plains the time traveling experience as a since of falling and the speed is so great that it feels like any minute you will smash into another object. All these details suggest that its not a comfortable ride especially when he said "I remarked indeed a clumsy swaying of the machine, for which I was unable to account." There is evidence that the laboratory and the time traveler's house was torn down when he saw the brief picture of scaffolding. A snail went across the room at a speed that his eyes could not keep up with. After his house was gone he was in the open air and saw huge buildings erect themselves all around him. Wells was right in his assumption about these buildings because skyscrapers do exist in our time. He saw all the vegetation grow and die. The moon ran its cycles and the sun shot across the sky so fast that it was hurting the time traveler's eyes. The time traveler witness the season's changing from snow to spring in a continuos cycle. He thought of stopping but he was afraid of jamming his molecules and the object's molecules that occupied that space at that particular time. Here he goes back to science and with some added element of chemistry. The main character explains that if his time machine occupied the same space at the same time as another object then the molecules would fuse together causing a chemical reaction and the ending result would be an explosion. Even with this threat he takes the risk out of curiosity building some suspense in the book. He stops and is flung from his machine and is met by a thunderstorm. This is realistic in this book because in the UK it rains a lot so there is a good chance that he would encounter rain. After the Thunder storm is gone he hears voices in the bushes. A person emerges from the brush and is described as "a slight creature-perhaps four feet high-clad in a purple tunic, girdled at the waist with a leather belt. Sandals or buskins-I could not clearly distinguish which-w...