As Robert Hugh Benson's apocalyptic novel Lord of the World moves toward its shocking conclusion, a naïve young woman who has placed simple-minded faith in the utter goodness of the Antichrist figure at the center of the story awakens to the fact that her hero has artfully constructed a regime of violence, oppression, and thought control.
Profoundly disillusioned, she turns to one of the new state-run euthanasia "homes" for help in ending her life. As she ponders what has happened and what lies ahead, she thinks of the humanist belief system that has brought here: "There seemed no way out of it. The Humanity-Religion was the only one. Man was God, or at least His highest manifestation; and He was a God with which she did not wish to have anything more to do."
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