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<p>EDGAR RICE BURROUGHS</p>
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THE</p>
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MOON MAID</p>
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THE MOON MAID</p>
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Copyright 1923, by Frank A. Munsey Company</p>
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New York</p>
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<h2 class="contents" id="TOC" >CONTENTS</h2>
<div><SPAN href="#start">PROLOGUE</SPAN></div>
<div><SPAN href="#CHI">I. AN ADVENTURE IN SPACE</SPAN></div>
<div><SPAN href="#CHII">II. THE SECRET OF THE MOON</SPAN></div>
<div><SPAN href="#CHIII">III. ANIMALS OR MEN?</SPAN></div>
<div><SPAN href="#CHIV">IV. CAPTURED</SPAN></div>
<div><SPAN href="#CHV">V. OUT OF THE STORM</SPAN></div>
<div><SPAN href="#CHVI">VI. THE MOON MAID</SPAN></div>
<div><SPAN href="#CHVII">VII. A FIGHT AND A CHANCE</SPAN></div>
<div><SPAN href="#CHVIII">VIII. A FIGHT WITH A TOR-HO</SPAN></div>
<div><SPAN href="#CHIX">IX. AN ATTACK BY KALKARS</SPAN></div>
<div><SPAN href="#CHX">X. THE CITY OF KALKARS</SPAN></div>
<div><SPAN href="#CHXI">XI. A MEETING WITH KO-TAH</SPAN></div>
<div><SPAN href="#CHXII">XII. GROWING DANGER</SPAN></div>
<div><SPAN href="#CHXIII">XIII. DEATH WITHIN AND WITHOUT!</SPAN></div>
<div><SPAN href="#CHXIV">XIV. THE BARSOOM!</SPAN></div>
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<h2 class="contents" id="start" >PROLOGUE</h2></div>
<p>I met him in the Blue Room of the Transoceanic
Liner <i>Harding</i> the night of Mars Day—June 10, 1967. I
had been wandering about the city for several hours prior to
the sailing of the flier watching the celebration, dropping in
at various places that I might see as much as possible of
scenes that doubtless will never again be paralleled—a
world gone mad with joy. There was only one vacant chair
in the Blue Room and that at a small table at which he
was already seated alone. I asked his permission and he
graciously invited me to join him, rising as he did so, his
face lighting with a smile that compelled my liking from
the first.</p>
<p>I had thought that Victory Day, which we had celebrated
two months before, could never be eclipsed in point of mad
national enthusiasm, but the announcement that had been
made this day appeared to have had even a greater effect
upon the minds and imaginations of the people.</p>
<p>The more than half-century of war that had continued almost
uninterruptedly since 1914 had at last terminated in the
absolute domination of the Anglo-Saxon race over all the
other races of the World, and practically for the first time
since the activities of the human race were preserved for
posterity in any enduring form no civilized, or even semicivilized,
nation maintained a battle line upon any portion of
the globe. War was at an end—definitely and forever. Arms
and ammunition were being dumped into the five oceans; the
vast armadas of the air were being scrapped or converted
into carriers for purposes of peace and commerce.</p>
<p>The peoples of all nations had celebrated—victors and
vanquished alike—for they were tired of war. At least they
thought that they were tired of war; but were they? What
else did they know? Only the oldest of men could recall even
a semblance of world peace, the others knew nothing but
war. Men had been born and lived their lives and died with
their grandchildren clustered about them—all with the
alarms of war ringing constantly in their ears. Perchance
the little area of their activities was never actually encroached
upon by the iron-shod hoof of battle; but always somewhere
war endured, now receding like the salt tide only to return
again; until there arose that great tidal wave of human emotion
in 1959 that swept the entire world for eight bloody years,
and receding, left peace upon a spent and devastated world.</p>
<p>Two months had passed—two months during which the
world appeared to stand still, to mark time, to hold its breath.
What now? We have peace, but what shall we do with it?
The leaders of thought and of action are trained for but one
condition—war. The reaction brought despondency—our nerves,
accustomed to the constant stimulus of excitement, cried
out against the monotony of peace, and yet no one wanted
war again. We did not know what we wanted.</p>
<p>And then came the announcement that I think saved a
world from madness, for it directed our minds along a new
line to the contemplation of a fact far more engrossing than
prosaic wars and equally as stimulating to the imagination
and the nerves—intelligible communication had at last been
established with Mars!</p>
<p>Generations of wars had done their part to stimulate
scientific research to the end that we might kill one another
more expeditiously, that we might transport our youth more
quickly to their shallow graves in alien soil, that we might
transmit more secretly and with greater celerity our orders
to slay our fellow men. And always, generation after generation,
there had been those few who could detach their
minds from the contemplation of massacre and looking forward
to a happier era concentrate their talents and their
energies upon the utilization of scientific achievement for the
betterment of mankind and the rebuilding of civilization.</p>
<p>Among these was that much ridiculed but devoted coterie
who had clung tenaciously to the idea that communication
could be established with Mars. The hope that had been
growing for a hundred years had never been permitted to die,
but had been transmitted from teacher to pupil with ever-growing
enthusiasm, while the people scoffed as, a hundred
years before, we are told, they scoffed at the experimenters
with <i>flying machines</i>, as they chose to call them.</p>
<p>About 1940 had come the first reward of long years of toil
and hope, following the perfection of an instrument which
accurately indicated the direction and distance of the focus
of any radio-activity with which it might be attuned. For
several years prior to this all the more highly sensitive receiving
instruments had recorded a series of three dots and
three dashes which began at precise intervals of twenty-four
hours and thirty-seven minutes and continued for approximately
fifteen minutes. The new instrument indicated conclusively
that these signals, if they were signals, originated
always at the same distance from the Earth and in the same
direction as the point in the universe occupied by the planet
Mars.</p>
<p>It was five years later before a sending apparatus was
evolved that bade fair to transmit its waves from Earth to
Mars. At first their own message was repeated—three dots
and three dashes. Although the usual interval of time had
not elapsed since we had received their daily signal, ours was
immediately answered. Then we sent a message consisting of
five dots and two dashes, alternating. Immediately they replied
with five dots and two dashes and we knew beyond
peradventure of a doubt that we were in communication
with the Red Planet, but it required twenty-two years of
unremitting effort, with the most brilliant intellects of two
world concentrated upon it, to evolve and perfect an intelligent
system of inter-communication between the two planets.</p>
<p>Today, this tenth of June, 1967, there was published
broadcast to the world the first message from Mars. It was
dated Helium, Barsoom, and merely extended greetings to a
sister world and wished us well. But it was the beginning.</p>
<p>The Blue Room of <i>The Harding</i> was, I presume, but
typical of every other gathering place in the civilized world.
Men and women were eating, drinking, laughing, singing
and talking. The flier was racing through the air at an altitude
of little over a thousand feet. Its engines, motivated
wirelessly from power plants thousands of miles distant,
drove it noiselessly and swiftly along its overnight pathway
between Chicago and Paris.</p>
<p>I had of course crossed many times, but this instance was
unique because of the epoch-making occasion which the passengers
were celebrating, and so I sat at the table longer
than usual, watching my fellow diners, with, I imagine, a
slightly indulgent smile upon my lips, since—I mention it in
no spirit of egotism—it had been my high privilege to assist
in the consummation of a hundred years of effort that had
borne fruit that day. I looked around at my fellow diners and
then back to my table companion.</p>
<p>He was a fine looking chap, lean and bronzed—one need
not have noted the Air Corps overseas service uniform, the
Admiral’s stars and anchors or the wound stripes to have
guessed that he was a fighting man; he looked it, every inch
of him, and there were a full seventy-two inches.</p>
<p>We talked a little—about the great victory and the message
from Mars, of course, and though he often smiled I noticed
an occasional shadow of sadness in his eyes and once, after
a particularly mad outburst of pandemonium on the part
of the celebrators, he shook his head, remarking: “Poor
devils!” and then: “It is just as well—let them enjoy life
while they may. I envy them their ignorance.”</p>
<p>“What do you mean?” I asked.</p>
<p>He flushed a little and then smiled. “Was I speaking
aloud?” he asked.</p>
<p>I repeated what he had said and he looked steadily at me
for a long minute before he spoke again. “Oh, what’s the
use!” he exclaimed, almost petulantly; “you wouldn’t understand
and of course you wouldn’t believe. I do not understand
it myself; but I have to believe because I know—I know
from personal observation. God! if you could have seen what
I have seen.”</p>
<p>“Tell me,” I begged; but he shook his head dubiously.</p>
<p>“Do you realize that there is no such thing as Time?” he
asked suddenly—“That man has invented Time to suit the
limitations of his finite mind, just as he has named another
thing, that he can neither explain nor understand, Space?”</p>
<p>“I have heard of such a theory,” I replied; “but I neither
believe nor disbelieve—I simply do not know.”</p>
<p>I thought I had him started and so I waited as I have read
in fiction stories is the proper way to entice a strange narrative
from its possessor. He was looking beyond me and I imagined
that the expression of his eyes denoted that he was
witnessing again the thrilling scenes of the past. I must have
been wrong, though—in fact I was quite sure of it when he
next spoke.</p>
<p>“If that girl isn’t careful,” he said, “the thing will upset
and give her a nasty fall—she is much too near the edge.”</p>
<p>I turned to see a richly dressed and much dishevelled
young lady busily dancing on a table-top while her friends
and the surrounding diners cheered her lustily.</p>
<p>My companion arose. “I have enjoyed your company immensely,”
he said, “and I hope to meet you again. I am
going to look for a place to sleep now—they could not give
me a stateroom—I don’t seem to be able to get enough sleep
since they sent me back.” He smiled.</p>
<p>“Miss the gas shells and radio bombs, I suppose,” I remarked.</p>
<p>“Yes,” he replied, “just as a convalescent misses smallpox.”</p>
<p>“I have a room with two beds,” I said. “At the last minute
my secretary was taken ill. I’ll be glad to have you share
the room with me.”</p>
<p>He thanked me and accepted my hospitality for the night—the
following morning we would be in Paris.</p>
<p>As we wound our way among the tables filled with laughing,
joyous diners, my companion paused beside that at
which sat the young woman who had previously attracted his
attention. Their eyes met and into hers came a look of puzzlement
and half-recognition. He smiled frankly in her face,
nodded and passed on.</p>
<p>“You know her, then?” I asked.</p>
<p>“I shall—in two hundred years,” was his enigmatical reply.</p>
<p>We found my room, and there we had a bottle of wine
and some little cakes and a quiet smoke and became much
better acquainted.</p>
<p>It was he who first reverted to the subject of our conversation
in the Blue Room.</p>
<p>“I am going to tell you,” he said, “what I have never told
another; but on the condition that if you retell it you are
not to use my name. I have several years of this life ahead
of me and I do not care to be pointed out as a lunatic. First
let me say that I do not try to explain anything, except that
I do not believe prevision to be a proper explanation. I have
actually <i>lived</i> the experiences I shall tell you of, and that girl
we saw dancing on the table tonight lived them with me;
but she does not know it. If you care to, you can keep in
mind the theory that there is no such thing as Time—just keep
it in mind—you cannot understand it, or at least I cannot.
Here goes.”</p>
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