Time travel short story where a man arrives in the late 19th century in a time machine and then sends the machine back into the pastTime travel short story: Changing the present by moving a rock in the pastFind a (short?) story about time travel and wasted talentTrying to Find Story of Drill Sgt Cryogenically Frozen and Awoken in Distant FutureTime travel short(?) story about love and an outdated calendarLooking for short story or novelette written mid century dealing with the pitfalls of time travelTime travel short story where past is blank and future is unformed matterSeeking SF Short Story with time travel to the 20th century from a totalitarian futureA short story where a man experiences time reversalShort Story involving time travel, origin of man, and an ancient enemyTime travel short story where dinosaur doesn't taste like chicken

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Time travel short story where a man arrives in the late 19th century in a time machine and then sends the machine back into the past


Time travel short story: Changing the present by moving a rock in the pastFind a (short?) story about time travel and wasted talentTrying to Find Story of Drill Sgt Cryogenically Frozen and Awoken in Distant FutureTime travel short(?) story about love and an outdated calendarLooking for short story or novelette written mid century dealing with the pitfalls of time travelTime travel short story where past is blank and future is unformed matterSeeking SF Short Story with time travel to the 20th century from a totalitarian futureA short story where a man experiences time reversalShort Story involving time travel, origin of man, and an ancient enemyTime travel short story where dinosaur doesn't taste like chicken













16















A time travel machine arrives in the late 19th century. A man jumps out and makes the machine disappear into the past so he can't be tracked. He then explains that human descendants with huge brains from millions of years in the future have invaded his time (something like the 25th century) and are transporting the population to the future Earth which is in its last days so the invaders can have a more pristine Earth. The man has stolen a time machine to escape.



I read this in 1987 as part of a book of SF short stories. I do not know the name of the collection, the name of the story, or the author.










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  • Welcome to Science Fiction & Fantasy! This question would be improved by going through the checklists here; How to ask a good story-ID question?

    – Valorum
    yesterday











  • I've edited the title to be more descriptive but can you clarify by what you meant with "set in 3 times"? It would also be good to edit in anything else you may remember such as when you read this!

    – TheLethalCarrot
    yesterday















16















A time travel machine arrives in the late 19th century. A man jumps out and makes the machine disappear into the past so he can't be tracked. He then explains that human descendants with huge brains from millions of years in the future have invaded his time (something like the 25th century) and are transporting the population to the future Earth which is in its last days so the invaders can have a more pristine Earth. The man has stolen a time machine to escape.



I read this in 1987 as part of a book of SF short stories. I do not know the name of the collection, the name of the story, or the author.










share|improve this question









New contributor




CBN is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.




















  • Welcome to Science Fiction & Fantasy! This question would be improved by going through the checklists here; How to ask a good story-ID question?

    – Valorum
    yesterday











  • I've edited the title to be more descriptive but can you clarify by what you meant with "set in 3 times"? It would also be good to edit in anything else you may remember such as when you read this!

    – TheLethalCarrot
    yesterday













16












16








16


5






A time travel machine arrives in the late 19th century. A man jumps out and makes the machine disappear into the past so he can't be tracked. He then explains that human descendants with huge brains from millions of years in the future have invaded his time (something like the 25th century) and are transporting the population to the future Earth which is in its last days so the invaders can have a more pristine Earth. The man has stolen a time machine to escape.



I read this in 1987 as part of a book of SF short stories. I do not know the name of the collection, the name of the story, or the author.










share|improve this question









New contributor




CBN is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












A time travel machine arrives in the late 19th century. A man jumps out and makes the machine disappear into the past so he can't be tracked. He then explains that human descendants with huge brains from millions of years in the future have invaded his time (something like the 25th century) and are transporting the population to the future Earth which is in its last days so the invaders can have a more pristine Earth. The man has stolen a time machine to escape.



I read this in 1987 as part of a book of SF short stories. I do not know the name of the collection, the name of the story, or the author.







story-identification short-stories time-travel






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share|improve this question








edited yesterday







CBN













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asked yesterday









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8315




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  • Welcome to Science Fiction & Fantasy! This question would be improved by going through the checklists here; How to ask a good story-ID question?

    – Valorum
    yesterday











  • I've edited the title to be more descriptive but can you clarify by what you meant with "set in 3 times"? It would also be good to edit in anything else you may remember such as when you read this!

    – TheLethalCarrot
    yesterday

















  • Welcome to Science Fiction & Fantasy! This question would be improved by going through the checklists here; How to ask a good story-ID question?

    – Valorum
    yesterday











  • I've edited the title to be more descriptive but can you clarify by what you meant with "set in 3 times"? It would also be good to edit in anything else you may remember such as when you read this!

    – TheLethalCarrot
    yesterday
















Welcome to Science Fiction & Fantasy! This question would be improved by going through the checklists here; How to ask a good story-ID question?

– Valorum
yesterday





Welcome to Science Fiction & Fantasy! This question would be improved by going through the checklists here; How to ask a good story-ID question?

– Valorum
yesterday













I've edited the title to be more descriptive but can you clarify by what you meant with "set in 3 times"? It would also be good to edit in anything else you may remember such as when you read this!

– TheLethalCarrot
yesterday





I've edited the title to be more descriptive but can you clarify by what you meant with "set in 3 times"? It would also be good to edit in anything else you may remember such as when you read this!

– TheLethalCarrot
yesterday










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















31














Sounds like "Worlds to Barter" by John Wyndham (published under the name John Benyon Harris in the May 1931 issue of Wonder Stories, but Wyndham's first published SF story).



A man arrives in a strange machine, then rigs it up so the machine disappears without him:




The stranger leaned over the instrument board, adjusted several dials, tied a loop in the end of my bit of string and slipped it over a small lever. He took as many steps away as the length of the string permitted and gave a jerky pull. . . .



A change came... there was no machine ; before our startled eyes stood only the stranger, the string dangling from his hand. A sigh of relief broke from his lips as he turned towards us.




He reveals he's a refuge from the 22nd century:




"Please let me go my own way. It is a difficult situation, but I hope I shall convince you. Very few men can have had the chance of convincing their great-great- great grandfathers of anything. I am now an anachronism. You see, I was born in the year A.D. 2108, — or should it be, I shall be born in 2108?— and I am— or will be— a refugee from the twenty-second century.




He explains his sending the machine on was because:




"I daren't keep the thing to examine it. It's even betting that the owners had some way of tracing it and that was not a risk worth taking.




He talks about their first sight of a member of the 5022nd century, who does indeed have large brains:




"In height it must have stood about five feet. The head had twice the volume of ours though the enlargement was mainly frontal. The neck was thickened in order to support the weight until the shoulders barely projected. Puny arms ended in small hands of which no finger carried a nail and none was longer than two inches.




And their goal is indeed to trade places with the people of his time:




"'People of the Twenty-Second Century,' the voice began. 'We of the five thousand and twenty-second century offer peace. We come from a period in the world's history which holds no hope for us. We have conquered time that we may gain the Earth. We offer two kinds of peace, one is elimination, the other, submission to our will.'



"'We are not cruel. We do not wish to kill you, our ancestors. Instead, we give transportation — you will exchange your world for ours. We will carry you across the gulf of half a million years to a world in which you, a short-lived race, will be well suited as will your sons and your sons' sons. For us who count our years by thousands as you count by tens, the end is too near. We have broken through time that we may continue our work. Prepare yourselves and your possessions that you may be ready for the time and places we shall appoint.'







share|improve this answer























  • Thank you. That is indeed the story. It's bugged me for years! Hurrah!

    – CBN
    yesterday











  • FYI -- This story can be read online at archive.org, see: archive.org/details/Wonder_Stories_v02n12_1931.05_images_/page/…

    – Otis
    14 hours ago











  • Presumably the future brainiacs surveyed all the eras of human habitation, and could have picked any of them. Poignant that the author in the 1930's expected Earth to be "pristine" in the 22nd century.

    – CCTO
    1 hour ago











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1 Answer
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active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









31














Sounds like "Worlds to Barter" by John Wyndham (published under the name John Benyon Harris in the May 1931 issue of Wonder Stories, but Wyndham's first published SF story).



A man arrives in a strange machine, then rigs it up so the machine disappears without him:




The stranger leaned over the instrument board, adjusted several dials, tied a loop in the end of my bit of string and slipped it over a small lever. He took as many steps away as the length of the string permitted and gave a jerky pull. . . .



A change came... there was no machine ; before our startled eyes stood only the stranger, the string dangling from his hand. A sigh of relief broke from his lips as he turned towards us.




He reveals he's a refuge from the 22nd century:




"Please let me go my own way. It is a difficult situation, but I hope I shall convince you. Very few men can have had the chance of convincing their great-great- great grandfathers of anything. I am now an anachronism. You see, I was born in the year A.D. 2108, — or should it be, I shall be born in 2108?— and I am— or will be— a refugee from the twenty-second century.




He explains his sending the machine on was because:




"I daren't keep the thing to examine it. It's even betting that the owners had some way of tracing it and that was not a risk worth taking.




He talks about their first sight of a member of the 5022nd century, who does indeed have large brains:




"In height it must have stood about five feet. The head had twice the volume of ours though the enlargement was mainly frontal. The neck was thickened in order to support the weight until the shoulders barely projected. Puny arms ended in small hands of which no finger carried a nail and none was longer than two inches.




And their goal is indeed to trade places with the people of his time:




"'People of the Twenty-Second Century,' the voice began. 'We of the five thousand and twenty-second century offer peace. We come from a period in the world's history which holds no hope for us. We have conquered time that we may gain the Earth. We offer two kinds of peace, one is elimination, the other, submission to our will.'



"'We are not cruel. We do not wish to kill you, our ancestors. Instead, we give transportation — you will exchange your world for ours. We will carry you across the gulf of half a million years to a world in which you, a short-lived race, will be well suited as will your sons and your sons' sons. For us who count our years by thousands as you count by tens, the end is too near. We have broken through time that we may continue our work. Prepare yourselves and your possessions that you may be ready for the time and places we shall appoint.'







share|improve this answer























  • Thank you. That is indeed the story. It's bugged me for years! Hurrah!

    – CBN
    yesterday











  • FYI -- This story can be read online at archive.org, see: archive.org/details/Wonder_Stories_v02n12_1931.05_images_/page/…

    – Otis
    14 hours ago











  • Presumably the future brainiacs surveyed all the eras of human habitation, and could have picked any of them. Poignant that the author in the 1930's expected Earth to be "pristine" in the 22nd century.

    – CCTO
    1 hour ago
















31














Sounds like "Worlds to Barter" by John Wyndham (published under the name John Benyon Harris in the May 1931 issue of Wonder Stories, but Wyndham's first published SF story).



A man arrives in a strange machine, then rigs it up so the machine disappears without him:




The stranger leaned over the instrument board, adjusted several dials, tied a loop in the end of my bit of string and slipped it over a small lever. He took as many steps away as the length of the string permitted and gave a jerky pull. . . .



A change came... there was no machine ; before our startled eyes stood only the stranger, the string dangling from his hand. A sigh of relief broke from his lips as he turned towards us.




He reveals he's a refuge from the 22nd century:




"Please let me go my own way. It is a difficult situation, but I hope I shall convince you. Very few men can have had the chance of convincing their great-great- great grandfathers of anything. I am now an anachronism. You see, I was born in the year A.D. 2108, — or should it be, I shall be born in 2108?— and I am— or will be— a refugee from the twenty-second century.




He explains his sending the machine on was because:




"I daren't keep the thing to examine it. It's even betting that the owners had some way of tracing it and that was not a risk worth taking.




He talks about their first sight of a member of the 5022nd century, who does indeed have large brains:




"In height it must have stood about five feet. The head had twice the volume of ours though the enlargement was mainly frontal. The neck was thickened in order to support the weight until the shoulders barely projected. Puny arms ended in small hands of which no finger carried a nail and none was longer than two inches.




And their goal is indeed to trade places with the people of his time:




"'People of the Twenty-Second Century,' the voice began. 'We of the five thousand and twenty-second century offer peace. We come from a period in the world's history which holds no hope for us. We have conquered time that we may gain the Earth. We offer two kinds of peace, one is elimination, the other, submission to our will.'



"'We are not cruel. We do not wish to kill you, our ancestors. Instead, we give transportation — you will exchange your world for ours. We will carry you across the gulf of half a million years to a world in which you, a short-lived race, will be well suited as will your sons and your sons' sons. For us who count our years by thousands as you count by tens, the end is too near. We have broken through time that we may continue our work. Prepare yourselves and your possessions that you may be ready for the time and places we shall appoint.'







share|improve this answer























  • Thank you. That is indeed the story. It's bugged me for years! Hurrah!

    – CBN
    yesterday











  • FYI -- This story can be read online at archive.org, see: archive.org/details/Wonder_Stories_v02n12_1931.05_images_/page/…

    – Otis
    14 hours ago











  • Presumably the future brainiacs surveyed all the eras of human habitation, and could have picked any of them. Poignant that the author in the 1930's expected Earth to be "pristine" in the 22nd century.

    – CCTO
    1 hour ago














31












31








31







Sounds like "Worlds to Barter" by John Wyndham (published under the name John Benyon Harris in the May 1931 issue of Wonder Stories, but Wyndham's first published SF story).



A man arrives in a strange machine, then rigs it up so the machine disappears without him:




The stranger leaned over the instrument board, adjusted several dials, tied a loop in the end of my bit of string and slipped it over a small lever. He took as many steps away as the length of the string permitted and gave a jerky pull. . . .



A change came... there was no machine ; before our startled eyes stood only the stranger, the string dangling from his hand. A sigh of relief broke from his lips as he turned towards us.




He reveals he's a refuge from the 22nd century:




"Please let me go my own way. It is a difficult situation, but I hope I shall convince you. Very few men can have had the chance of convincing their great-great- great grandfathers of anything. I am now an anachronism. You see, I was born in the year A.D. 2108, — or should it be, I shall be born in 2108?— and I am— or will be— a refugee from the twenty-second century.




He explains his sending the machine on was because:




"I daren't keep the thing to examine it. It's even betting that the owners had some way of tracing it and that was not a risk worth taking.




He talks about their first sight of a member of the 5022nd century, who does indeed have large brains:




"In height it must have stood about five feet. The head had twice the volume of ours though the enlargement was mainly frontal. The neck was thickened in order to support the weight until the shoulders barely projected. Puny arms ended in small hands of which no finger carried a nail and none was longer than two inches.




And their goal is indeed to trade places with the people of his time:




"'People of the Twenty-Second Century,' the voice began. 'We of the five thousand and twenty-second century offer peace. We come from a period in the world's history which holds no hope for us. We have conquered time that we may gain the Earth. We offer two kinds of peace, one is elimination, the other, submission to our will.'



"'We are not cruel. We do not wish to kill you, our ancestors. Instead, we give transportation — you will exchange your world for ours. We will carry you across the gulf of half a million years to a world in which you, a short-lived race, will be well suited as will your sons and your sons' sons. For us who count our years by thousands as you count by tens, the end is too near. We have broken through time that we may continue our work. Prepare yourselves and your possessions that you may be ready for the time and places we shall appoint.'







share|improve this answer













Sounds like "Worlds to Barter" by John Wyndham (published under the name John Benyon Harris in the May 1931 issue of Wonder Stories, but Wyndham's first published SF story).



A man arrives in a strange machine, then rigs it up so the machine disappears without him:




The stranger leaned over the instrument board, adjusted several dials, tied a loop in the end of my bit of string and slipped it over a small lever. He took as many steps away as the length of the string permitted and gave a jerky pull. . . .



A change came... there was no machine ; before our startled eyes stood only the stranger, the string dangling from his hand. A sigh of relief broke from his lips as he turned towards us.




He reveals he's a refuge from the 22nd century:




"Please let me go my own way. It is a difficult situation, but I hope I shall convince you. Very few men can have had the chance of convincing their great-great- great grandfathers of anything. I am now an anachronism. You see, I was born in the year A.D. 2108, — or should it be, I shall be born in 2108?— and I am— or will be— a refugee from the twenty-second century.




He explains his sending the machine on was because:




"I daren't keep the thing to examine it. It's even betting that the owners had some way of tracing it and that was not a risk worth taking.




He talks about their first sight of a member of the 5022nd century, who does indeed have large brains:




"In height it must have stood about five feet. The head had twice the volume of ours though the enlargement was mainly frontal. The neck was thickened in order to support the weight until the shoulders barely projected. Puny arms ended in small hands of which no finger carried a nail and none was longer than two inches.




And their goal is indeed to trade places with the people of his time:




"'People of the Twenty-Second Century,' the voice began. 'We of the five thousand and twenty-second century offer peace. We come from a period in the world's history which holds no hope for us. We have conquered time that we may gain the Earth. We offer two kinds of peace, one is elimination, the other, submission to our will.'



"'We are not cruel. We do not wish to kill you, our ancestors. Instead, we give transportation — you will exchange your world for ours. We will carry you across the gulf of half a million years to a world in which you, a short-lived race, will be well suited as will your sons and your sons' sons. For us who count our years by thousands as you count by tens, the end is too near. We have broken through time that we may continue our work. Prepare yourselves and your possessions that you may be ready for the time and places we shall appoint.'








share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered yesterday









starpilotsixstarpilotsix

24.5k397112




24.5k397112












  • Thank you. That is indeed the story. It's bugged me for years! Hurrah!

    – CBN
    yesterday











  • FYI -- This story can be read online at archive.org, see: archive.org/details/Wonder_Stories_v02n12_1931.05_images_/page/…

    – Otis
    14 hours ago











  • Presumably the future brainiacs surveyed all the eras of human habitation, and could have picked any of them. Poignant that the author in the 1930's expected Earth to be "pristine" in the 22nd century.

    – CCTO
    1 hour ago


















  • Thank you. That is indeed the story. It's bugged me for years! Hurrah!

    – CBN
    yesterday











  • FYI -- This story can be read online at archive.org, see: archive.org/details/Wonder_Stories_v02n12_1931.05_images_/page/…

    – Otis
    14 hours ago











  • Presumably the future brainiacs surveyed all the eras of human habitation, and could have picked any of them. Poignant that the author in the 1930's expected Earth to be "pristine" in the 22nd century.

    – CCTO
    1 hour ago

















Thank you. That is indeed the story. It's bugged me for years! Hurrah!

– CBN
yesterday





Thank you. That is indeed the story. It's bugged me for years! Hurrah!

– CBN
yesterday













FYI -- This story can be read online at archive.org, see: archive.org/details/Wonder_Stories_v02n12_1931.05_images_/page/…

– Otis
14 hours ago





FYI -- This story can be read online at archive.org, see: archive.org/details/Wonder_Stories_v02n12_1931.05_images_/page/…

– Otis
14 hours ago













Presumably the future brainiacs surveyed all the eras of human habitation, and could have picked any of them. Poignant that the author in the 1930's expected Earth to be "pristine" in the 22nd century.

– CCTO
1 hour ago






Presumably the future brainiacs surveyed all the eras of human habitation, and could have picked any of them. Poignant that the author in the 1930's expected Earth to be "pristine" in the 22nd century.

– CCTO
1 hour ago











CBN is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.









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Romeo and Juliet ContentsCharactersSynopsisSourcesDate and textThemes and motifsCriticism and interpretationLegacyScene by sceneSee alsoNotes and referencesSourcesExternal linksNavigation menu"Consumer Price Index (estimate) 1800–"10.2307/28710160037-3222287101610.1093/res/II.5.31910.2307/45967845967810.2307/2869925286992510.1525/jams.1982.35.3.03a00050"Dada Masilo: South African dancer who breaks the rules"10.1093/res/os-XV.57.1610.2307/28680942868094"Sweet Sorrow: Mann-Korman's Romeo and Juliet Closes Sept. 5 at MN's Ordway"the original10.2307/45957745957710.1017/CCOL0521570476.009"Ram Leela box office collections hit massive Rs 100 crore, pulverises prediction"Archived"Broadway Revival of Romeo and Juliet, Starring Orlando Bloom and Condola Rashad, Will Close Dec. 8"Archived10.1075/jhp.7.1.04hon"Wherefore art thou, Romeo? To make us laugh at Navy Pier"the original10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.O006772"Ram-leela Review Roundup: Critics Hail Film as Best Adaptation of Romeo and Juliet"Archived10.2307/31946310047-77293194631"Romeo and Juliet get Twitter treatment""Juliet's Nurse by Lois Leveen""Romeo and Juliet: Orlando Bloom's Broadway Debut Released in Theaters for Valentine's Day"Archived"Romeo and Juliet Has No Balcony"10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.O00778110.2307/2867423286742310.1076/enst.82.2.115.959510.1080/00138380601042675"A plague o' both your houses: error in GCSE exam paper forces apology""Juliet of the Five O'Clock Shadow, and Other Wonders"10.2307/33912430027-4321339124310.2307/28487440038-7134284874410.2307/29123140149-661129123144728341M"Weekender Guide: Shakespeare on The Drive""balcony"UK public library membership"romeo"UK public library membership10.1017/CCOL9780521844291"Post-Zionist Critique on Israel and the Palestinians Part III: Popular Culture"10.2307/25379071533-86140377-919X2537907"Capulets and Montagues: UK exam board admit mixing names up in Romeo and Juliet paper"Istoria Novellamente Ritrovata di Due Nobili Amanti2027/mdp.390150822329610820-750X"GCSE exam error: Board accidentally rewrites Shakespeare"10.2307/29176390149-66112917639"Exam board apologises after error in English GCSE paper which confused characters in Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet""From Mariotto and Ganozza to Romeo and Guilietta: Metamorphoses of a Renaissance Tale"10.2307/37323537323510.2307/2867455286745510.2307/28678912867891"10 Questions for Taylor Swift"10.2307/28680922868092"Haymarket Theatre""The Zeffirelli Way: Revealing Talk by Florentine Director""Michael Smuin: 1938-2007 / Prolific dance director had showy career"The Life and Art of Edwin BoothRomeo and JulietRomeo and JulietRomeo and JulietRomeo and JulietEasy Read Romeo and JulietRomeo and Julieteeecb12003684p(data)4099369-3n8211610759dbe00d-a9e2-41a3-b2c1-977dd692899302814385X313670221313670221