The Flying Machine
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The Flying Machine is a short story by Ray Bradbury from the collection The Golden Apples of the Sun (1957).
[edit] Plot summary
This story is set in China many centuries ago, where a servant to the emperor notices a man that has created a contraption for flying. The emperor is not at all happy when he asks the inventor his purpose in creating such a device and is told that the inventor's motivation was merely the desire for innovation. Thus the emperor orders that the inventor shall be executed because, while his flying machine may be a beautiful creation, the emperor sees the devastating potential for those who "have evil in their eyes" and will seek to use it for purposes other than the enjoyment of flight, namely flying over the Great Wall of China. For this reason, the inventor is killed, the flying machine burned, and all who saw it are silenced. But in the last line the Emperor suddenly realises the futility of his actions, when realises birds were the spark of the innovation, and will be again.
[edit] Characters
This section may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia's quality standards. Please improve this article if you can (February 2008). |
- emperor/ Excellency
- servant
- man/ flier
- executioner
-> no real names bring distance to the characters