Authors: The Cyberiad [v1.0] [htm]
that, huffing, he raised his finger and— though he still
dropped an occasional oath and threw off such sparks, that the air
reeked with ozone—proceeded to tell his story in the following
words:
—Know then, O foreigner, that I
am a pundit, a pundit's pundit, first among philosophists, for my
lifelong passion and profession is ontology, and my name (which the
stars must some day outshine) is Chlorian Theoreticus the Proph. I
was born of impoverished parents and from earliest childhood felt an
irresistible attraction to abstract thought. At the age of sixteen I
wrote my first opus,
The Gnostotron
. It set forth the
general theory of
a posteriori
deities, deities which had to
be added to the Universe later by advanced civilizations, since, as
everyone knows, Matter always comes first and no one, consequently,
could have possibly thought in the very beginning. Clearly then, at
the Dawn of Creation thoughtlessness reigned supreme, which is
only obvious, really, when you take a look at this, this Cosmos of
ours!!— Here the ancient one choked with sudden rage, stamped
his feet, but then weakened, and finally went on. —I simply
explained the necessity of providing gods after the fact, inasmuch
as there were none available beforehand. Indeed, every civilization
that engages in intellectronics strives for nothing else but to
construct some Omniac, which, in Its infinite mercy, might rectify
the currents of evil and plot the path of righteousness and true
wisdom. Now in this work of mine I included a blueprint for the first
Gnostotron, as well as graphs of its omnipotence output, measured in
units called jehovahs. One jehovah would be equivalent to the working
of one miracle with a radius of one billion parsecs. As soon as this
treatise appeared in print (at my own expense), I rushed out into the
street, certain that the people would lift me up on their
shoulders, crown me with garlands, shower me with gold, but no
one, not even so much as a lame cybernerian, approached with words of
praise. Feeling dismay rather than disappointment at this neglect, I
immediately sat down and wrote
The Scourge of Reason
, two
volumes, in which I showed that each civilization may choose one of
two roads to travel, that is, either fret itself to death, or pet
itself to death. And in the course of doing one or the other, it eats
its way into the Universe, turning cinders and flinders of stars into
toilet seats, pegs, gears, cigarette holders and pillowcases, and it
does this because, unable to fathom the Universe, it seeks to change
that Fathomlessness into Something Fathomable, and will not stop
until the nebulae and planets have been processed to cradles, chamber
pots and bombs, all in the name of Sublime Order, for only a
Universe with pavement, plumbing, labels and catalogues is, in its
sight, acceptable and wholly respectable. Then in the second volume,
entitled
Advocatus Materiae
, I demonstrated how the Reason,
a greedy, grasping thing, is only satisfied when it succeeds in
chaining some cosmic geyser, or harnessing an atomic swarm—say,
to produce an ointment for the removal of freckles. This
accomplished, it hurries on to the next natural phenomenon, to
add it, like a stuffed trophy, to its precious collection of
scientific spoils. But alas, these two excellent volumes of mine were
also received with silence by the world; I said to myself then, that
patience was the way, and perseverance. Now having defended, first,
the Reason against the Universe (the Reason absolved from blame, in
that Matter permits all sorts of abominations only because it is
mindless), and second, the Universe against the Reason (which I
demolished utterly, I dare say), on a sudden inspiration I then wrote
The Existential Tailor
, where I proved conclusively the
absurdity of more than one philosopher, for each must have his own
philosophy, that fits him like a glove, or a coat cut to
specifications. And as this work too was totally ignored, I
straightway wrote another; in it I presented all the possible
hypotheses concerning the origin of the Universe —first, the
opinion that it doesn't exist at all, second, that it's the result of
all the mistakes made by a certain Demiurgon, who set out to create
the world without the faintest idea of how to go about it, third,
that the world is actually an hallucination of some Superbrain gone
berserk in a manner infinite but bounded, four, that it is an
asinine thought materialized as a joke, five, that it is matter that
thinks, but with an abysmally low IQ—and then I sat back and
waited, expecting vehement attacks, heated debates, notoriety,
laurels, lawsuits, fan mail and anonymous threats. But once
again, nothing, absolutely nothing. It was quite beyond belief.
Then I thought, well, perhaps I hadn't read enough of other thinkers,
and so, obtaining their works, I acquainted myself with the most
famous among them, one by one— Phrensius Whiz, Buffon von
Schneckon, founder of the Schneckonist movement, then Turbulo
Turpitus Catafalicum, Ithm of Logar, and of course Lemuel the
Balding.
Yet in all of this I discovered
nothing of significance. Meanwhile my own books were gradually being
sold, I assumed therefore that someone was reading them, and if
so, I would sooner or later hear of it. In particular I had no doubt
but that the Tyrant would summon me, with the demand that I
devote myself exclusively to the immortalization of his glorious
name. Of course I would tell him that Truth alone did I serve and
would lay down my life for it, if necessary; the Tyrant, desirous of
the praises my brilliant brain could formulate, would then attempt to
bring me round with honeyed words and even toss sacks of clinking
coins at my feet, but, seeing me unmoved and resolute, would say
(prompted by his wise men) that as I dealt with the Universe, I ought
to deal with him as well, for he represented, after all, a part of
the Cosmic Whole. Outraged at this mockery, I would answer sharply,
and he would have me put to torture. Thus I toughened my body in
advance, that it might endure the worst with philosophical
indifference. Yet days and months passed by, and nothing, no
word from the Tyrant—so I had readied myself for martyrdom in
vain. There was only a certain scribbler by the name of Noxion, who
wrote in some cheap, vulgar evening gazette that this prankster
Chlorian made up no end of farfetched yarns in his book facetiously
entitled,
The Gnostotron
, or The
Ultimate
Omnipotentiometer
, or
A Pee into
the Future. I
rushed to my bookshelf—yes, there it was, the printer had
somehow left out the
k.
. .. My first impulse was to go out
and murder him, but reason prevailed. "My time will come!"
I told myself. "It cannot be, for someone to cast forth pearls
of eternal wisdom left and right, day and night, till the mind is
blinded by the surging Light of Final Understanding—and
nothing! No, fame will be mine, acclaim will be mine, thrones of
ivory, the title of Prime Mentorian, the love of the people, sweet
solace in a shaded grove, my very own school, pupils that hang on
every word, and a cheering crowd!" For verily, O foreign one,
every pundit cherishes such dreams. True, they'll tell you that
Knowledge is their only sustenance, and Truth their only joy, that
not for them are the trappings of this world, the ribbons, medals and
awards, the warm embrace of thermomours, and gold, and glory, and
applause. Humbug, my dear sir, sheer humbug! They all crave the same
thing, and the only difference between them and myself is that
I, at least, have the greatness of spirit to admit to such frailties,
openly and without shame. But the years went by, and I was referred
to only as Chlorian the Fool, or Poor Old Chlorio. When the fortieth
anniversary of my birth arrived, I was amazed to find myself still
waiting for the masses to beat a path to my door. So I sat down and
wrote a dissertation on the H. P. L. D.'s, that is, the civilization
that has progressed the farthest in the entire Universe. What, you
say you never heard of them? But then neither did I, nor did I see
them, nor for that matter do I ever expect to; I established their
existence on purely deductive grounds, in a manner that was strictly
logical, inevitable and theoretical. For if—so went my
argument —the Universe contains civilizations at varying stages
of development, the majority must be more or less average, with
a few that have either fallen behind or managed to forge ahead. And
whenever you have a statistical distribution, say, for example, of
height in a group of individuals, most will be medium, but one and
only one may be the highest, and similarly, in the Universe there
must exist a civilization that has achieved the Highest Possible
Level of Development. Its inhabitants, the H. P. L. D.'s, know things
of which we do not even dream. All this I placed in four volumes,
paying for the glossy paper and the frontispiece portrait of the
author out of my own pocket, but in vain—it shared the fate of
its predecessors. A year ago I read the whole work through, from
cover to cover, and wept, so brilliantly was the thing written, so
full of the breath of the Absolute—no, it simply cannot be
described! And then, at the age of fifty, I nearly hit the ceiling!
You see, I would occasionally purchase the works of other sages,
who enjoyed great riches and the sweets of success, to learn what
sort of things they wrote about. Well, they wrote about the
difference between the front and the rear, about the wondrous
structure of the Tyrant's throne, its sweeping arms and all-enduring
legs, and tracts about good manners, and detailed descriptions of
this and that, during which no one ever praised himself in any way,
and yet it worked out somehow that Phrensius stood in awe of
Schneckon, and Schneckon of Phrensius, while both were lauded by the
Logarites. And then there were the three Voltaic brothers catapulted
to fame: Vaultor elevated Vauntor, Vauntor elevated Vanitole, and
Vanitole did likewise for Vaultor. As I studied all these works,
suddenly I saw red, and wildly threw myself upon them, and ripped and
tore, and gnashed and gnawed… until my sobs abated, and then,
drying my tears, I proceeded to write T
he Evolution of
Reason As a Two-cycle Phenomenon. For, as I showed in that essay,
robots and paleface are joined by a reciprocal bond. First, as the
result of an accumulation of mucilaginous slime upon some saline
shore, beings come into being, viscous, sticky, albescent and
albuminous. After centuries, these finally learn how to breathe the
breath of life into base metals, and they fashion Automata to be
their slaves. In time, however, the process is reversed, and our
Automata, having freed themselves from the Albuminids, eventually
conduct experiments, to see if consciousness can subsist in any
gelatinous substance, which of course it can, and does, in albuminose
protein. But now those synthetic paleface, after millions of years,
again discover iron, and so on, back and forth for all eternity. As
you can see, I had thus settled the age-old question of which came
first, robot or paleface. This opus I submitted to the Academy, six
volumes bound in leather, and the expense of its publication quite
exhausted the remainder of my inheritance. Need I tell you that it
too was passed over in silence? I was already past sixty, going on
seventy, and all hope of glory within my lifetime was swiftly fading.
What then could I do? I began to think of posterity, of the future
generations that must some day discover me and prostrate themselves
in the dust before my name. But what benefit, I asked myself, would I
derive from that, when I no longer was? And I was forced to conclude,
in keeping with my teachings contained in four and forty volumes,
with prolegomena, paralipomena and appendices, that there would be no
benefit whatever. So, my soul seething with spleen, I sat down to
write my
Testament for Descendants
, to kick them, spit upon
them, abuse, revile and curse them as much as possible, and all in
the most rigorously scientific way. What's that, you say? That this
was unjust, and my indignation would have been better directed at my
contemporaries, who failed to recognize my genius? Bah!
Consider, worthy stranger! By the time my
Testament
is
enshrined by future fame, its every syllable refulgent with the glow
of greatness, these contemporaries will have long since turned to
dust, and how shall my curses reach them then? No, had I done as you
say, their descendants would surely study my works with perfect
equanimity, now and then remarking with a comfortable,
self-righteous sigh: "Alas! With what quiet heroism did