Authors: The Cyberiad [v1.0] [htm]
"Thou seekest Ineffabelle, poor
wretch! And yet thou knowest full well she doth not live these five
hundred years, hence how vain and unavailing is thy passion! The only
thing that I can do for thee is to let thee see her—not in the
flesh, forsooth, but a fair informational facsimile, a model that is
digital, not physical, stochastic, not plastic, ergodic and most
assuredly erotic, and all in yon Black Box, which I constructed in my
spare time out of odds and ends!"
"Ah, show her to me, show her to
me now!" exclaimed Zipperupus, quivering. The patriarch gave a
nod, examined the ancient volume for the princess' coordinates, put
her and the entire Middle Ages on punch cards, wrote up the program,
threw the switch, lifted the lid of the Black Box and said:
"Behold!"
The King leaned over, looked and saw,
yes, the Middle Ages simulated to a T, all digital, binary and
nonlinear, and there was the land of Dandelia, the Icicle Forest, the
palace with the Helical Tower, the Aviary That Neighed, and the
Treasury with a Hundred Eyes as well; and there was Ineffabelle
herself, taking a slow, stochastic stroll through her simulated
garden, and her circuits glowed red and gold as she picked simulated
daisies and hummed a simulated song. Zipperupus, unable to restrain
himself any longer, leaped upon the Black Box and in his madness
tried to climb into that computerized world. The patriarch, however,
quickly killed the current, hurled the King to the earth and said:
"Madman! Wouldst attempt the
impossible?! For no being made of matter can ever enter a system
that is naught but the flux and swirl of alphanumerical elements,
discontinuous integer configurations, the abstract stuff of
digits!"
"But I must, I must!!"
bellowed Zipperupus, beside himself, and beat his head against the
Black Box until the metal was dented. The old sage then said:
"If such is thy inalterable
desire, there
is
a way I can connect thee to the Princess
Ineffabelle, but first thou must part with thy present form, for I
shall take thy appurtenant coordinates and make a program of
thee, atom by atom, and place thy simulation in that world medievally
modeled, informational and representational, and there will it
remain, enduring as long as electrons course through these wires and
hop from cathode to anode. But thou, standing here before me now,
thou wilt be annihilated, so that thy only existence may be in the
form of given fields and potentials, statistical, heuristical,
and wholly digital!"
"That's hard to believe,"
said Zipperupus. "How will I know you've simulated me, and not
someone else?"
"Very well, we'll make a trial
run," said the sage. And he took all the King's measurements, as
if for a suit of clothes, though with much greater precision, since
every atom was carefully plotted and weighed, and then he fed the
program into the Black Box and said:
"Behold!"
The King peered inside and saw himself
sitting by the fire and reading in an ancient book about the Princess
Ineffabelle, then rushing out to find her, asking here and
there, until in the heart of the gold-plated desert he came upon a
humble hut and a snow-white patriarch, who greeted him with the
words, "Thou seekest Ineffabelle, poor wretch!" And so on.
"Surely now thou art convinced,"
said the patriarch, switching it off. "This time I shall program
thee in the Middle Ages, at the side of the sweet Ineffabelle, that
thou mayest dream with her an unending dream, simulated, nonlinear,
binary …"
"Yes, yes, I understand,"
said the King. "But still, it's only my likeness, not myself,
since I am right here and not in any Box!"
"But thou wilt not be here long,"
replied the sage with a kindly smile, "for I shall attend to
that…"
And he pulled out a hammer from under
the bed, a heavy hammer, but serviceable.
"When thou art locked in the arms
of thy beloved," the patriarch told him, "I shall see to it
that there be not two of thee, one here and one there, in the
Box—employing a method that is old and primitive, yet never
fails, so if thou wilt just bend over a little…"
"First let me take another look
at your Ineffabelle," said the King. "Just to make sure…"
The sage lifted the lid of the Black
Box and showed him Ineffabelle. The King looked and looked, and
finally said:
"The description in the ancient
volume is greatly exaggerated. She's not bad, of course, but nowhere
near as beautiful as it says in the chronicles. Well, so long, old
sage…"
And he turned to leave.
"Where art thou going, madman?!"
cried the patriarch, clutching his hammer, for the King was almost
out the door.
"Anywhere but in the Box,"
said Zipperupus and hurried out, but at that very moment the dream
burst like a bubble beneath his feet, and he found himself in the
vestibule facing the bitterly disappointed Subtillion, disappointed
because the King had come so close to being locked up in the
Black Box, and the Lord High Thaumaturge could have kept him there
forever…
"Listen here, Sir Cybernerian,"
said the King, "these dreams of yours with princesses are a
great deal more trouble than they're worth. Now either you show me
one I can enjoy—no tricks, no complications—or leave the
palace at once, and take your cabinets with you!"
"Sire!" Subtillion replied.
"I have just the dream for you, the finest quality and
tailor-made. Only give it a try, and you'll see I'm right!"
"Which one is that?" asked
the King.
"This one, Your Highness,"
said the Lord High Thaumaturge, and pointed to the little pearl
plaque with the inscription: "Mona Lisa, or The Labyrinth
of Sweet Infinity."
And before the King could answer yea
or nay, Subtillion himself took the chain to plug him in, and
quickly, for he saw that things were going none too well: Zipperupus
had escaped eternal imprisonment in the Black Box, too thickheaded
to fall completely for the captivating Ineffabelle.
"Wait," said the King, "let
me!"
And he pushed in the plug and entered
the dream, only to find himself still himself, Zipperupus, standing
in the palace vestibule, and at his side, Subtillion the Cybernerian,
who explains to him that of all the dreams, "Mona Lisa" is
the most dissolute and dissipated, for in it is the infinite in
femininity; hearing this, Zipperupus plugs in and looks about for
Mona Lisa, already yearning for her infinitely feminine caress, but
in this dream within a dream he finds himself still in the palace
vestibule, the Lord High Thaumaturge at his side, so impatiently
plugs into the cabinet and enters the next dream, but it's still the
same, the vestibule, the cabinets, the Cybernerian and himself. "Is
this a dream or isn't it?" he shouts, plugging in again, and
once again there's the vestibule, the cabinets, the Cybernerian; and
again, but it's still the same; and again and again, faster and
faster. "Where's Mona Lisa, knave?!" he snarls, and pulls
the plug to wake—but no, he's still in the vestibule with the
cabinets! Furious, he stamps his feet and hurls himself from dream to
dream, from cabinet to cabinet, from Cybernerian to Cybernerian, but
now he doesn't care about the dream, he only wants to get back to
reality, back to his beloved throne, the court intrigues and old
iniquities, and he pulls and pushes the plugs in a blind frenzy.
"Help!" he cries, and, "Hey! The King's in danger!"
and, "Mona Lisa! Yoo-hoo!," while he thrashes around in
terror and scrambles wildly from corner to corner, looking for a
chink in the dream, but in vain. He did not understand the how, the
why or the what of it, but his stupidity could not save him, nor
could his cowardice, nor his inordinate greed, for this time he had
gotten himself in too deep, and was trapped and wrapped in dreams as
if in a hundred tight cocoons, so that even when he managed,
straining with all his might, to free himself from one, that didn't
help, for immediately he fell into another, and when he pulled his
plug from the cabinet, both plug and cabinet were only dreamed, not
real, and when he beat Subtillion, Subtillion too turned out to be a
dream. Zipperupus leaped here and there, and everywhere, but
wherever he leaped, everything was a dream, a dream and nothing but a
dream, the doors, the marble floors, the gold-embroidered walls, the
tapestries, the halls, and Zipperupus too, he was a dream, a dream
that dreamed, a walking shadow, an empty apparition, insubstantial,
fleeting, lost in a labyrinth of dreams, sinking ever deeper,
though still he bucked and kicked—only that too was purely
imaginary! He punched Subtillion in the nose, but not really, roared
and howled, but nothing real came out, and when at last, dazed and
half-crazed, he really did tear his way into reality, he thought it
was a dream and plugged himself back in, and then it really was, and
on he dreamed, and on and on, which was inevitable, and thus
Zipperupus, whimpering, dreamed of waking in vain, not knowing that
'Mona Lisa' was—in reality—a diabolical code for
'monarch-olysis,' that is: the dissolution, dissociation and total
dissipation of the King. For truly, of all Subtillion's
treacherous traps, this was the most terrible…
--------------------+---+----------------------
Such was the tale, moving and
improving, that Trurl told to King Thumbscrew the Third, who by now
had a splitting headache and so dismissed the constructor without
further ado, presenting him first with the Order of the Sacred
Cy-bernia, a lilac sign of feedback upon a field of green, in-crusted
with precious bits of information.
+ +
And with these words the second
storytelling machine ground to a halt, its golden gears whirring
musically, and gave a giddy little laugh, for a few of its klystrons
had overheated slightly; but it lowered its anode potential,
waved away the smoke, sighed and retreated to the photon phaeton,
accompanied by much applause, the reward for its eloquence and
storytelling skill.
King Genius meanwhile offered Trurl a
cup of ion mead, wondrously carved with curves of probability and the
subtle play of quantum waves. Trurl quaffed it down, then snapped his
fingers, whereupon the third machine stepped out into the center of
the cave, bowed low and said, in a voice that was tonic, euphonic,
and most electronic:
+ +
This is the story of how the Great
Constructor Trurl, with the aid of an ordinary jug, created a local
fluctuation, and what came of it.
In the Constellation of the Wringer
there was a Spiral Galaxy, and in this Galaxy there was a Black
Nebula, and in this Nebula were five sixth-order clusters, and in the
fifth cluster, a lilac sun, very old and very dim, and around this
sun revolved seven planets, and the third planet had two moons, and
in all these suns and stars and planets and moons a variety of
events, various and varying, took place, falling into a statistical
distribution that was perfectly normal, and on the second moon
of the third planet of the lilac sun of the fifth cluster of the
Black Nebula in the Spiral Galaxy in the Constellation of the Wringer
was a garbage dump, the kind of garbage dump one might find on any
planet or moon, absolutely average, in other words full of garbage;
it had come into existence because the Glauberical Aberracleans once
waged a war, a war of the fission-and-fusion type, against the
Albumenid Ifts, with the natural result that their bridges, roads,
homes and palaces, and of course they themselves, were reduced to
ashes and shards, which the solar winds blew to the place whereof we
speak. Now for many, many centuries positively nothing took place in
this garbage dump but garbage, though an earthquake did occur and
shifted the garbage on the bottom to the top, and the garbage on the
top to the bottom, which in itself had no particular significance,
and yet this paved the way for a most unusual phenomenon. It so
happened that Trurl, the Fabulous Constructor, while flying in the
vicinity, was blinded by a certain comet with a garish tail. He fled
its path, frantically jettisoning out the spaceship window whatever
lay in reach—chess pieces, the hollow kind, which he'd filled
with liquor for the trip, some barrels the Ubbidubs of Chlorelei
employed for the purpose of compelling their opponents to yield, as
well as assorted utensils, and among these, an old earthenware
jug with a crack down the middle. This jug, accelerating in
accordance with the laws of gravity and boosted by the comet's tail,
crashed into a mountainside above the dump, fell, clattered down a
slope of junk toward a puddle, skittered across some mud, and finally
smacked into an old tin can; this impact bent the metal around a