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・ A Room for London
・ A Room for Romeo Brass
・ A Room in Chelsea Square
・ A Room of One's Own
・ A Room with a View
・ A Room with a View (1985 film)
・ A Room with a View (2007 film)
・ A Room with No View
・ A Rosa do Povo
・ A Rose and a Baby Ruth
・ A Rose Beyond the Thames
・ A Rose by Any Name
・ A Rose by Any Other Name
・ A Rose by Any Other Name (album)
・ A rose by any other name would smell as sweet
A Rose for Ecclesiastes
・ A Rose for Emily
・ A Rose for Everyone
・ A Rose for Mary
・ A Rose for the Apocalypse
・ A Rose for the Dead
・ A Rose in the Wind
・ A Rose Is Still a Rose
・ A Rose Is Still a Rose (song)
・ A Rough Passage
・ A Round and a Bout
・ A Rowboat Romance
・ A Royal Affair
・ A Royal Christmas
・ A Royal Divorce


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A Rose for Ecclesiastes : ウィキペディア英語版
A Rose for Ecclesiastes

"A Rose for Ecclesiastes" is a science fiction short story by American author Roger Zelazny, first published in the November 1963 issue of ''The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction'' with a special wraparound cover painting by Hannes Bok. It was nominated for the 1964 Hugo Award for Short Fiction.〔(The LOCUS Index to SF Awards )〕
== Plot summary ==

The story is narrated by a gifted human linguist and poet named Gallinger, who is part of a mission studying Mars. He becomes the first human to learn the "high language" of the intelligent Martians, and to be allowed to read their sacred texts. He comes to believe that Martian culture is essentially fatalistic, following an event in the distant past that left the long-lived Martians sterile.
The Martian high priestess regards Gallinger highly, and over the course of months, his theological and poetical discussion elevate him to a status something like a prophet. Ultimately, he is seduced by a Martian temple dancer and impregnates her, the first such pregnancy on the planet in hundreds of years. The Martians appear not to take this well, as it contradicts their religion's expectation of extinction.
Gallinger sets out to do two things: he translates the Biblical book of ''Ecclesiastes'', which he finds thematically similar to their religious texts, into the High Tongue. As part of the cultural exchange he engages in with the High Priestess, he promises to bring her a rose, since the Martians have never seen one. The ship's biologist grows a rose and gives it to Gallagher.
In anger at Martian religious fatalism and impassioned by his love for the dancer and his child-to-be, Gallinger breaks into the temple during a closed service and reads to the Martians from his translation of ''Ecclesiastes''. He mocks it as he reads it, stating:
He discovers that the Martian religion is more complicated than he had originally realized, as is his role in fulfilling prophecy. It has been prophesied that a stranger will "go shod in the temple", breaking in without removing all unclean items, restoring life to the Martian race and bringing something new. His actions have brought life, and the High Priestess takes the rose with a vow to learning how to grow the flower.
The story ends well for the Martians, though perhaps less so for Gallinger, who discovers his dancer was only fulfilling her religious duty by seducing him, not caring for him otherwise. He attempts suicide, but, when he wakes up, he is in the infirmary, and he sees Mars through a port, growing farther away as the ship leaves Mars to return to Earth.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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