Quotes From The Time Machine (+ Context & Explanation)

This article is an excerpt from the Shortform book guide to "The Time Machine" by H.G. Wells. Shortform has the world's best summaries and analyses of books you should be reading.

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In The Time Machine, what aspect of humanity “had committed suicide”? Why did humanity grow weaker over time? What’s the significance of the two flowers?

The Time Machine is a science fiction classic that tells the story of a Victorian scientist who builds a machine that can travel through time. In the distant future he finds that, rather than advancing, human civilization has collapsed.

Continue reading for a few quotes from The Time Machine that provide insights into the book’s profound ideas.

Quotes From The Time Machine

H.G. Wells’s classic story still captures people’s imaginations well over 100 years after its publication. We’ve collected a few representative quotes from The Time Machine and provided them along with some context and explanation.

“I grieved to think how brief the dream of the human intellect had been. It had committed suicide.”

The Time Traveller goes to the distant future, where he finds that humanity has evolved into two separate species—the childlike Eloi and the bestial Morlocks. Creativity is a distinctly human trait that neither the Eloi nor the Morlocks display. In A First-Rate Madness, psychiatrist Nassir Ghaemi defines creativity as the ability to identify problems that others haven’t noticed and to come up with innovative solutions for those problems. However, the Eloi and the Morlocks don’t seem to innovate at all—they just follow routines and become frightened or angry when something disrupts those routines.

Why couldn’t these new species keep society and culture from falling apart (or, alternatively, why didn’t they)? The loss of creativity would explain it. If humanity somehow lost the ability to be creative—to identify new problems and devise solutions for them—all progress would stop. Without creativity, at best we could only keep society as it currently is. In fact, that’s exactly what the Morlocks do: They keep the ventilation system working and take care of the Eloi, but there are no signs of them trying to invent or discover new things. Furthermore, if new problems arose without people recognizing or solving them, civilization would eventually decay and collapse just as Wells describes.

Quotes From The Time Machine (+ Context & Explanation)

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  • An overview and analysis of H.G. Wells's 1895 science fiction novel
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Elizabeth Whitworth

Elizabeth has a lifelong love of books. She devours nonfiction, especially in the areas of history, theology, and philosophy. A switch to audiobooks has kindled her enjoyment of well-narrated fiction, particularly Victorian and early 20th-century works. She appreciates idea-driven books—and a classic murder mystery now and then. Elizabeth has a Substack and is writing a book about what the Bible says about death and hell.

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