Methuselah (short story): Difference between revisions

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* The ''Methuselah'' crew used a [[Feynman radio]] to send their distress signal.
* The ''Methuselah'' crew used a [[Feynman radio]] to send their distress signal.
* Peri mentions the [[Bible]].
* Peri mentions the [[Bible]].
* The Doctor mentions the [[Ottoman]]s and the [[Sarkovian]]s.
* Peri can't read [[Latin]].


== Notes ==
== Notes ==

Revision as of 05:19, 15 May 2020

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You may wish to consult Methuselah for other, similarly-named pages.

Methuselah was the eleventh short story in the Short Trips anthology Short Trips: Transmissions. It was written by George Mann. It featured the Fifth Doctor and Peri Brown.

Summary

The Doctor and Peri land in Constantinople in the 10th century. They rescue an old man named Mephistus who is being chased by a mob. They take him home, where he tells them his story.

He used to be a teacher, but then he started hearing voices. Now people think he's crazy. He has written down what he thinks he's heard. The Doctor deciphers the writings and discovers that Mephistus has been hearing the distress call from a 22nd century spaceship called the Methuselah. It had an experimental hyperdrive that failed, sending the ship to the far future, at the end of the universe.

The Doctor leaves to rescue the crew of the ship. Peri stays with Methuselah, who begins to go crazy when he stops hearing the voices (because the Doctor has turned off the distress call in the future). He even tries to attack Peri.

When the Doctor finally returns, Mephistus apologises to Peri for his actions. The Doctor gives Mephistus the transmitter from the ship so he can continue to hear voices.

Characters

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Notes

Continuity

to be added