Novel of the Future
(1834) in France, Vilhelm Bergsøe’s “Flying Fish Prometheus” (1870) in Denmark and Mor Jokai’s A Novel of the Next Century (1872-74) in Hungary. There is no
indication that the authors of the later works knew of the earlier ones;
indeed, Jokai made a point of contrasting his work with “state novels” (utopias
set on imaginary islands or other worlds); he referenced Etienne Cabet’s Journey to Icaria (1840), and believed
that he was inventing a new kind of narrative:
Other
novels are called to present a tale, born only of the imagination, in a way
that convinces the reader that it could really have happened; this novel will
present a historical event that has not “yet” happened, and will grapple with
the difficult task, to present the facts and the characters, the future age’s
inner and outer world, in such a way so as to make the reader say: this might
yet happen!
There will not be in this
novel utopian states, Icarian people; its scenes will not be on yet to be
discovered islands; the story, throughout, takes place in the known world, and
develops from situations that exist today, from notions that impact the world
today.[3]
Similarly, there were examples of alternate
history long before sf was recognized as a genre, notably Louis Geoffroy’s Napoleon
and the Conquest of the World, 1812-32 (1836, revised 1841 as Apocryphal Napoleon). While there were a
number of examples, in English as well as French, they were probably unknown to
Sir John Squire, whose If It Had Happened
Otherwise (1931) was a collection of speculative essays – among them
Winston Churchill’s “If Lee Had Not Won the Battle of Gettysburg,” a
tongue-in-cheek piece supposedly composed in an alternate history where the
South won the Civil War. That probably inspired Ward Moore’s Bring the Jubilee (1953). Alternate
outcomes of the Civil War still figure in alternate history today.
But Moore’s novel also had a time
traveler changing history, an idea that dates back to Edward Everett Hale’s
“Hands Off” (1881), in which the protagonist rescues the Biblical Joseph from
slavery – Egypt is conquered by barbarians after a famine, Judaism dies out,
and Greek and Roman civilization never develop. Of course, the Bible isn’t real
history; neither is the Arthurian mythology of Thomas Malory exploited in Mark
Twain’s classic A Connecticut Yankee in
King Arthur’s Court (1889). It wasn’t until L. Sprague de Camp’s Lest Darkness Fall (1939) that the more
realistic subgenre of time travel and alternate history took hold in America,
although there had been previous examples in Europe – notably Théo Varlet and
André Blandin’s La Belle Valence
(1923) in France, translated in 2012 as Timeslip
Troopers; and Antoni Slonimski’s The
Time Torpedo (1924) in Poland. As in the case of 19th Century
tales of the future, it is doubtful that the early 20th Century
authors of time travel/alternate history were aware of each other.
Yet the invention and reinvention of the same
ideas in alternate history suggests a cultural parallel to the kind of
convergent evolution that has produced similar bodyplans in marsupial and
placental mammals, or in fish and aquatic mammals. It seems natural for a
culture in which theories of history have taken hold for writers to speculate
about how history might have gone otherwise – and why. And there likewise seems
to be something in the cultural environment that has encouraged post-holocaust
fiction – and in particular, post-holocaust quest
fiction like “By the Waters of Babylon.” There were a number of earlier
examples, some of them uncannily similar to Benét’s story, and yet Benét wasn’t
familiar with any of them. In a letter to one Margaret Widdemer, who had been
inspired to write a post-holocaust story of her own, he explained his own
inspiration thusly:
I
don’t see how that particular idea can help being at the back of a lot of our
minds these days—it has suddenly come upon us that the works may blow up. I
suppose Wells was the first to say it in our time—though we must go back to
Macaulay’s brooding on the ruins of London Bridge.[4]
Only, Thomas Babington Macaulay wasn’t thinking
about some cataclysmic end to our civilization, the basis of stories like
Benét’s. Rather, in a piece for the Edinburgh
Review on a history of the Papacy by Leopold Ranke (1840), he remarked that
the Catholic Church had been the only institution to outlast Roman
civilization: “And she may still exist in undiminished vigour when some
traveller from New Zealand shall, in the midst of a vast solitude, take his
stand on a broken arch of London Bridge to sketch the ruins of St. Paul’s.”[5]
Perhaps he was also thinking of Edward Gibbon’s Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire (1776-89), the seminal work
which reminded us that all past civilizations have been transient, and that
ours too could be.
Proto-science fiction about the end of the world
itself, or at least of civilization, dates back to Jean-Baptist Cousin de
Granville’s The Last Man (1805), a
curious book that juxtaposes religious and secular visions. God has decided it
is time to end it all, and the last man and last woman – Omegar and Siberia –
have to be persuaded to accept His plan, with a little help from Adam (recalled
from the Gates of Hell for that purpose). Yet there is no mention of the Second
Coming of Christ or other signs from the Book of Revelation that obsess
Millennialist Christians, and there are also references to the threats of
deforestation and the exhaustion of natural resources.
Yet perhaps it was the very syncretic nature of
the narrative that gave The Last Man
its appeal to other writers (if not to the general public), and may thus have
inspired Mary Shelley’s The Last Man
(1826) in the short run as well as Camille Flammarion’s Omega: The Last Days of the
World (1894) in the long run.
French sf
historians Jean-Marc and Randy Lofficier cite a number of transitional works
inspired by Grainville. Auguste-Françoise Creuzé de Lesser, who published an expanded
version of The Last Man (1831), added
aerial cities and even a failed attempt to colonize another planet. Other
variations cited by the Lofficiers include Paulin Gagne’s The Unieide, or the Woman Messiah (1858) and his wife Elise’s Omegar, or the Last Man (1859).[6]
Shelley’s The
Last Man imagines a global plague wiping out the human race in a utopian
22nd Century, perhaps as punishment for collective human hubris as opposed to
the individual variety in her Frankenstein
(1818). M.P. Shiel’s The Purple Cloud
(1901) plays a variation of that scenario. A polar explorer – who has been told
that seeking the North Pole is against God’s will (an idea suggested in Frankenstein), but also believes that
his life has been guided by supernatural forces, is the only survivor the
plague – except for one woman who has become absorbed in the Bible and urges
him to trust in God. At the end, it seems, they are destined to be the new Adam
and Eve.
Purely secular disaster stories, as Benét noted
to Widdemer, were pioneered by H.G. Wells – “The Star” (1897), in which the
gravitational force of a passing rogue star devastates our planet, was the
first modern cosmic disaster tale. There had already been any number of future
war stories, and Wells contributed to them with The War in the Air (1908), in which civilization is brought low.
But there were also secular versions of other disaster scenarios, notably Jack
London’s The Scarlet Plague (1912).
Told 60 years later by one of the survivors, it verges on the post-holocaust
story. The same can be said of such later works as George R. Stewart’s Earth Abides (1949; a plague figures
again) and Pat Frank’s Alas, Babylon
(1959, nuclear war). In both novels, those who lived through the catastrophe
are still alive at the end, and carry the weight of the story.
In “By the Waters of Babylon,” by contrast,
centuries have passed since the fall of civilization, and the past has become a
matter of legend. Finding out about the past and what it means to the present
is a matter of a quest by the hero. In Benét’s story, that quest grows out of a
coming-of-age journey that is part of the hero’s own culture:
If the hunters think we do all things by chants and
spells, they may believe so—it does not hurt them. I was taught how to read in
the old books and how to make the old writings—that was hard and took a long
time. My knowledge made me happy—it was like a fire in my heart. Most of all, I
liked to hear of the Old Days and the stories of the gods. I asked myself many
questions that I could not answer, but it was good to ask them. At night, I
would lie awake and listen to the wind—it seemed to me that it was the voice of
the gods as they flew through the air.
We are not ignorant like the Forest People—our women
spin wool on the wheel, our priests wear a white robe. We do not eat grubs from
the trees, we have not forgotten the old writings, although they are hard to
understand. Nevertheless, my knowledge and my lack of knowledge burned in me—I
wished to know more. When I was a man at last, I came to my father and said,
“It is time for me to go on my journey. Give me your leave.”
He looked at me for a long time, stroking his beard,
then he said at last, “Yes. It is time.” That night, in the house of the
priesthood, I asked for and received purification. My body hurt but my spirit
was a cool stone. It was my father himself who questioned me about my dreams.
He bade me look into the smoke of the fire and see—I
saw and told what I saw. It was what I have always seen—a river, and, beyond
it, a great Dead Place and in it the gods walking. I have always thought about
that. His eyes were stern when I told him he was no longer my father but a
priest. He said, “This is a strong dream.”
“It
is mine,” I said, while the smoke waved and my head felt light. They were singing
the Star song in the outer chamber and it was like the buzzing of bees in my
head.[7]
Stanley
G. Weinbaum’s “Dawn of Flame” (1936), which first appeared in a small press
memorial volume the year after Weinbaum’s death, couldn’t possibly have been
known to Benét, and yet it opens with the hero, Hull Tarvish, leaving home on a
quest of his own in a future where the past is similarly a place of legend:
He passed the place where the great steel
road of the Ancients had been, now only two rusty streaks and a row of decayed
logs. Beside it was the mossy heap of stones that had been an ancient structure
in the days before the Dark Centuries, when Ozarky had been a part of the old
state of M’souri. The mountain people still sought out the place for squared
stones to use in building, but the tough metal of the steel road itself was too
stubborn for their use, and the rails had rusted quietly these three hundred
years.
That much Hull Tarvish knew, for they were
things still spoken of at night around the fireplace. They had been mighty
sorcerers, those Ancients; their steel roads went everywhere, and everywhere
were the ruins of their towns, built, it was said, by a magic that lifted
weights. Down in the valley, he knew, men were still seeking that magic; once a
rider had stayed by night at the Tarvish home, a little man who said that in
the far south the secret had been found, but nobody ever heard any more of it.
So Hull whistled to himself, shifted the
rag bag on his shoulder, set his bow more comfortably on his mighty back, and
trudged on. That was why he himself was seeking the valley; he wanted to see
what the world was like. He had been always a restless sort, not at all like
the other six Tarvish sons, nor like the three Tarvish daughters. They were
true mountainies, the sons great hunters, and the daughters stolid and
industrious. Not Hull, however; he was neither lazy like his brothers nor
stolid like his sisters, but restless, curious, dreamy. So he whistled his way
into the world, and was happy.[8]
Benét’s
hero learns about the war that brought down civilization, and contrasts it with
the kind of petty wars his people know:
Then
I saw their fate come upon them and that was terrible past speech. It came upon
them as they walked the streets of their city. I have been in the fights with
the Forest People—I have seen men die. But this was not like that. When gods
war with gods, they use weapons we do not know. It was fire falling out of the
sky and a mist that poisoned. It was the time of the Great Burning and the Destruction.
They ran about like ants in the streets of their city—poor gods, poor gods!
Then the towers began to fall. A few escaped—yes, a few. The legends tell it.
But, even after the city had become a Dead Place, for many years the poison was
still in the ground. I saw it happen, I saw the last of them die. It was
darkness over the broken city and I wept.[9]
It
is the same in “Dawn of Flame,” where the scholar Einar Olin tells Tarvish
about the rival powers of the old world:
“These were warlike nations, so fond of battle that they
had to write many books about the horrors of war to keep themselves at peace,
but they always failed. During the time they called their twentieth century
there was a whole series of wars, not such little quarrels as we have so often
between our city-states, nor even such as that between the Memphis League and
the Empire, five years ago. Their wars spread like storm clouds around the
world, and were fought between millions of men with unimaginable weapons that
flung destruction a hundred miles, and with ships on the seas, and with gases.”[10]
Where did this kind of story begin? With Richard
Jefferies (1849-87), a British naturalist, journalist and novelist whose After London; Or, Wild England (1885)
created the model for what we now know as post-holocaust sf, even if Benét and
others had to recreate the same model in decades to come. Jefferies was already
interested in disaster sf; about 1875, he had begun a tale called “The Great
Snow,” in which London is doomed by a super blizzard. But nothing ever came of
it. A lot came of After London. It
begins with an account by some later historian called “The Relapse into
Barbarism;” Jefferies gets into the actual story with “Wild England.”
Centuries
after most or at least much of the rest of the world has succumbed to a
combination of industrial pollution and a near pass by a rogue planet – at
least, nothing has been heard from the rest of the world – England has become a
patchwork of petty principalities in which feudal lords hold sway over illiterate
serfs.
Advanced
technology has vanished, and forests have reclaimed the countryside. Travel is
so difficult that even educated men have only a vague idea what is happening
more than a few dozen miles from home. Wars are fought with swords and bows and
arrows; knowledge of gunpowder is as lost as that of steam and electricity. After
London establishes the pattern, not only in its setting but
in its story; for, as even as in “By the Waters of Babylon” and “Dawn of
Flame,” it is the quest of an individual to discover, if he can, what value
there is in civilization.
Like so
many of his later literary counterparts, Felix Aquila is a lone, discontented
youth who, chafing at the restrictions of a static society, sets off to seek
his fortune elsewhere. Although he accomplishes nothing more than to
reintroduce the catapult to warfare and to win the allegiance of a shepherd
society, it is implied that his long-term influence will be considerable.
He convened an assembly of the chief men
of the nearest tribes, and addressed them in the circular fort. He asked them
if they could place sufficient confidence in him to assist him in carrying out
certain plans, although he should not be able to altogether disclose the object
he had in view.
They replied as one man that they had
perfect confidence in him, and would implicitly obey.
He then said that the first thing he
wished was the clearing of the land by the river in order that he might erect a
fortified dwelling suitable to his position as their Leader in war. Next he
desired their permission to leave them for two months, at the end of which he
would return. He could not at that time explain the reasons, but until his
journey had been made he could not finally settle among them.
[That journey has to do with a woman named
Aurora he plans to marry.]
To this announcement they listened in
profound silence. It was evident that they disliked him leaving them, yet did
not wish to seem distrustful by expressing the feeling.
Thirdly, he continued, he wanted them to
clear a path through the forest, commencing at Anker’s Gate and proceeding
exactly west. The track to be thirty yards wide in order that the undergrowth
might not encroach upon it, and to be carried on straight to the westward until
his return. The distance to which this path was cleared he should take as the
measure of their loyalty to him.
They immediately promised to fulfil this
desire, but added that there was no necessity to wait till he left them, it
should be commenced the very next morning. To his reiterated request for leave
of absence they preserved an ominous silence, and as he had no more to say, the
assembly then broke up.[11]
The
first part of After London, because
it is the first future history account of its kind, it is akin to what would
now be called an information dump. But while it sets the stage by going into
great detail about the breakdown of society after the catastrophe, it also
creates the atmosphere for the story
to follow. Below are some extracts that relate to the fields and forests,
wildlife and former domestic animals, and, of course, both the handiworks and
social order of humanity:
The old men say their fathers told them that soon
after the fields were left to themselves a change began to be visible. It
became green everywhere in the first spring, after London ended, so that all
the country looked alike.
The
meadows were green, and so was the rising wheat which had been sown, but which
neither had nor would receive any further care. Such arable fields as had not
been sown, but where the last stubble had been ploughed up, were overrun with
couch-grass, and where the short stubble had not been ploughed, the weeds hid
it. So that there was no place which was not more or less green; the footpaths
were the greenest of all, for such is the nature of grass where it has once
been trodden on, and by-and-by, as the summer came on, the former roads were
thinly covered with the grass that had spread out from the margin.[12]
* * *
Footpaths
were concealed by the second year, but roads could be traced, though as green
as the sward, and were still the best for walking, because the tangled wheat
and weeds, and, in the meadows, the long grass, caught the feet of those who
tried to pass through. Year by year the original crops of wheat, barley, oats,
and beans asserted their presence by shooting up, but in gradually diminished
force, as nettles and coarser plants, such as the wild parsnips, spread out
into the fields from the ditches and choked them.[13]
*
* *
By
the thirtieth year there was not one single open place, the hills only
excepted, where a man could walk, unless he followed the tracks of wild
creatures or cut himself a path. The ditches, of course, had long since become
full of leaves and dead branches, so that the water which should have run off
down them stagnated, and presently spread out into the hollow places and by the
corner of what had once been fields, forming marshes where the horsetails,
flags, and sedges hid the water.[14]
*
* *
Thus,
too, the sites of many villages and towns that anciently existed along the
rivers, or on the lower lands adjoining, were concealed by the water and the
mud it brought with it. The sedges and reeds that arose completed the work and
left nothing visible, so that the mighty buildings of olden days were by these
means utterly buried. And, as has been proved by those who have dug for
treasures, in our time the very foundations are deep beneath the earth, and not
to be got at for the water that oozes into the shafts that they have tried to
sink through the sand and mud banks.[15]
*
* *
In
the first years after the fields were left to themselves, the fallen and
over-ripe corn crops became the resort of innumerable mice. They swarmed to an
incredible degree, not only devouring the grain upon the straw that had never
been cut, but clearing out every single ear in the wheat-ricks that were
standing about the country. Nothing remained in these ricks but straw, pierced
with tunnels and runs, the home and breeding-place of mice, which thence poured
forth into the fields. Such grain as had been left in barns and granaries, in
mills, and in warehouses of the deserted towns, disappeared in the same manner.[16]
*
* *
When the ancients departed, great numbers of their
cattle perished. It was not so much the want of food as the inability to endure
exposure that caused their death; a few winters are related to have so reduced
them that they died by hundreds, many mangled by dogs. The hardiest that
remained became perfectly wild, and the wood cattle are now more difficult to
approach than deer.
There are two kinds, the white and the black. The
white (sometimes dun) are believed to be the survivors of the domestic
roan-and-white, for the cattle in our enclosures at the present day are of that
colour. The black are smaller, and are doubtless little changed from their
state in the olden times, except that they are wild. These latter are timid,
unless accompanied by a calf, and are rarely known to turn upon their pursuers.
But the white are fierce at all times; they will not, indeed, attack man, but
will scarcely run from him, and it is not always safe to cross their haunts.
The
bulls are savage beyond measure at certain seasons of the year. If they see men
at a distance, they retire; if they come unexpectedly face to face, they
attack. This characteristic enables those who travel through districts known to
be haunted by white cattle to provide against an encounter, for, by
occasionally blowing a horn, the herd that may be in the vicinity is dispersed.
There are not often more than twenty in a herd. The hides of the dun are highly
prized, both for their intrinsic value, and as proofs of skill and courage, so
much so that you shall hardly buy a skin for all the money you may offer; and
the horns are likewise trophies. The white or dun bull is the monarch of our forests.[17]
*
* *
So far as this, all that I have stated has been clear,
and there can be no doubt that what has been thus handed down from mouth to
mouth is for the most part correct. When I pass from trees and animals to men,
however, the thing is different, for nothing is certain and everything
confused. None of the accounts agree, nor can they be altogether reconciled
with present facts or with reasonable supposition; yet it is not so long since
but a few memories, added one to the other, can bridge the time, and, though
not many, there are some written notes still to be found. I must attribute the
discrepancy to the wars and hatreds which sprang up and divided the people, so
that one would not listen to what the others wished to say, and the truth was
lost.
Besides
which, in the conflagration which consumed the towns, most of the records were
destroyed, and are no longer to be referred to. And it may be that even when
they were proceeding, the causes of the change were not understood. Therefore,
what I am now about to describe is not to be regarded as the ultimate truth,
but as the nearest to which I could attain after comparing the various
traditions. Some say, then, that the first beginning of the change was because
the sea silted up the entrances to the ancient ports, and stopped the vast
commerce which was once carried on. It is certainly true that many of the ports
are silted up, and are now useless as such, but whether the silting up preceded
the disappearance of the population, or whether the disappearance of the
population, and the consequent neglect caused the silting, I cannot venture to
positively assert.[18]
*
* *
It has, too, been said that the earth, from some
attractive power exercised by the passage of an enormous dark body through
space, became tilted or inclined to its orbit more than before, and that this,
while it lasted, altered the flow of the magnetic currents, which, in an
imperceptible manner, influence the minds of men. Hitherto the stream of human
life had directed itself to the westward, but when this reversal of magnetism
occurred, a general desire arose to return to the east. And those whose
business is theology have pointed out that the wickedness of those times
surpassed understanding, and that a change and sweeping away of the human evil
that had accumulated was necessary, and was effected by supernatural means. The
relation of this must be left to them, since it is not the province of the
philosopher to meddle with such matters.
All that seems certain is, that when the event took
place, the immense crowds collected in cities were most affected, and that the
richer and upper classes made use of their money to escape. Those left behind
were mainly the lower and most ignorant, so far as the arts were concerned;
those that dwelt in distant and outlying places; and those who lived by
agriculture. These last at that date had fallen to such distress that they
could not hire vessels to transport themselves. The exact number of those left
behind cannot, of course, be told, but it is on record that when the fields
were first neglected (as I have already described), a man might ride a hundred
miles and not meet another. They were not only few, but scattered, and had not
drawn together and formed towns as at present.
Of
what became of the vast multitudes that left the country, nothing has ever been
heard, and no communication has been received from them. For this reason I
cannot conceal my opinion that they must have sailed either to the westward or
to the southward where the greatest extent of ocean is understood to exist, and
not to the eastward as Silvester would have it in his work upon the “Unknown
Orb”, the dark body travelling in space to which I have alluded. None of our
vessels in the present day dare venture into those immense tracts of sea, nor,
indeed, out of sight of land, unless they know they shall see it again so soon
as they have reached and surmounted the ridge of the horizon. Had they only
crossed to the mainland or continent again, we should most likely have heard of
their passage across the countries there.[19]
*
* *
The cunning artificers of the cities all departed, and
everything fell quickly into barbarism; nor could it be wondered at, for the
few and scattered people of those days had enough to do to preserve their
lives. Communication between one place and another was absolutely cut off, and
if one perchance did recollect something that might have been of use, he could
not confer with another who knew the other part, and thus between them
reconstruct the machine. In the second generation even these disjointed
memories died out.
At
first it is supposed that those who remained behind existed upon the grain in
the warehouses, and what they could thresh by the flail from the crops left
neglected in the fields. But as the provisions in the warehouses were consumed
or spoiled, they hunted the animals, lately tame and as yet but half wild. As
these grew less in number and difficult to overtake, they set to work again to
till the ground, and cleared away small portions of the earth, encumbered
already with brambles and thistles. Some grew corn, and some took charge of
sheep. Thus, in time, places far apart from each other were settled, and towns
were built; towns, indeed, we call them to distinguish them from the champaign,
but they are not worthy of the name in comparison with the mighty cities of old
time.[20]
A few years after Jefferies’ novel came John Ames
Mitchell’s The Last American (1889),
in which an expedition from Persia in the 30th Century explores what
was once the United States. But Mitchell’s intent is strictly satirical – the
Persians all have silly names like Noz-yt-ahl, and misunderstand what they see:
a cigar store Indian, for example, is taken to be a wooden god. The Wikipedia
entry for the novel asserts, without giving any foundation, that it “seems to
have been a rough model for Aldous Huxley’s Ape
and Essence.”[21]
Huxley’s 1949 novel is a story within a story, involving a screenplay in which
nuclear war is touched off by intelligent baboons; what passes for civilization
a century or more later is ruled by a Satanist church. In turn, the Wikipedia
entry for Pierre Boulle’s Planet of the
Apes (1963) cites Ape and Essence
as a “precursor novel.”[22]
The 1968 film version of Planet of the
Apes, which spawned a media franchise, relocated the story from a planet of
Betelgeuse to a post-holocaust Earth, on which the apes developed intelligence
and a new civilization after men destroyed theirs. It is hard to take all this
seriously as sf history. The impact of After
London, by contrast, can be
traced forwards for close to 50 years.
John
Collier’s Tom’s A-Cold (1933), set in
a barbarian England following a war that has destroyed the cities and advanced
technology and decimated the population, has been described as a “genuine
successor”[23]
to After London by sf critic John
Clute in his Science Fiction Encyclopedia,
and as “reminiscent” of Jefferies’ novel by historian-critic Brian Stableford
in Scientific Romance in Britain,
1890-1950 (1985).[24]
But
while Collier’s approach is similar to that in After London, there are also some stark contrasts. To begin with, Tom’s A-Cold (alternately titled Full Circle in the U.S.) is actually a
first generation post-holocaust story, taking place in 1995. Its internal
references reveal that the war began no later than 1940. The former Chief of a
struggling community in Hampshire – known as Father but apparently named
Gilbert – is 70 years old, and was in his mid-teens when he joined the
military. He and an older man named Tom remember what it was like before the war.
That puts Collier’s novel in company with “The Scarlet
Plague,” if only the latter part of London’s story. Well before Collier in
England and Weinbaum and Benét in the U.S., there were works like George Allan
England’s Darkness and Dawn trilogy (1912-14) and Edward Shanks’ The People of the Ruins (1920) that
don’t quite fit the pattern because the protagonists are Rip Van Winkle types,
like those in such classic tales of the future as Wells’ When the Sleeper Wakes (1899) – they awaken in the post-holocaust
future, rather than being born and raised there. In The People of the Ruins, however,
a socialist revolution as well as a war have brought down civilization, and
it has to be significant that Collier refers to “war, defeat, revolution and
blockade.”[25]
There is nothing like Jefferies’ information dump
history in Tom’s A-Cold, but in his
introduction, Collier is disingenuous in his assertion that, unlike other
novels “laid in the future,” it “contains no sociological interest at all,” and
that his business was only to describe the imagined state of affairs, “not to account for it merely because it happens
to take place in the future.”[26]
While he doesn’t go into exhaustive detail, however, Collier works the
essentials into the actual story. It is thus that we learn that travel is
difficult because roads are overgrown, and marshy areas are common, just as in After London – but there is also mention
of railroads being scavenged for metal, an idea used a couple of years later by
Weinbaum: could he have read Collier?
But the neo-medieval society in Tom’s A-Cold is actually more barbaric than that in After London. Just a few pages into the
story, we learn that the Chief, Ajax, thinks that what his community needs is
to “launch out and get some more women.”[27]
Women have come down in this brave new world; Tom’s wife Alicia was once
“violently feminist,”[28]
and played an active role in local councils for husbandry and defence; but
under the current Chief, “no woman dared raise her voice in the general talk.”[29]
By the time of the story, the community is a “patriarchal gang,”[30]
in which alpha males vie for dominance. Nobody thinks there’s anything wrong
with kidnapping women.
We are also told there are over a score of men aged 50
or so, but three times that many under 30 – “The nineteen sixties and seventies
had not been propitious for child-rearing.”[31]
Something to do with the aftermath of the war, apparently a plague. With its
small population, the Hampshire community fears attack from larger groups,
although its defensive hedges are laced with barbed wire. There are only a few
fields growing wild-looking oats and corn, and for meat there are mostly
rabbits – pork is a rare treat because too many hogs ranging around “would have
been conspicuous and attractive”[32]
to raiders. There are old books, but they aren’t read by the younger
generation.
Harry, the young protagonist, is the grandson of
Father/Gilbert (What became of his father is unclear, although his mother Bella
puts in an appearance.). He and his friend Crab are sent on a scouting mission
to Swindon, where rumor has it that young women are available. Harry is smitten
at the sight of a one of the women there:
Harry
lay rigid, all his life ravenous in his eyes. He had never before seen a woman
dressed in anything but dreary skins, and, skins or no skins, he had never seen
one a tenth as beautiful. She seemed like a goddess, radiant. What a thing
beauty is! This girl bore herself nobly and gaily … but what most made her seem
divine to Harry was a fresh and untrammeled look she had…[33]
Her name is Rose, and Harry claims her for his own
after the raid itself succeeds. But the Chief is wounded – gangrene sets in,
and the abysmal state of what is known of medicine from old books (Some in
Greek, which nobody really understands any more) in attempts to treat it leads
to his death – which is just as well, Father believes, for it clears the way
for Harry to become Chief himself. Father has wanted that all along, and in his
own hubris Harry sees himself as a dictator – “I’ll be answerable to none,”[34]
although at the advice of Father he allows for a vote in which the younger men
are eager to grant him sole power as opposed to giving a council of elders
ultimate authority.
Only, pride goeth before a fall; and things soon go
awry for the new Chief. Rose’s brother comes looking for her, and Crab flies
into a rage and kills him. That dooms a budding romance between Harry and Rose;
she flees home, and raises Swindon against him. Harry has already been busy
with improving his community’s defenses – like Aquila in After London, he reintroduces catapults – training his men in
combat, and even getting them to read the old books. But during the battle that
ensues. Rose kills Crab, and George – who has longed to be Chief himself –
kills Rose. Harry, in turn, murders George. That sets the young men against him
and, in an ambiguous ending, Father urges him to try to bull his way through:
“Come, Harry!” he cried at last. “Shout them down. To
Swindon!”
Harry stood still.
“It’s a terrible
life!” cried Father madly.
“Ah!”
shouted Harry, and rushed out, and down the stairs.[35]
Whatever else one can call it, Tom’s A-Cold isn’t a quest story in the same sense as After London: Harry never ventures from
his own community except for a mercenary purpose. The most that can be said is
that there is at least some hope for a better future, a revival of
civilization, unlike what Shanks’ Rip Van Winkle physicist Jeremy Tufts finds
in The People of the Ruins. Although Tufts proves useful to a regional
ruler called the Speaker in the England where he awakens after 150 years of
suspended animation, by building cannon that make for a signal victory against
one rival, the forces of the Speaker are routed in a later battle. Tufts and
his love Eva, the Speaker’s daughter, are trapped by enemy forces; when she is
killed, he decides to commit suicide, knowing that all hope is lost:
He had a vision of the world sinking further below the
point from which in his youth he had seen it, still on a level with him. Cities
would be burnt, bridges broken down, tall towers destroyed and all the wealth
and learning of humanity would shiver to a few shards and a little dust. The
very place would be forgotten where once had stood the houses that he knew; and
the roads he had walked with his friends would be as desolate and lonely as the
Stane Street of the Romans. Even all this story, his victory and his defeat,
his joy and his sorrow, would fade out of the memory of man.[36]
To our eyes, the parallels between After London and Tom’s A Cold and the more familiar post-holocaust works like those
of Weinbaum and Benét that reinvented their tropes seem more than mere
coincidence. Benét was concerned that “the works may blow up,” Collier had
already observed that, “given a certain impetus, things may take this sort of
course,”[37]
and early on in Tom’s A-Cold, Harry
and Father come across the remains of an aeroplane that crashed “in one of the
earliest battles.”[38]
Rather, the resemblances seem as inevitable as those of the marsupial
counterparts of dogs, cats and other animals that fill or once filled niches
now dominated by their later placental counterparts. Tom’s A-Cold updates After
London through cross-fertilization with works like People of the Ruins, but is still part of the marsupial lineage.
“By the Waters of Babylon,” by contrast, is a placental work, and the same is
probably the case with “Dawn of Flame.”
It was Shoshana Milgram who first called attention to
Benét’s having invented the post-holocaust story independently of previous such
works. For Essays on Ayn Rand’s Anthem
(2005), her focus in “Anthem in the
Context of Related Literary Works” was on her discovery that Rand had been
inspired by “The Place of the Gods” for her 1938 post-holocaust story, which
also drew on elements of the anti-utopia. Rand couldn’t recall the author or
title of the story 20 years later, only that she had read it in the Saturday Evening Post and “the fact that some kind of war had destroyed
civilization, and the last survivor in the ruins of New York.”[39]
Not quite accurate – Benét’s protagonist was hardly the “last survivor” – but his first-person style as well as the
substance of his story make the case a dead giveaway.
Benét, unlike Weinbaum, wasn’t a genre sf writer. But
readers, writers and editors of genre sf were always on the lookout for science
fiction from sources other than the pulp magazines that had fostered American
sf since Hugo Gernsback launched Amazing
Stories in 1926 (Gernsback even gave the genre its name with Science Wonder Stories in 1929.). They
didn’t hesitate to embrace the likes of S. Fowler Wright and Olaf Stapledon; Famous Fantastic Mysteries, a reprint
magazine, featured works from before the time of specialized sf pulps by
Wright, William Hope Hodgson, Francis Stevens and others – it even reprinted Anthem in 1953. Thrilling Wonder Stories had already reprinted “Dawn of Flame” in
1939, making it familiar to genre readers, as its appearance in the 1936 small
press memorial volume could not. It was thus quite natural for the genre sf
community to take notice of “The Place of the Gods,” and perhaps also see an
affinity with Weinbaum’s story. It may be crucial that Benét and Weinbaum were
both Americans; Collier was a British writer, although he later moved to
Hollywood to work on screenplays, and a bleak attitude towards the future was
more characteristic of British sf. Tom’s
A-Cold, which has never been reprinted since 1936, may be the last
post-holocaust work in the marsupial lineage of After London. Benét and Weinbaum, in any case, share an attitude
far more hopeful than Collier’s. Consider the conclusion of “By the Place of
the Gods:”
I told and he listened. After that, I wished to tell
all the people but he showed me otherwise. He said, “Truth is a hard deer to
hunt. If you eat too much truth at once, you may die of the truth. It was not
idly that our fathers forbade the Dead Places.” He was right—it is better the
truth should come little by little. I have learned that, being a priest.
Perhaps, in the old days, they ate knowledge too fast.
Nevertheless,
we make a beginning. it is not for the metal alone we go to the Dead Places
now—there are the books and the writings. They are hard to learn. And the magic
tools are broken—but we can look at them and wonder. At least, we make a
beginning. And, when I am chief priest we shall go beyond the great river. We
shall go to the Place of the Gods—the place newyork—not one man but a company.
We shall look for the images of the gods and find the god ASHING and the
others—the gods Lincoln and Biltmore and Moses. But they were men who built the
city, not gods or demons. They were men. I remember the dead man’s face. They
were men who were here before us. We must build again.[40]
In “Dawn
of Flame,” Hull Tarvish learns from Einar Olin that civilization has already
arisen again in what was once New Orleans, beginning with a man named John
Holland:
“Holland was a rare specimen, anxious for learning. He found the remains
of an ancient library and began slowly to decipher the archaic words in the few
books that had survived. Little by little others joined him, and as the word
spread slowly, men from other sections wandered in with books, and the Academy
was born. No one taught, of course; it was just a group of studious men living
a sort of communistic, monastic life. There was no attempt at practical use of
the ancient knowledge until a youth named Teran had a dream — no less a dream
than to recondition the centuries-old power machines of N’Orleans, to give the
city the power that travels on wires!”
“What’s that?” asked Hull. “What’s that, Old Einar?”
“You wouldn’t understand, Hull. Teran was an enthusiast; it didn’t stop
him to realize that there was no coal or oil to run his machines. He believed
that when power was needed, it would be there, so he and his followers scrubbed
and filed and welded away, and Teran was right. When he needed power, it was
there.
“This was the gift
of a man named Olin [Einar himself, he later admits], who had unearthed the
last, the crowning secret of the Ancients, the power called atomic energy…”[41]
Indeed, Weinbaum’s
sequel, The Black Flame, is set in a
global technological state generations later; Weinbaum even sees a silver
lining in the disaster: “a period of barbarism seems to act as a time of rest
for humanity before a charge to new heights.”[42]
That might not have set well with Benét, and certainly not with Collier.
Weinbaum also brings in romantic obsession, but Black Margot, the immortal
heroine whom no man can resist and who becomes co-ruler of the world empire in
the sequel, makes Collier’s Rose seem no more than a country girl. Weinbaum
pioneered the use of invented future slang, like “weeds” for guerrillas
opposing N’Orleans, and to “have one’s tongue in the bag”[43]
for refusing to answer questions. Even if he had read Tom’s A-Cold, his approach to post-holocaust sf was as original as
Benét’s.
Once it was
republished by Wollheim as “By the Waters of Babylon,” Benét’s story became a
model for writers of post-holocaust sf. Best known is Edgar Pangborn, whose
“The Music Master of Babylon (1954) preceded his epic Davy (1964). That in turn led to novels that take place after the
breakdown of civilization but before Davy
– The Judgment of Eve (1966) and The Company of Glory (1974); related
short stories appear in the collection Still
I Persist in Wondering (1978). Others writers influenced by Benét, but in
startlingly different ways, and expressing different attitudes, include John
Wyndham in “The Wheel” (1952) and The
Chrysalids (1959, a.k.a. Re-Birth),
Leigh Brackett in The Long Tomorrow
(1955) and Walter M. Miller, Jr. in A
Canticle for Leibowitz (1959). More recently, there have been further
contrarian variations, notably Russell Hoban’s Riddley Walker (1980). But they are all part of the same placental
lineage.
[1] Wollheim, Donald A., ed., The Pocket Book of Science Fiction
(Pocket Books, 1943), p. 1
[2]
Rottensteiner, Franz,
ed., The Black Mirror & Other Stories,
Wesleyan University Press, 2008, pp. xi-xii.
[3] Jokai, Mors, Jövo Szazad Regénye, p. 5, trans. Istvan
Aggott Honsch
[4] Selected Letters of Stephen Vincent Benét, ed. Charles A. Fenton (Yale
University Press, 1960), p. 301
[5] http://www.victorianweb.org/authors/macaulay/ranke1.html
[6]
Lofficier, Jean Marc
and Randy, French Science Fiction,
Fantasy, Horror and Pulp Fiction, McFarland & Company, 2000, pp. 335-6
[7] The Pocket Book of Science Fiction, pp. 2-3
[8] Weinbaum, Stanley G., The Black Flame (Avon, 1969), pp. 11-12
[9] The Pocket Book of Science Fiction, p. 14
[10] Weinbaum, The Black Flame, p. 19
[11] Jefferies, Richard, After London (Oxford University Press,
1980). p. 240
[12] Ibid., p. 1
[13] Ibid., p. 2
[14] Ibid., p. 3
[15] Ibid., p. 4
[16] Ibid., p. 5
[17] Ibid., p. 10
[18] Ibid., p. 15
[19] Ibid., pp. 16-17
[20] Ibid., pp. 18-19
[21]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Last_American_(novel)
[22]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Planet_of_the_Apes_(novel)
[23]
http://www.sf-encyclopedia.com/entry/collier_john
[24] Stableford, Brian, Scientific Romance in Britain, 1890-1950
(Fourth Estate Ltd.), 1985, p. 244
[26] Ibid, introduction
[27] Ibid., p. 9
[28] Ibid., p, 39
[29] Ibid., p. 41
[30] Ibid., p. 187
[31] Ibid., p. 13
[32] Ibid., p. 26
[33] Ibid., p. 100
[34] Ibid., p. 232
[35] Ibid., p. 320
[36] Shanks, Edward, The People of the Ruins (Kessinger
Publishing, n.d.), pp. 207-8
[37] Collier, Tom’s A-Cold, intro
[38] Ibid, p. 18
[39] quoted in Mayhew, Robert, Essays on Ayn Rand’s Anthem (Lexington
Books, 2005), p. 120
[40] The Pocket Book of Science Fiction, pp. 15-16
[41] Weinbaum, The Black Flame,
pp. 22-23
[42] Ibid,, p. 100
[43] Ibid., p. 13
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