Kafka
Kafka
Download AppDownload
AboutContactPrivacyTerms
Download App

© 2026 Kafka

  1. Home
  2. /
  3. Back to Methuselah
Back to Methuselah

Back to Methuselah

George Bernard Shaw

9h 6m
109,197 words
en
Start Reading

George Bernard Shaw published this series of five linked plays in a single volume in 1921. It was first performed in 1922 in New York. We begin in the year 4004 BC. In the Garden of Eden, Adam and Eve discover death, and a serpent teaches them what it is to conceive new life. It is the early twentieth century. The brothers Barnabas are discussing the political need for people to live for three centuries when the leaders of the Liberal party arrive to convince one of them to run for Parliament. It is the year 2170. British public services are provided so effectively by the Chinese that government has become largely ceremonial and Parliament full of the insane. Life expectancy is 78, the public are expected to work from the age of 13 through to retirement at 43, and the Accountant General discovers that the Archbishop is 283 years old. It is the year 3000. An elderly short-lived man is visiting Ireland from Baghdad, the capitol of the British Commonwealth, with the British Prime Minister and the Emperor of Turania, who have come to ask for advice from the Oracle. He finds that even though everyone speaks the same language, he can’t communicate with the local long-lived population. It is the farthest future, the year 31,920. In idyllic surroundings people hatch, physically mature, spend four years playing and dancing, and then live for an eternity, changing their physical forms as they wish. A new child is born, a Festival of Art is held, and a youth has discovered how to breath life into artificial humans. When staged, Back to Methuselah tends to be split across multiple evenings, or is heavily abridged; some critics have argued that it was intended to be read and not staged. In a lengthy preface Shaw discusses the need for humans to learn to live longer and to gain more wisdom to be able to govern effectively. In it he argues against both the theory of Darwinian evolution and the church, writing that the purpose of the plays is to “homeopathically educate” the population against Darwinist thinking when choosing their political leaders. His counterarguments are the Lamarckian view of evolution, his concept of the Life Force (which he previously explored in Man and Superman), and the importance of intentionally striving rather than accepting outcomes as down to chance.

DramaComedyBritish Literature20th CenturyScience FictionPhilosophySatireIrish Literature
PublisherStandard Ebooks
LanguageEnglish
Source
https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/13084https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.208046
CopyrightThe source text and artwork in this ebook are believed to be in the United States public domain; that is, they are believed to be free of copyright restrictions in the United States. They may still be copyrighted in other countries, so users located outside of the United States must check their local laws before using this ebook. The creators of, and contributors to, this ebook dedicate their contributions to the worldwide public domain via the terms in the [CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedication](https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/).

Books by George Bernard Shaw

Fanny’s First PlayFanny’s First Play
Arms and the ManArms and the Man
Getting MarriedGetting Married
Heartbreak HouseHeartbreak House
MisallianceMisalliance
Mrs. Warren’s ProfessionMrs. Warren’s Profession
Major BarbaraMajor Barbara
Man and SupermanMan and Superman
PygmalionPygmalion
Saint JoanSaint Joan
Short PlaysShort Plays
The Doctor’s DilemmaThe Doctor’s Dilemma
The Apple CartThe Apple Cart
The Man of DestinyThe Man of Destiny
CandidaCandida
You Never Can TellYou Never Can Tell

Similar books

Perpetual PeacePerpetual Peace
CritoCrito
ClerambaultClerambault
Death in VeniceDeath in Venice
ApologyApology
The Great ImpersonationThe Great Impersonation
The Expensive HaloThe Expensive Halo
The Luck of Barry LyndonThe Luck of Barry Lyndon
Counsels and MaximsCounsels and Maxims
The Hairy ApeThe Hairy Ape
PhaedoPhaedo
PhaedrusPhaedrus
Short FictionShort Fiction
Bushido: The Soul of JapanBushido: The Soul of Japan
An Unpleasant PredicamentAn Unpleasant Predicament
Critique of Pure ReasonCritique of Pure Reason
CymbelineCymbeline
Dangerous AgesDangerous Ages

Similar audiobooks

PygmalionPygmalion
Northanger Abbey (version 2)Northanger Abbey (version 2)
Beyond Good and EvilBeyond Good and Evil
Alcibiades IAlcibiades I
Life of Charles DickensLife of Charles Dickens
History of England, from the Accession of James II - (Volume 1, Chapter 05)History of England, from the Accession of James II - (Volume 1, Chapter 05)
Night LandNight Land