William Tenn Generation of Noah


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Generation of Noah
William Tenn
That was the day Plunkett heard his wife screaming guardedly to their youngest
boy.
He let the door of the laying house slam behind him, forgetful of the
nervously feeding hens. She had, he realized, cupped her hands over her mouth
so that only the boy would hear.
"Saul! You, Saul! Come back, come right back this instant. Do you want your
fa-ther to catch you out there on the road? Saul!"
The last shriek was higher and clearer, as if she had despaired of attracting
the boy's attention without at the same time warning the man.
Poor Ann!
Gently, rapidly, Plunkett shh'd his way through the bustling and hungry hens
to the side door. He came out facing the brooder run and broke into a heavy,
unathletic trot.
He heard the other children clatter out of the feed house. Good! They have the
responsibility after Ann and me, Plunkett told himself. Let them watch and
learn again.
"Saul!" his wife's voice shrilled unhappily. "Saul, your father's coming!"
Ann came out of the front door and paused. "Elliot," she called at his back as
he leaped over the flush well-cover. "Please, I don't feel well."
A difficult pregnancy, of course, and in her sixth month. But that had nothing
to do with Saul. Saul knew better.
At the last frozen furrow of the truck garden Plunkett gave himself a moment
to gather the necessary air for his lungs. Years ago, when Von Rundstedt's
Tigers roared through the Bulge, he would have been able to dig a foxhole
after such a run. Now, he was badly winded. Just showed you: such a short
distance from the far end of the middle chicken house to the far end of the
vegetable garden merely crossing four acres and he was winded. And consider
the practice he'd had.
He could just about see the boy idly lifting a stick to throw for the dog's
pleasure. Saul was in the further ditch, well past the white line his father
had painted across the road.
"Elliot," his wife began again. "He's only six years old. He "
Plunkett drew his jaws apart and let breath out in a bellyful of sound. "Saul!
Saul Plunkett!" he bellowed. "Start running!"
He knew his voice had carried. He clicked the button on his stopwatch and
threw his right arm up, pumping his clenched fist.
The boy had heard the yell. He turned, and, at the sight of the moving arm
that meant the stopwatch had started, he dropped the stick. But, for the
fearful moment, he was too startled to move.
Eight seconds. He lifted his lids slightly. Saul had begun to run. But he
hadn't picked up speed, and Rusty skipping playfully between his legs threw
him off his stride.
Ann had crossed the garden laboriously and stood at his side, alternately
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staring over his jutting elbow at the watch and smiling hesitantly sidewise at
his face. She shouldn't have come out in her thin housedress in November. But
it was good for Ann, too. Plunkett kept his eyes stolidly on the unemotional
second hand.
One minute forty.
He could hear the dog's joyful barks coming closer, but as yet there was no
echo of sneakers slapping the highway. Two minutes. He wouldn't make it.
The old bitter thoughts came crowding back to Plunkett. A father timing his
six-year-old son's speed with the best watch he could afford. This, then, was
the scientific way to raise children in Earth's most enlightened era. Well, it
was scientific...in keep-ing with the latest discoveries...
Two and a half minutes. Rusty's barks didn't sound so very far off. Plunkett
could hear the desperate pad-pad-pad of the boy's feet. He might make it at
that. If only he could!
"Hurry, Saul," his mother breathed. "You can make it."
Plunkett looked up in time to see his son pound past, his jeans already
darkened with perspiration. "Why doesn't he breathe like I told him?" he
muttered. "He'll be out of breath in no time."
Halfway to the house, a furrow caught at Saul's toes. As he sprawled, Ann
gasped. "You can't count that, Elliot. He tripped."
"Of course he tripped. He should count on tripping."
"Get up, Saulie," Herbie, his older brother, screamed from the garage where he
stood with Josephine Dawkins, one pail of eggs between them. "Get up and run!
This corner here! You can make it!"
The boy heaved to his feet, and threw his body forward again. Plunkett could
hear him sobbing. He reached the cellar steps and literally plunged down.
Plunkett pressed the stopwatch and the second hand halted. Three minutes
thir-teen seconds.
He held the watch up for his wife to see. "Thirteen seconds, Ann."
Her face wrinkled.
He walked to the house. Saul crawled back up the steps, fragments of
unrecovered breath rattling in his chest. He kept his eyes on his father.
"Come here, Saul. Come right here. Look at the watch. Now, what do you see?"
The boy stared intently at the watch. His lips began twisting; startled tears
writhed down his stained face. "More more than three m-minutes, poppa?"
"More than three minutes, Saul. Now, Saul don't cry, son; it isn't any
use Saul, what would have happened when you got to the steps?"
A small voice, pitifully trying to cover its cracks: "The big doors would be
shut."
"The big doors would be shut. You would be locked outside. Then what would
have happened to you? Stop crying. Answer me!"
"Then, when the bombs fell, I'd I'd have no place to hide. I'd burn like the
head of a match. An' an' the only thing left of me would be a dark spot on the
ground, shaped like my shadow. An' an' "
"And the radioactive dust," his father helped with the catechism.
"Elliot "Ann sobbed behind him. "I don't "
"Please, Ann! And the radioactive dust, son?"
"An' if it was ra-di-o-ac-tive dust 'stead of atom bombs, my skin would come
right off my body, an' my lungs would burn up inside me please, poppa, I won't
do it again!"
"And your eyes? What would happen to your eyes?"
A chubby brown fist dug into one of the eyes. "An' my eyes would fall out, an'
my teeth would fall out, and I'd feel such terrible terrible pain "
"All over and inside you. That's what would happen if you got to the cellar
too late when the alarm went off, if you got locked out. At the end of three
minutes, we pull the levers, and no matter who's outside no matter who all
four corner doors swing shut and the cellar will be sealed. You understand
that, Saul?"
The two Dawkins children were listening with white faces and dry lips. Their
par-ents had brought them from the city and begged Elliot Plunkett, as he
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remembered old friends, to give their children the same protection as his.
Well, they were getting it. This was the way to get it.
"Yes, I understand it, poppa. I won't ever do it again. Never again."
"I hope you won't. Now start for the barn, Saul. Go ahead." Plunkett slid his
heavy leather belt from its loops.
"Elliot! Don't you think he understands the horrible thing? A beating won't
make it any clearer."
He paused behind the weeping boy trudging to the barn. "It won't make it any
clearer, but it will teach him the lesson another way. All seven of us are
going to be in that cellar three minutes after the alarm, if I have to wear
this strap clear down to the buckle!"
When Plunkett later clumped into the kitchen with his heavy farm boots, he
stopped and sighed.
Ann was feeding Dinah. With her eyes on the baby, she asked, "No supper for
him, Elliot?"
"No supper." He sighed again. "It does take it out of a man."
"Especially you. Not many men would become a farmer at thirty-five. Not many
men would sink every last penny into an underground fort and powerhouse, just
for insurance. But you're right."
"I only wish," he said restlessly, "that I could work out some way of getting
Nancy's heifer into the cellar. And if eggs stay high one more month, I can
build the tunnel to the generator. Then there's the well. Only one well, even
if it's enclosed "
"And when we came out here seven years ago " She rose to him at last and
rubbed her lips gently against his thick blue shirt. "We only had a piece of
ground. Now, we have three chicken houses, a thousand broilers, and I can't
keep track of how many layers and breeders."
She stopped as his body tightened and he gripped her shoulders.
"Ann, Ann! If you think like that, you'll act like that! How can I expect the
chil-dren to Ann, what we have all we have is a five-room cellar,
concrete-lined, which we can seal in a few seconds, an enclosed well from a
fairly deep underground stream, a windmill generator for power and a sunken
oil-burner-driven generator for emergencies. We have supplies to carry us
through, Geiger counters to detect radiation and lead-lined suits to move
about in afterwards. I've told you again and again that these things are our
lifeboat, and the farm is just a sinking ship."
"Of course, darling." Plunkett's teeth ground together, then parted helplessly
as his wife went back to feeding the baby.
"You're perfectly right. Swallow, now, Dinah. Why, that last bulletin from the
Sur-vivors Club would make anybody think."
He had been quoting from the October Survivor and Ann had recognized it. Well?
At least they were doing something seeking out nooks and feverishly building
cran-nies pooling their various ingenuities in an attempt to haul themselves
and their families through the military years of the Atomic Age.
The familiar green cover of the mimeographed magazine was very noticeable on
the kitchen table. He flipped the sheets to the thumb-smudged article on page
five and shook his head.
"Imagine!" he said loudly. "The poor fools agreeing with the government again
on the safety factor. Six minutes! How can they an organization like the
Survivors Club making that their official opinion! Why freeze, freeze
alone..."
"They're ridiculous," Ann murmured, scraping the bottom of the bowl.
"All right, we have automatic detectors. But human beings still have to look
at the radar scope, or we'd be diving underground every time there's a meteor
shower."
He strode along a huge table, beating a fist rhythmically into one hand. "They
won't be so sure, at first. Who wants to risk his rank by giving the
nationwide signal that makes everyone in the country pull ground over his
head, that makes our own pro-jectile sites set to buzz? Finally, they are
certain: they freeze for a moment. Mean-while, the rockets are zooming
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down how fast, we don't know. The men unfreeze, they trip each other up, they
tangle frantically. Then they press the button, then the nationwide signal
starts our radio alarms."
Plunkett turned to his wife, spread earnest, quivering arms. "And then, Ann,
we freeze when we hear it! At last, we start for the cellar. Who knows, who
can dare to say, how much has been cut off the margin of safety by that time?
No, if they claim that six minutes is the safety factor, we'll give half of it
to the alarm system. Three minutes for us."
"One more spoonful," Ann urged Dinah. "Just one more. Down it goes!"
Josephine Dawkins and Herbie were cleaning the feed trolley in the shed at the
near end of the chicken house.
"All done, pop," the boy grinned at his father. "And the eggs taken care of.
When does Mr. Whiting pick 'em up?"
"Nine o'clock. Did you finish feeding the hens in the last house?"
"I said all done, didn't I?" Herbie asked with adolescent impatience. "When I
say a thing, I mean it."
"Good. You kids better get at your books. Hey, stop that! Education will be
very important, afterwards. You never know what will be useful. And maybe only
your mother and I to teach you."
"Gee," Herbie nodded at Josephine. "Think of that."
She pulled at her jumper where it was very tight over newly swelling breasts
and patted her blonde braided hair. "What about my mother and father, Mr.
Plunkett? Won't they be be "
"Naw!" Herbie laughed the loud, country laugh he'd been practicing lately.
"They're dead-enders. They won't pull through. They live in the city, don't
they? They'll just be some "
"Herbie!"
" some foam on a mushroom-shaped cloud," he finished, utterly entranced by the
image. "Gosh, I'm sorry," he said, as he looked from his angry father to the
quiv-ering girl. He went on in a studiously reasonable voice. "But it's the
truth, anyway. That's why they sent you and Lester here. I guess I'll marry
you afterwards. And you ought to get in the habit of calling him pop. Because
that's the way it'll be."
Josephine squeezed her eyes shut, kicked the shed door open, and ran out. "I
hate you, Herbie Plunkett," she wept. "You're a beast!"
Herbie grimaced at his father women, women, women! and ran after her. "Hey,
Jo! Listen!"
The trouble was, Plunkett thought worriedly as he carried the emergency bulbs
for the hydroponic garden into the cellar the trouble was that Herbie had
learned through constant reiteration the one thing: survival came before all
else, and ameni-ties were merely amenities.
Strength and self-sufficiency Plunkett had worked out the virtues his children
needed years ago, sitting in air-conditioned offices and totting corporation
balances with one eye always on the calendar.
"Still," Plunkett muttered, "still Herbie shouldn't " He shook his head.
He inspected the incubators near the long steaming tables of the hydroponic
gar-den. A tray about ready to hatch. They'd have to start assembling eggs to
replace it in the morning. He paused in the third room, filled a gap in the
bookshelves.
"Hope Josephine steadies the boy in his schoolwork. If he fails that next
exam, they'll make me send him to town regularly. Now there's an aspect of
survival I can hit Herbie with."
He realized he'd been talking to himself, a habit he'd been combating futilely
for more than a month. Stuffy talk, too. He was becoming like those people who
left tracts on trolley cars.
"Have to start watching myself," he commented. "Dammit, again!"
The telephone clattered upstairs. He heard Ann walk across to it, that serene,
unhurried walk all pregnant women seem to have.
"Elliot! Nat Medarie."
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"Tell him I'm coming, Ann." He swung the vault-like door carefully shut behind
him, looked at it for a moment, and started up the high stone steps.
"Hello, Nat. What's new?"
"Hi, Plunk. Just got a postcard from Fitzgerald. Remember him? The abandoned
silver mine in Montana? Yeah. He says we've got to go on the basis that
lithium bombs will be used."
Plunkett leaned against the wall with his elbow. He cradled the receiver on
his right shoulder so he could light a cigarette. "Fitzgerald can be wrong
sometimes."
"Uhm. I don't know. But you know what a lithium bomb means, don't you?"
"It means," Plunkett said, staring through the wall of the house and into a
boiling Earth, "that a chain reaction maybe set off in the atmosphere if
enough of them are used. Maybe if only one "
"Oh, can it," Medarie interrupted. "That gets us nowhere. That way nobody gets
through, and we might as well start shuttling from church to bar-room like my
brother-in-law in Chicago is doing right now. Fred, I used to say to him No,
listen, Plunk: it means I was right. You didn't dig deep enough."
"Deep enough! I'm as far down as I want to go. If I don't have enough layers
of lead and concrete to shield me well, if they can crack my shell, then you
won't be able to walk on the surface before you die of thirst, Nat. No I sunk
my dough in power supply. Once that fails, you'll find yourself putting the
used air back into your empty oxygen tanks by hand!"
The other man chuckled. "All right. I hope I see you around."
"And I hope I see..." Plunkett twisted around to face the front window as an
old station wagon bumped over the ruts in his driveway. "Say, Nat, what do you
know? Charlie Whiting just drove up. Isn't this Sunday?"
"Yeah. He hit my place early, too. Some sort of political meeting in town and
he wants to make it. It's not enough that the diplomats and generals are
practically glar-ing into each other's eyebrows this time. A couple of local
philosophers are impatient with the slow pace at which their extinction is
approaching, and they're getting to-gether to see if they can't hurry it up
some."
"Don't be bitter," Plunkett smiled.
"Here's praying at you. Regards to Ann, Plunk."
Plunkett cradled the receiver and ambled downstairs. Outside, he watched
Charlie Whiting pull the door of the station wagon open on its one desperate
hinge.
"Eggs stowed, Mr. Plunkett," Charlie said. "Receipt signed. Here. You'll get a
check Wednesday."
"Thanks, Charlie. Hey, you kids get back to your books. Go on, Herbie. You're
having an English quiz tonight. Eggs still going up, Charlie?"
"Up she goes." The old man slid onto the crackled leather seat and pulled the
door shut deftly. He bent his arm on the open window. "Heh. And every time she
does I make a little more off you survivor fellas who are too scairt to carry
'em into town yourself."
"Well, you're entitled to it," Plunkett said, uncomfortably. "What about this
meet-ing in town?"
"Bunch of folks goin' to discuss the conference. I say we pull out. I say we
walk right out of the dern thing. This country never won a conference yet. A
million con-ferences the last few years and everyone knows what's gonna happen
sooner or later. Heh. They're just wastin' time. Hit 'em first, I say."
"Maybe we will. Maybe they will. Or maybe, Charlie, a couple of different
na-tions will get what looks like a good idea at the same time."
Charlie Whiting shoved his foot down and ground the starter. "You don't make
sense. If we hit 'em first how can they do the same to us? Hit 'em first hard
enough and they'll never recover in time to hit us back. That's what I say.
But you survivor fellas " He shook his white head angrily as the car shot
away.
"Hey!" he yelled, turning into the road. "Hey, look!"
Plunkett looked over his shoulder. Charlie Whiting was gesturing at him with
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his left hand, the forefinger pointing out and the thumb up straight.
"Look, Mr. Plunkett," the old man called. "Boom! Boom! Boom!" He cackled
hysterically and writhed over the steering wheel.
Rusty scuttled around the side of the house and after him, yipping frantically
in ancient canine tradition.
Plunkett watched the receding car until it swept around the curve two miles
away. He stared at the small dog returning proudly.
Poor Whiting. Poor everybody, for that matter, who had a normal distrust of
crack-pots.
How could you permit a greedy old codger like Whiting to buy your produce,
just so you and your family wouldn't have to risk trips into town?
Well, it was a matter of having decided years ago that the world was too full
of people who were convinced that they were faster on the draw than anyone
else and the other fellow was bluffing anyway. People who believed that two
small boys could pile up snowballs across the street from each other and go
home without having used them, people who discussed the merits of concrete
fences as opposed to wire guard-rails while their automobiles skidded over the
cliff. People who were righteous. People who were apathetic.
It was the last group, Plunkett remembered, who had made him stop
buttonhol-ing his fellows at last. You got tired of standing around in a hair
shirt and pointing ominously at the heavens. You got to the point where you
wished the human race well, but you wanted to pull you and yours out of the
way of its tantrums. Survival for the individual and his family, you thought
Clang-ng-ng-ng-ng!
Plunkett pressed the stud on his stopwatch. Funny. There was no practice alarm
scheduled for today. All the kids were out of the house, except Saul and he
wouldn't dare to leave his room, let alone tamper with the alarm. Unless,
perhaps, Ann
He walked inside the kitchen. Ann was running toward the door, carrying Dinah.
Her face was oddly unfamiliar. "Saulie!" she screamed. "Saulie! Hurry up,
Saulie!"
"I'm coming, momma," the boy yelled as he clattered down the stairs. "I'm
com-ing as fast as I can! I'll make it!"
Plunkett understood. He put a heavy hand on the wall, under the dinner-plate
clock.
He watched his wife struggle down the steps into the cellar. Saul ran past him
and out of the door, arms flailing. "I'll make it, poppa! I'll make it!"
Plunkett felt his stomach move. He swallowed with great care. "Don't hurry,
son," he whispered. "It's only judgment day."
He straightened out and looked at his watch, noticing that his hand on the
wall had left its moist outline behind. One minute, twelve seconds. Not bad.
Not bad at all. He'd figured on three.
Clang-ng-ng-ng-ng!
He started to shake himself and began a shudder that he couldn't control. What
was the matter? He knew what he had to do. He had to unpack the portable lathe
that was still in the barn.
"Elliot!" his wife called.
He found himself sliding down the steps on feet that somehow wouldn't lift
when he wanted them to. He stumbled through the open cellar door. Frightened
faces dot-ted the room in an unrecognizable jumble.
"We all here?" he croaked.
"All here, poppa," Saul said from his position near the aeration machinery.
"Lester and Herbie are in the far room, by the other switch. Why is Josephine
crying? Lester isn't crying. I'm not crying, either."
Plunkett nodded vaguely at the slim, sobbing girl and put his hand on the
lever protruding from the concrete wall. He glanced at his watch again. Two
minutes, ten seconds. Not bad.
"Mr. Plunkett!" Lester Dawkins sped in from the corridor. "Mr. Plunkett!
Herbie ran out of the other door to get Rusty. I told him "
Two minutes, twenty seconds, Plunkett realized as he leaped to the top of the
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steps. Herbie was running across the vegetable garden, snapping his fingers
behind him to lure Rusty on. When he saw his father, his mouth stiffened with
shock. He broke stride for a moment, and the dog charged joyously between his
legs. Herbie fell.
Plunkett stepped forward. Two minutes, forty seconds. Herbie jerked himself to
his feet, put his head down and ran.
Was that dim thump a distant explosion? There another one! Like a giant
belching. Who had started it? And did it matter now?
Three minutes. Rusty scampered down the cellar steps, his head back, his tail
flickering from side to side. Herbie panted up. Plunkett grabbed him by the
collar and jumped.
And as he jumped he saw far to the south the umbrellas opening their agony
upon the land. Rows upon swirling rows of them...
He tossed the boy ahead when he landed. Three minutes, five seconds. He threw
the switch, and, without waiting for the door to close and seal, darted into
the corridor. That took care of two doors; the other switch controlled the
remaining entrances. He reached it. He pulled it. He looked at his watch.
Three minutes, twenty seconds. "The bombs," blubbered Josephine. "The bombs!"
Ann was scrabbling Herbie to her in the main room, feeling his arms, caressing
his hair, pulling him in for a wild hug and crying out yet again. "Herbie!
Herbie! Herbie!"
"I know you're gonna lick me, pop. I I just want you to know that I think you
ought to."
"I'm not going to lick you, son."
"You're not? But gee, I deserve a licking. I deserve the worst "
"You may," Plunkett said, gasping at the wall of clicking Geigers. "You may
deserve a beating," he yelled, so loudly that they all whirled to face him,
"but I won't punish you, not only for now, but forever! And as I with you," he
screamed, "so you with yours! Understand?"
"Yes," they replied in a weeping, ragged chorus. "We understand!"
"Swear! Swear that you and your children and your children's children will
never punish another human being no matter what the provocation."
"We swear!" they bawled at him. "We swear!"
Then they all sat down.
To wait.
Afterword
For a long time (until I wrote "The Custodian"), "Generation of Noah" was my
favor-ite among my stories. But the science-fiction magazines didn't want it:
too hortatory. The general fiction magazines all said something on the order
of "too fantastic." Six years after publication, it was rejected by a movie
producer who was interested in filming some of my work ("far too prosaic for
today's audiences").
Fred Pohl, the agent who finally sold the piece, liked it almost as much as I
did. But he begged me and begged me to change what he called "the Greek chorus
ending." And I kept telling him that the goddam Greek chorus ending was why I
had written the story in the first place. He would walk away from me
muttering, "That's no excuse at all."
So from the white-bearded standpoint of eighty years of age, let me remind the
reader:
In 1947 when I wrote "Generation of Noah," the Federation of Atomic Scientists
kept trying to tell everyone how much they apologized for having helped to
develop our nuclear weaponry. And a lot of them got investigated as
un-American for making such noises. (After all, the military kept saying, the
atomic bomb was a weapon just like any other weapon. A bigger bang for the
buck, some general shrugged.)
By 1957, six years after the story was published, we knew full well that the
Soviet Union not only had nuclear weapons too, but might even have better
means of delivering them than we. Everyone had heard of the atomic bomb drills
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in the schools where the children learned that at a given signal they were to
jump off their benches and lie down under their desks with their hands locked
behind their heads to protect vital parts. I knew people I swear this! who
said that in the event of an atomic attack one should above all close the
windows and pull down the window shades. That would reduce the amount of
radiation reaching you.
And, of course, this was the tail-end of the period where every new home built
had a bomb shelter in the basement, a tiny room surrounded by well-plastered
walls and maybe, if the contractor was an especially responsible type, by some
walls of brick. You go now into homes built in this period and you find that
those bomb shelters are being used as fruit cellars or wine vaults or, most
likely, extra storage space.
Well, the bipolar Cold War has given way to the sunshine of monopolar power,
and all that is behind us now.
Like hell.
John Campbell wrote a number of editorials in Astounding Science Fiction of
the 1940s that were remarkably strong and good and gave him a free pass to be
forgotten as the chief publicist of Dianetics and the Hieronymus Machine. I
remember one where he talked of the atomic bomb as The Great Equalizer.
He pointed out that when the Colt six-gun reached the West, it had a
tremendous effect on the relationships between small, weak men and the big,
strong men who formerly had been able to bully them at will. Billy the Kid and
others now had their equalizer. And from Los Alamos on, Campbell said, small
countries that were unable to afford big navies and big artilleries and big
air forces now could have weapons that would equalize the difference between
them and the great powers of the Earth. All they had to do was find the right
messenger with a suitcase to deliver them.
War is by no means gone from our planet, as a glance at almost any continent
will unmistakably show. And if war ever comes our way again...
There is Lenin's dictum as enunciated in State and Revolution: "No ruling
class in his-tory ever laid down power of its own free will." Which makes me
think of Hitler, 1945, in that last bunker in the ruins of Berlin. An aide
comes to him and says, "Mein Fuhrer, we have just now perfected a weapon that
will vaporize the enemy, city by city, patch of coun-tryside by patch of
countryside. But "
"But what?" yells red-eyed Hitler.
"If we use it, we just may set off a reaction that will destroy the entire
planet. What should we do?"
And Hitler, hearing the Russian guns going off in one direction, and knowing
that the Americans, British, and French are scant miles off in the other
direction what do you think Adolf Hitler would say to do?
No, until we as a species grow a couple of moral inches, or until we have
daughter colonies on planets outside Earth, until then
I will keep my Greek chorus ending.
Written 1947 / Published 1951
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