"Won't you help Maskull out of his difficulty?" said Joiwind, pulling her husband's arm.
He smiled. "If he'll forgive me for again trespassing in his brain.
But the difficulty is small. Life on a new planet, Maskull, is necessarily energetic and lawless, and not sedate and imitative.
Nature is still fluid - not yet rigid - and matter is plastic. The will forks and sports incessantly, and thus no two creatures are alike.""Well, I understand all that," replied Maskull, after listening attentively. "But what I don't grasp is this - if living creatures here sport so energetically, how does it come about that human beings wear much the same shape as in my world?""I'll explain that too," said Panawe. "All creatures that resemble Shaping must of necessity resemble one another.""Then sporting is the blind will to become like Shaping?""Exactly."
"It is most wonderful," said Maskull. "Then the brotherhood of man is not a fable invented by idealists, but a solid fact."Joiwind looked at him, and changed colour. Panawe relapsed into sternness.
Maskull became interested in a new phenomenon. The jale - coloured blossoms of a crystal bush were emitting mental waves, which with his breve he could clearly distinguish. They cried out silently, "To me To me!" While he looked, a flying worm guided itself through the air to one of these blossoms and began to suck its nectar. The floral cry immediately ceased.
They now gained the crest of the mountain, and looked down beyond. Alake occupied its crater - like cavity. A fringe of trees partly intercepted the view, but Maskull was able to perceive that this mountain lake was nearly circular and perhaps a quarter of a mile across. Its shore stood a hundred feet below them.