Dr. Michael Delahoyde
Washington State University
H.G. Wells (1866-1946) is responsible for The Time Machine,
War of the Worlds, The Invisible Man. He called
The Island of Dr. Moreau an "exercise in youthful
blasphemy."
Texts:
Here is an online version of the novel:
The first significant film version was titled Island of Lost Souls
(1932), starring Charles Laughton and Bela Lugosi. It is reported that
Wells was "delighted" with it, especially in that it was banned by the
British Censor.
A film version starring Burt Lancaster and Michael York appeared
in 1977: The Island of Dr. Moreau.
The latest film version stars Marlon Brando and Val Kilmer:
The Island of Dr. Moreau (1996).
Topics for Writing:
Influences and Contexts:
Influences include Defoe's Robinson Crusoe with its "air of
documentary factuality" (Williamson 76); Voltaire's Candide,
one of Wells' favorite works (McConnell 90); Swift's Gulliver's
Travels with its own dark, satirical misanthropy and final repulsion
for human "Yahoos"; Mary Shelley's Frankenstein for obvious
reasons; Rudyard Kipling's Jungle Book and its imperialistic
"Law of the Jungle" -- very different from what Wells describes; "a
scandalous trial about that time, the graceless and pitiful downfall
of a man of genius [understood to be Oscar Wilde]" (qtd. in Reed 134);
and the famous scientist and lecturer Huxley, who had been attacked by
anti-vivisectionists. Prendick is made a former biology student of
Huxley's. The book cannot be read as straightforwardly anti-scientific
and anti-experimentalist (McConnell 93), especially since Wells penned
numerous scientific essays in which he seems to express his faith in
the possibilities of biological experimentation.
18th-century romances about "the natural goodness of man" were often
set on tropical islands, so this setting is nicely ironical. Caliban,
the malicious wretch-creature from Shakespeare's The Tempest is
another influence, via a Browning poem, "Caliban upon Setebos." In 1884,
the legal case of Regina v. Dudley and Stephens resulted in a
decision against sailors who had had to resort to cannibalism to survive
(Reed 134).
Wells referred to the book as "an exercise in youthful blasphemy" (qtd.
in Williamson 75). He also reported in his own autobiography that he
lost his religious faith when at about the age of 12 he experienced a
nightmare in which God was slowly roasting a sinner over a fire built
under a wheel. He hated God intensely and was resentful at the kind of
divine hypocrisy he invests in Moreau (Williamson 78).
"The Law," the chanting of which was a late addition to the novel (Reed
136), is a "bitter parody of the Ten Commandments handed down by the
vengeful God of the Old Testament; Moreau's own set of conditioned
responses" (McConnell 96), and a parody of Kipling's "Law of the Jungle"
in his Jungle Books (Reed 136). Wells is exploring behaviorism, a
"scientific" paradigm that did not exist as such for another 50 years.
The Island of Dr. Moreau calls into question "the most basic
tenet of the entire tradition of Western humanism: the belief in the
speciality, the sublime individuality, the autonomy of the human species
on this planet" (McConnell 90). This was the really revolutionary effect
of Darwinism: the dethronement of humankind from the center of creation.
Morality is shown to be merely a conditioned reflex (McConnell 92).
"Moreau's island is a totalitarian regime -- perhaps the first really
totalitarian regime imagined by Western man" (McConnell 92).
The Characters:
Prendick: "A sort of Christ to Moreau's God, he fraternizes with
the Beast People and attempts to teach them" (Williamson 80).
Montgomery: what was his crime? "Why am I here now -- an outcast from
civilisation -- instead of being a happy man enjoying all the pleasures
of London? Simply because -- eleven years ago -- I lost my head for ten
minutes on a foggy night" (11).
Moreau: physically looks like whom or what? "I looked at him, and saw
but a white-faced, white-haired man, with calm eyes" (59). He functions
like whom or what?
Literary Innovations:
The "facts" of the case include noticeable ship names: Lady Vain,
Scorpion, Myrtle, Medusa, and especially the
Ipecacuanha. So women, poison, and vomit are the nautical themes.
The last name, in particular, is interesting. Prendick acknowledges the
idea that the ship "acts accordingly" -- as an emetic purgative (4) --
but despite the emphasis on graphic unpleasantness here, the idea is to
restore health. The book itself might be seen as functioning this way.
Wells gives us several depictions of communities, the first being the
shipwreck survivors in the lifeboat. One man had died, "luckily for us"
(1). They don't talk after the first day, just eventually eye each other
with a common unspeakable thought. So here is a vision of distrust and
antagonism, finally of cannibalistic impulses. When two of the men fight
and tumble overboard to their deaths, Prendick laughs hysterically (2;
see the "King Laugh" passage in Dracula). This is the first nasty
and contentious "community," a manifestation of the anxiety that "We were
up from the apes, not down from the angels" (Aldiss 140).
The second community is that of the "rescue" ship, but Prendick awakens
to a drink described like iced blood (4). The first worry is when he'll
be eligible for "solid food" (4). It's difficult to believe that under
any circumstances boiled mutton (4-5) is in any way an "appetising" smell.
But Prendick scarfs it down while he hears animals howling above deck (5).
Montgomery has saved Prendick's life, but he insists it's entirely a matter
of chance and randomness. There's no real connection or friendship here;
Montgomery shuts down when real topics approach (11). The captain is foul
and perpetually drunk, but he declares himself "the law and the prophets"
(9). And everyone hates the "black-faced man" (e.g., 6). So in this
community there is no sympathy, there are no alliances, and once again
it's a vision of raw survival.
The island consists of masters and slaves. It's not a community, just one
man's mad vision and the results of his irresponsibility. The biblical
phrase of "Increase and multiply" (19) is applied to rabbits so that
Montgomery can breed meat. And further eating takes place all while animals
are screaming. "It was as if all the pain in the world had found a voice"
(26). When Prendick seems to be stalked, he assumes the creature is out to
get him, though ultimately it only says "No" and runs away (30), then follows.
So, like the creatures later, it really just seems curious, yet the narrative
perspective projects enmity onto everything else. Prendick doesn't ask what
is different about the creatures, but what is "wrong" (e.g., 18).
"But ... I still do not understand. Where is your justification for inflicting
all this pain? The only thing that could excuse vivisection to me would be
some application -- " (54). So supposedly the sadistic infliction of pain is
not the horror, but pointlessness: "... like a wave across my mind, came the
realisation of the unspeakable aimlessness of things upon the island" (73).
"The study of Nature makes a man at last as remorseless as Nature" (52).
Rhetorically slick, but questionable self-justification.
Moreau's vegetarianism has been compared to Hitler's, which Carol Adams
explains had everything to do with a health movement's neurotic obsession
with purity and nothing to do with ethics or compassion. It's a kind of
narcissism divorced from any protest aspect of consumption.
"It was a limbless thing with a horrible face that writhed along the
ground in a serpentine fashion" (58).
The female principle -- there are no women in the book -- is cast as
particularly foul. The female puma brings about the demise of Moreau (80-81)
after being cast (screaming in pain) as a "virago" (75). The female creatures
are described as particularly monstrous (63-64, 68), especially when they
"even attempted public outrages on the institution of monogamy" (97). Note
that the Vixen/Bear or Fox/Bear becomes a "Witch."
"Then we went into the laboratory and put an end to all we found living
there" (82).
"An animal may be ferocious and cunning enough, but it takes a real man
to tell a lie" (94).
Signs of bestiality?
The dog man becomes the St. Bernard dog man, from a domesticated animal
form. M'ling has a name as a sign of rudimentary status, like a pet.
"How much, we are forced to ask, is our belief in the afterlife simply
an expression of our fear -- fear that the dead, our fathers, may still
be looking on and judging our lives?" (McConnell 97). Scandalous!
When the creatures get human voices, they lose their voice. Discuss.
An individual experimenter was stopped, arbitrarily, but the modus
operandi and all the assumptions remain. Moreau's place could have been
filled more securely by Prendick.
Final Commentary:
Perhaps it takes animals to point out, at least implicitly, how disgusting
and unworthy of the planet's resources is humankind. There does circulate
a usually unspoken notion that animals are ours to torture and slaughter;
and this is only slightly a paraphrase: "I don't care how many millions of
animals have to suffer if it saves my little Cody one afternoon of the
sniffles." So Prendick ends up emotionally scarred and anti-social, and
critics have fits and frets. He might justifiably have been a heck of a
lot more misanthropic finally.
I hope Wells intended to blow anthropocentric assumptions out of the
water, that he was consciously attacking the smugness of the assumption
that evolution has occurred for our benefit, or glorification, that
evolution is somehow a pro-human force or designed towards man as the
superb end-product.
Wells, H.G. The Island of Dr. Moreau. 1896. NY: Penguin, 1988.
Wells, H.G. The Island of Dr. Moreau. 1896. NY: Dover Pub. Inc.,
1996.
The Island of Dr.
Moreau.
The specific "madness" of this mad scientist.
Horror and/or science fiction.
Wells and Judeo-Christianity.
Defining humanity.
The female presence in the novel.
The threat of misanthropy.
Jules Verne and H.G. Wells (1866-1946) did not think highly of each
other's work. Wells' vision is much bleaker, but in The Time
Machine, which enjoyed tremendous success in 1895, despite the
nightmarish elements seen in the future, Wells still gives us glimmers
of hope. The following year, with The Island of Dr. Moreau,
however, the thoroughly dark vision repulsed readers. Instead of
focusing on potential dangers of the future, the work this time
emphasized "the animal, chaotic, bloody origins and hidden nature
of the human present" (McConnell 89). Wells acknowledged that the
work itself is "rather painful" (qtd. in Williamson 74-75).
Wells uses the "found manuscript" tradition. The main character's nephew
introduces Prendick's manuscript, and we are left to take it or to leave
it.
It was no brute this time. It was a human being in torment! ... I picked
myself up and stood trembling, / my mind a chaos of the most horrible
misgivings. Could the vivisection of men be possible? The question shot
like lightning across a tumultuous sky. And suddenly the clouded horror of
my mind condensed into a vivid realisation of my danger. (36-37)
"But I never before saw an animal trying to think" (51). No, just humans
failing to.
(They end up parroting The Law in an empty ritualistic litany vaguely
linked to the memory of pain. Their former "voice" was manifested in
the screams of pain that, as good scientists, we are not to take
anthropocentrically as if the noises they emit signify pain as you and
I feel it -- they do not. Animals do not experience pain the same as we
do, we are perpetually told; they are not sentient creatures and do not
go to heaven. The earmuffs worn in slaughterhouses are, well, never mind
that.)
"The spirit of Dr. Moreau is alive and well and living in these United
States. These days, he would be state-funded" (Aldiss 142).
"I could not get away from men; their voices came through windows; locked
doors were flimsy safeguards. I would go out into the streets to fight
with my delusion, and prowling women would mew after me, furtive craving
men glance jealously at me, weary pale workers go coughing by me, with
tired eyes and eager paces like wounded deer dripping blood, old people,
bent and dull, pass murmuring to themselves, and all unheeding..." (103).
Aldiss, Brian. Afterword. The Island of Dr. Moreau. NY: Penguin, 1988. 139-144.
McConnell, Frank. The Science Fiction of H.G. Wells. NY: Oxford University Press, 1981.
Philmus, Robert M. and David Y. Hughes, eds. H.G. Wells: Early Writings in Science and Science Fiction. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1975.
Reed, John R. "The Vanity of Law in The Island of Dr. Moreau." H.G. Wells Under Revision. Ed. Patrick Parrinder and Christopher Rolfe. London: Associated University Presses, Inc., 1990. 134-144.
Wells, H.G. The Island of Dr. Moreau. 1896. NY: Penguin, 1988.
---. The Island of Dr. Moreau. 1896. NY: Dover Pub. Inc., 1996.
---. The Island of Dr. Moreau: A Variorum Text. Ed. Robert M. Philmus. Athens: The University of Georgia Press, 1993.
Williamson, Jack. H.G. Wells: Critic of Progress. Baltimore: The Mirage Press, 1973.