
A curious Victorian scholar presents a series of “fragments” that claim to come from a distant star‑city, Montalluyah. Framed as a genuine report rather than a fanciful tale, the introduction invites readers to set aside disbelief and consider the material on its own merits. The tone blends the era’s scientific optimism about inhabited worlds with a measured, almost scholarly caution.
Within the pages, the author sketches a polished civilization whose pursuits—health, education, governance, the arts, and the regulation of leisure—mirror our own aspirations. Though the customs and technologies differ, the underlying values and dilemmas feel familiar, offering a mirror for our own social experiments. Scholars, poets, and anyone interested in the possible lessons from a far‑off humanity will find the fragments both thought‑provoking and oddly comforting.
Language
en
Duration
~6 hours (400K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2005-08-10
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1812–1875
A driving force in 19th-century opera, this English impresario helped shape musical life in London and left behind a lively firsthand record of the stage world he knew. He is especially remembered for his years at Her Majesty’s Theatre and for the memoir that preserves his side of a fiercely competitive era.
View all books