The First Men In The Moon


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end in an open archway beyond which is a still larger hall, and beyond  
this yet another and still larger one, and so on. At the end of the vista,  
dimly seen, a flight of steps, like the steps of Ara Coeli at Rome, ascend  
out of sight. Higher and higher these steps appear to go as one draws  
nearer their base. But at last I came under a huge archway and beheld the  
summit of these steps, and upon it the Grand Lunar exalted on his throne.  
"
He was seated in what was relatively a blaze of incandescent blue. This,  
and the darkness about him gave him an effect of floating in a blue-black  
void. He seemed a small, self-luminous cloud at first, brooding on his  
sombre throne; his brain case must have measured many yards in diameter.  
For some reason that I cannot fathom a number of blue search-lights  
radiated from behind the throne on which he sat, and immediately  
encircling him was a halo. About him, and little and indistinct in this  
glow, a number of body-servants sustained and supported him, and  
overshadowed and standing in a huge semicircle beneath him were his  
intellectual subordinates, his remembrancers and computators and searchers  
and servants, and all the distinguished insects of the court of the moon.  
Still lower stood ushers and messengers, and then all down the countless  
steps of the throne were guards, and at the base, enormous, various,  
indistinct, vanishing at last into an absolute black, a vast swaying  
multitude of the minor dignitaries of the moon. Their feet made a  
perpetual scraping whisper on the rocky floor, as their limbs moved with a  
rustling murmur.  
"As I entered the penultimate hall the music rose and expanded into an  
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