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The Time Machine By H. G. Wells

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The novel, the Time Machine by H.G. Wells, does not necessary have the setting of a place but the setting is in a series of time periods. At the beginning of the story, the Time Traveller, whose name is not told and remains anonymous for the rest of the novel, stumbles into a room and begins to tell his guests his long story about what happened and how he became a time traveler. As the events unfold, the climax, when Weena dies in the forest upon fighting the Morlocks, happens and the Time Traveller, is saddened. In the end, the resolution was that the Time Traveller was able to return back to his time after going through his time machine and then he tells the story to his guests, looping the story back at the beginning. The events that lead to the maximum intensity of Weena dying was that Weena was drowning and the Time Traveller rescues her. …show more content…

This shows irony that no matter what happens in any way, Weena was doomed to die in order for the Time Traveller to return back to his time and live. Another event that lead to that moment of intensity was when the Time Traveller first confronted the Morlocks, he figured out that they were aggressive and hostile but he figured out matches and fire would ward them off. The events in this novel lead to the idea that we may be able to go back in time and try to fix anything but fate and destiny have its way of unraveling by itself and we can not change our own future. Message is shown because if the Time Traveller was not originally there, Weena would have drowned and died but later, she still ultimately died and his efforts were in

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