'I cannot convey the
sense of abominable desolation that hung over the world. The red
eastern sky, the northward blackness, the salt Dead Sea, the
stony beach crawling with these foul, slow-stirring [crab-like]
monsters, the uniform poisonous-looking green of the lichenous
plants, the thin air that hurts one's lungs: all contributed to
an appalling effect. I moved on a hundred years, and there was
the same red sun--a little larger, a little duller--the same
dying sea, the same chill air, and the same crowd of earthy
crustacea creeping in and out among the green weed and the red
rocks. And in the westward sky, I saw a curved pale line like a
vast new moon.
'So I traveled,
stopping ever and again, in great strides of a thousand years or
more, drawn on by the mystery of the earth's fate, watching with
a strange fascination the sun grow larger and duller in the
westward sky, and the life of the old earth ebb away. At
last, more than thirty million years hence, the huge
red-hot dome of the sun had come to obscure nearly a tenth
part of the darkling heavens. Then I stopped once more,
for the crawling multitude of crabs had disappeared, and the red
beach, save for its livid green liverworts and lichens, seemed
lifeless. And now it was flecked with white. A bitter cold
assailed me. Rare white flakes ever and again came eddying down.
To the north-eastward, the glare of snow lay under the starlight
of the sable sky and I could see an undulating crest of hillocks
pinkish white. There were fringes of ice along the sea margin,
with drifting masses further out; but the main expanse of that
salt ocean, all bloody under the eternal sunset, was still
unfrozen.