Authors: The Cyberiad [v1.0] [htm]
forming such a thick coat, that the constructors lost all hope of
ever getting it clean again.
By now the stars had vanished in the
general gloom, so the two proceeded gropingly, till suddenly their
ship lurched, and all the furniture, pots and pans went flying; they
felt themselves hurtling forward, faster and faster, then at last
there was an awful crunch and the ship came to a stop, landing softly
enough though at an angle, as if its nose had stuck in something
doughy. They ran to the window, but couldn't see a thing, as it was
pitch black outside—and now they heard someone banging, someone
fearfully strong, whoever it was, for the very walls were buckling
in. At this point Trurl and Klapaucius began to feel a little less
confident in the power of their unarmed wits, but it was too
late now, so they opened the hatch, since otherwise it would be
forced from without and broken for good.
As they looked, someone stuck his face
in the opening— a face so huge, that it was clearly out of the
question for the rest of the body to climb in after it, and not only
huge, but unspeakably hideous, studded up and down and every which
way with bulging eyes, and the nose was a saw, and an iron hook
served for the jaw. The face didn't move, pressed up against the open
hatch, only the eyes darted back and forth, avidly examining
everything, as if appraising whether or not the take was worth the
trouble. Even someone far less intelligent than our constructors
would have understood what that scrutiny meant, for it was
unmistakable.
"Well?" said Trurl finally,
exasperated by such shameless eyeing, which went on in silence. "What
do you want, you unwashed mug?! I am Trurl, constructor and general
omni-potentiary, and this is my friend Klapaucius, also of great
renown, and we were flying by in our ship as tourists, so kindly
remove your ugly muzzle and take us immediately out of this unsavory
place—full of litter and rubbish, no doubt—and direct us
to some clean, respectable sector, or we'll lodge a complaint and
they'll have you broken down into little scrap—do you hear me,
you scavenger, ragpicker, pack rat?!"
But the face said nothing, just looked
and looked, as if calculating, making an estimate of how much.
"Listen here, you unmitigated
freak," yelled Trurl, throwing all caution to the winds,
though Klapaucius kept elbowing him to show some restraint, "we
have no gold, no silver, no precious stones, so you let us go this
instant, and above all cover up that oversized physiognomy of yours,
for it's unspeakably hideous. And you"—he said,
turning to Klapaucius—"stop jabbing me with that
elbow! This is the way you have to talk to such types!"
"I have no use," suddenly
said the face, turning its thousand glittering eyes on Trurl,
"for gold or silver, and the way you have to talk to me is
delicately and with respect, as I am a pirate with a Ph.D.,
well-educated and by nature extremely high-strung. Other guests have
been here and needed sweetening up—and when I've given you
a proper pounding too, why, you'll be positively dripping with good
manners. My name is Pugg, I'm thirty arshins in every direction and
it's true I rob, but in a manner that is modern and scientific, for I
collect precious facts, genuine truths, priceless knowledge, and
in general all information of value. And now, let's hand it over,
otherwise I whistle! Very well then, I'll count to five—one,
two, three …"
And at five, when they had handed him
nothing, he let loose such a whistle, that their ears nearly flew
off, and Klapaucius realized that the "PHT" of which the
natives spoke with terror was indeed "Ph.D.," for the
pirate had obviously studied at some higher institution, like the
Criminal Academy. Trurl held his head and groaned—Pugg's
whistle was fully commensurate with his size.
"We'll give you nothing!" he
cried, while Klapaucius ran off to find some cotton. "And get
your face out of here!"
"You don't like my face, maybe
you'll like my hand," replied the pirate. "It's one
huge humdinger of a hand and heavy as the devil! And here it comes!"
And indeed: the cotton Klapaucius
brought was no longer needed, for the face had disappeared, and in
its place was a paw, a paw to end all paws, with knots and knobs and
shovel claws, and it rummaged and clutched, breaking tables and
hutches and cupboards, till all the pots and pans came crashing
down, and the paw chased Trurl and Klapaucius into the engine room,
where they climbed up on top of the atomic pile and rapped its
knuckles—pow! pow!—with a poker. This made the diplomaed
pirate mad, and he put his face back in the hatch and said:
"Look, I strongly advise you to
come to terms with me at once, otherwise I'll put you aside for
later, at the very bottom of my storage bin, and cover you with
garbage, and wedge you in with rocks, so you can't move, and you'll
just sit there and slowly rust. So then, which is it to be?"
Trurl wouldn't hear of negotiating,
but Klapaucius politely asked what exactly it was that His
Doctoral Diploma-hood wanted?
"Now you're talking," he
said. "I gather rich mines of information, for such is my
lifelong love and avocation, the result of a higher education and, I
might add, a practical grasp of the situation, when you consider
that, with the usual treasures untutored pirates like to hoard, there
is not a blessed thing here one can buy. Information, on the other
hand, satisfies one's thirst for knowledge, and it is well known
besides, that everything that is, is information; and thus for
centuries now I gather it, and will continue to do so, though it's
true I'm not against a little gold or diamonds now and then, for
they're pretty and decorative—but that's strictly on the side,
as occasion warrants. Observe, however, that for false information,
no less than for false coin, I give a good shellacking, since I am
refined and insist on authenticity!"
"But what kind of authentic and
valuable information do you require?" asked Klapaucius.
"All kinds, as long as it's
true," replied the pirate. "You never can tell what facts
may come in handy. I already have a few hundred wells and cellars
full of them, but there's room for twice again as much. So out with
it; tell me everything you know, and I'll jot it down. But make
it snappy!"
"A fine state of affairs,"
Klapaucius whispered in Trurl's ear. "He could keep us here for
an eon or two before we tell him everything we know. Our knowledge is
colossal!!"
"Wait," whispered Trurl, "I
have an idea." And he said aloud:
"Listen here, you thief with a
degree, we possess a piece of information worth more than any other,
a formula to fashion gold from ordinary atoms—for instance,
hydrogen, of which the Universe has an inexhaustible supply. We'll
let you have it if you let us go."
"I have a whole trunk full of
such recipes," answered the face, batting its eyes ferociously.
"And they're all worthless. I don't intend to be tricked
again—you demonstrate it first."
"Sure, why not? Do you have a
jug?"
"No."
"That's all right, we can do
without one/' said Trurl. "The method is simplicity itself: take
as many atoms of hydrogen as the weight of an atom of gold, namely
one hundred and ninety-six; first you shell the electrons, then knead
the protons, working the nuclear batter till the mesons appear,
and now sprinkle your electrons all around, and voila, there's the
gold. Watch!"
And Trurl began to catch atoms,
peeling their electrons and mixing their protons with such nimble
speed, that his fingers were a blur, and he stirred the subatomic
dough, stuck all the electrons back in, then on to the next
molecule. In less than five minutes he was holding a nugget of
the purest gold, which he presented to the face; it took a sniff and
said with a nod:
"Yes, that's gold, but I'm too
big to go running around like that after atoms."
"No problem, we'll give you a
suitable machine!" coaxed Trurl. "Just think, this way you
can turn anything into gold, not only hydrogen—we'll give you
the formula for other atoms, too. Why, one could make the entire
Universe gold, if only he applied himself!"
"If the Universe was gold, gold
would be worthless," observed Pugg. "No, I have no use for
your formula—I've written it down, yes, but that's not enough!
It's the wealth of knowledge that I crave."
"But what do you want to know,
for heaven's sake?!"
"Everything!"
Trurl looked at Klapaucius, Klapaucius
looked at Trurl, and the latter finally said:
"If first you will solemnly
swear, up and down and cross your heart, that you will let us go, we
will give you information, information about infinite
information, that is, we will make you your very own Demon of the
Second Kind, which is magical and thermodynamical, nonclassical and
stochastical, and from any old barrel or even a sneeze it will
extract information for you about everything that was, is, may be or
ever will be. And there is no demon beyond this Demon, for it is of
the Second Kind, and if you want it, say so now!"
The pirate with the Ph.D. was
suspicious, and didn't agree all at once to these conditions, but
finally swore the required oath, with the stipulation that the Demon
first give clear proof of its informational prowess. Which was fine
with Trurl.
"Now pay attention, big-face!"
he said. "Do you have any air knocking about? Without air the
Demon won't work."
"I have a little," said
Pugg, "but it's not too clean…"
"Stale, stagnant, polluted, it
doesn't matter, not in the least," replied the constructors.
"Lead us to it, and we'll show you something!"
So he withdrew his face and let them
leave the ship, and they followed him to his house, noticing that he
had legs like towers, shoulders like a precipice, and hadn't been
washed for centuries, nor oiled, hence creaked something awful. They
went down cellar corridors, with sacks moldering on every hand—in
these the pirate kept his stolen facts —bunches and bundles of
sacks, all tied with string, and the most important, valuable items
marked in red pencil. On the wall hung an immense catalog, fastened
to the rock by a rust-eaten chain and full of entries and headings,
beginning, of course, with A. On they went, raising muffled
echoes, and Trurl looked and grimaced, as did Klapaucius, for though
there was plenty of authentic and top-quality information lying
about, wherever the eye fell was nothing but must, dust and clutter.
Plenty of air, too, but thoroughly stale. They stopped and Trurl
said:
"Now pay attention! Air is made
up of atoms, and these atoms jump this way and that, and collide
billions of times a second in each and every cubic micromillimeter,
and it is precisely this eternal jumping and bumping together that
constitutes a gas. Now, even though their jumping is blind and wholly
random, there are billions upon billions of atoms in every
interstice, and as a consequence of this great number, their little
skips and scamperings give rise to, among other things—and
purely by accident—to significant configurations… Do you
know what a configuration is, blockhead?"
"No insults, please!" said
Pugg. "For I am not your usual uncouth pirate, but refined and
with a Ph.D., and therefore extremely high-strung."
"Fine. So then, from all this
atomic hopping around, we obtain significant, that is meaningful
configurations, as if, for instance, you were to fire at a wall
blindfold and the bullet holes formed some letter. That, which on a
large scale is rare and quite unlikely, happens in atomic gases all
the time, on account of those trillion collisions every one
hundred-thousandth of a second. But here's the problem: in every