Authors: The Cyberiad [v1.0] [htm]
that master endure his cruel obscurity! How justified was his
anger towards our forefathers, and yet how noble of him, to have
bequeathed to us, even so, the fruits of his mighty wisdom!"
Yes, that's exactly what they'd say! And then what? Those idiots who
buried me alive, are they to go unpunished, shielded from my wrath
and vengeance by the grave? The very thought of it sets my oil aboil!
What, the sons would read my works in peace, politely rebuking their
fathers on my behalf? Never!! The least I can do is thumb my nose at
them from afar, from the past! Let them know, they who will worship
me and raise up gilded monuments to my memory, that in return I
wish them all to— to sprain their sprockets, pop their valves,
burn out their transmissions, and may their data be dumped, and
verdigris cover them from head to foot, if all they are able to do is
honor corpses exhumed from the cemetery of history! Perchance
there will arise among them a new sage, but they, slavishly poring
over the remains of some letters I wrote to my laundress, will take
no notice of him! Let them know, I say, oh let them know, once and
for all, that they have my heartfelt damnation and most sincere
contempt, that I hold them all for skeleton-kissers, corpse-lickers,
professional axle-jackals, who feed on carrion because they are blind
to wisdom when it is alive! Let them, in publishing my Complete
Works—which must include this Testament, my final curse upon
their future heads-—let the vile thanatomites and necrophytes
thereby be deprived of the chance to congratulate themselves, that
Chlorian Theoreticus the Proph, peerless pundit of yore who limned
the infinite tomorrow, was of their race! And as they grovel beneath
my pedestal, let them have the knowledge that I wished them nothing
but the very worst the Universe has to offer, and that the force of
my hatred, hurled forth into the future, was equaled only by its
impotence! Let them know that I disowned them utterly, and bestowed
upon them nothing but my loathing and anathema!!!
It was in vain that Klapaucius sought
to calm the raging sage throughout this long harangue. Upon uttering
these final words, the ancient one leaped up and, shaking his fist at
the generations to come, let loose a volley of shockingly pungent
imprecations (for where could he have learnt them, having led such an
exemplary life?); then, foaming and fuming, he stamped and bellowed,
and in a shower of sparks crashed to the floor, dead from an overload
of bile. Klapaucius, much discomfited by this unpleasant turn of
events, sat at the table of stone nearby, picked up the Testament and
began to peruse it, though his eyes were soon swimming from the
abundance of epithets therein addressed to the future, and by the
second page he broke into a sweat, for the now-departed Chlorian
Theoreticus gave evidence of a power of invective that was truly
cosmic. For three days Klapaucius read, his eyes riveted to that
manuscript, and was sorely perplexed: should he reveal it to the
world, or destroy it? And he sits there to this day, unable to
decide…"
+ +
"Methinks," said King
Genius, when the machine had finished and retired, "I see in
this some allusion to the question of monetary compensation,
which is now indeed at hand, for, after a night bravely whiled away
with tales, the dawn of a new day appears outside our cave. Well
then, my good constructor, how shall I reward you?"
"Your Majesty," said Trurl,
"places me in some difficulty. Whatever I request, should I
receive it, I must later regret, in that I did not ask for more. On
the other hand, I would not wish to cause offense by naming an
exorbitant figure. And so, the amount of the honorarium I leave to
the generosity of Your Majesty…"
"So be it," replied the King
affably. "The stories were excellent, the machines
unquestionably perfect, and therefore I see no alternative but to
reward you with the greatest treasure of all, one which, I am
certain, you will not want to exchange for any other. I grant you
health and life—this is, in my estimation, the only fitting
gift. Anything else would be an insult, for no amount of gold can
purchase Truth or Wisdom. Go then in peace, my friend, and continue
to hide your truths, too bitter for this world, in the guise of fairy
tale and fable."
"Your Majesty," said Trurl,
aghast, "did you intend, before, to deprive me of my life?
Was this then to have been my payment?"
"Put whatever interpretation you
wish upon my words," replied the King. "But here is how I
understand the matter: had you merely amused me, my munificence would
have known no bounds. But you did much more, and no wealth in the
Universe can equal that in value. Thus, in offering you the
opportunity to continue your illustrious career, I can give you no
higher reward or payment…"
Altruizine
OR
A True Account
of How Bonhomius the
Hermetic
Hermit Tried to Bring
About
Universal Happiness,
and
What Came of It
One bright summer day, as Trurl the
constructor was pruning the cyberberry bush in his back yard, he
spied a robot mendicant coming down the road, all tattered and torn,
a most woeful and piteous sight to behold. Its limbs were held
together by sections of old stovepipe fastened with string, its head
was a pot so full of holes you could hear its thoughts whir and
sputter inside, throwing off sparks, and its makeshift neck was
a rusty rail, and in its open belly were vacuum tubes that smoked and
rattled so badly, it had to hold them in place with its free hand—the
other was needed to tighten the screws that kept coming loose. Just
as it hobbled past the gate to Trurl's residence, it blew four fuses
at once and straightway began, spewing a foul cloud of burning
insulators, to fall apart, right before the constructor's eyes.
Trurl, full of compassion, took a screwdriver and a roll of electric
tape and hastened to offer what aid he could to the poor wayfarer,
who swooned repeatedly with a great grinding of gears, due to a total
asynchronization. At last Trurl managed to restore it to its senses,
such as they were, then helped it inside, sat it down in a
comfortable chair and gave it a battery to recharge itself, and while
the poor thing did so with trembling urgency, he asked it, unable to
contain his curiosity any longer, what had brought it to this
sorry pass.
"O kind and noble sir,"
replied the strange robot, its armatures still aquiver, "my name
is Bonhomius and I am, or rather was, a hermetic hermit, for I lived
sixty years and seven in a cave, where I passed the time solely in
pious meditation, until one morning it dawned on me that to spend a
life in solitude was wrong, for truly, did all my exceedingly
profound thoughts and strivings of the spirit ever keep one rivet
from falling, and is it not written that thy first duty is to help
thy neighbor and not to tend to thine own salvation, for yea and
verily—"
"Fine, fine," interrupted
Trurl. "I think I more or less understand your state of mind
that morning. What happened then?"
"So I hied myself to Photura,
where I chanced to meet a certain distinguished constructor, one
Klapaucius."
"Klapaucius?!" cried Trurl.
"Is something amiss, kind sir?"
"No, nothing—go on,
please!"
"I did not recognize him at
first: he was indeed a great lord and had an automatic carriage that
he not only rode upon but was able to converse with, much as I
converse with you now. This same carriage did affront me with a most
unseemly epithet as I walked in the middle of the street,
unaccustomed to city traffic, and in my surprise I inadvertently put
out its headlight with my staff, which drove the carriage into such a
frenzy, that its occupant was hard put to subdue it, but finally did,
and then invited me to join him. I told him who I was and why I had
abandoned my cave and that, forsooth, I knew not what to do next,
whereupon he praised my decision and introduced himself in turn,
speaking at great length of his work and many achievements. He told
me at last the whole moving history of that famous sage, pundit and
philosophist, Chlorian Theoreticus the Proph, at whose lamentable end
he had had the privilege to be present. From all that he said of the
Collected Works of that Greatest of Robots, the part about the
H. P. L. D.'s did intrigue me the most. Perchance, kind sir, you have
heard of them?"
"Certainly. They are the only
beings in the universe who have reached the Highest Possible Level of
Development."
"Indeed you are well-informed,
most kind and noble sir! Now while I sat at the side of this worthy
Klapaucius in his carriage (which continued to hurl the foulest
insults at whatever was imprudent enough to cross its path), the
thought suddenly came to me that these beings, developed as much as
possible, would surely know what one should do, when one, such as
myself, felt the call to help his fellow robot. So I questioned
Klapaucius closely concerning this, and asked him if he knew where
the H. P. L. D.'s lived, and how to find them. His only reply was a
wry smile and a shake of the head. I dared not press the matter
further, but later, when we had halted at an inn (the carriage had by
this time grown so hoarse that it lost its voice entirely, thus
Klapaucius was obliged to wait until the following day) and were
sitting over a jug of mulled electrolyte, which quickly put my
gracious host in a better humor, and as we watched the thermocouples
dance to the spirited tunes of a high-frequency band, he took me into
his confidence and proceeded to tell me… but perhaps you
grow weary of my tale."
"Not at all, not at all!"
protested Trurl. "I'm all ears, I assure you."
+ +
"My good Bonhomius,"
Klapaucius addressed me in that inn as the dancers worked themselves
into a positive heat, "know that I took very much to heart the
history of the unfortunate Chlorian and resolved to set out
immediately and find those perfectly developed beings whose existence
he had so conclusively proven on purely logical and theoretical
grounds. The main difficulty of the undertaking, as I saw it, lay in
the circumstance that nearly every cosmic race considered itself to
be perfectly developed—obviously I would get nowhere by merely
asking around. Nor did a trial-and-error method of search promise
much, for the Universe contained, as I calculated, close to fourteen
centigigaheptatrillion civilizations capable of reason; with such
odds one could hardly expect to simply happen on the correct address.
So I deliberated, read up on the problem, went methodically through
several libraries, pored over all sorts of ancient tomes, until one
day I found the answer in the work of a certain Cadaverius Malignus,
a scholar who had apparently arrived at exactly the same conclusion
as the Proph, only three hundred thousand years earlier, and who was
completely forgotten afterwards. Which shows, once more, that
there's nothing new under this or any other sun—Cadaverius even
met an end similar to that of our own Chlorian… But I digress.
It was precisely from these yellowed and crumbling pages that I
learned how to seek the H. P. L. D.'s. Malignus maintained that one
must examine star clusters for some impossible astrophysical
phenomenon, and that would surely be the place. A rather obscure
clue, to be sure, but then aren't they all? Without further ado I
stocked my ship with the necessary provisions, took off and, after
numerous adventures we need not go into here, finally spotted in
a great swarm of stars one that differed from all the rest, since it
was a perfect cube. Now that was quite a shock— every schoolboy
knows stars have to be spherical and any sort of stellar
angularities, let alone rectangularities, are not only highly
irregular but entirely out of the question! I drew near the star and
immediately saw that its planet was also cubiform and equipped,
moreover, with castellated corner cleats and crenelated quoins.
Farther out revolved another planet, which appeared to be quite
normal; a look through the telescope, however, revealed hordes of
robots locked in mortal combat, a sight which hardly invited closer
scrutiny. So I got the square planet back in my finder and increased
the resolution to full power. Imagine my surprise and joy when I
looked in the eyepiece and beheld a monogram engraved on one of the
planet's mile-long quoins, a monogram consisting of four letters
embellished with swirls and curlicues: H. P. L. D.!