Certainly Both Mr. G.B. Shaw and Wells are ideologist to each the literary form of their work is a secondary matter; they are primarily concerned to promulgate certain ideas and theories, and they are primarily concerned to promulgate certain ideas and theories, and they use the form which seems to them the most convenient or suitable for the moment of effectuate their aim.

Here, however, the similarity ends. Mr. Bernard Shaw has a theory of life, which, whatever are its merits or demerits, gives homogeneity to his work-dramatic, fictional or purely argumentative. Mr. H.G. Wells has no definite theory of life. His writings are not the varied and continuous expression of any distinctive systematized outlook.