Authors: The Cyberiad [v1.0] [htm]
openly admit to. Now what do you do: help them achieve the ends to
which the little decency they have prompts them, or instead fulfill
their innermost desires? Take, for example, the Dementians and
Amentians. The Dementians, in their medieval piety, burnt at the
stake all those consorting with the Devil, females especially,
and they did this because, first, they envied them their unholy
delights, and secondly, they found that administering torture in the
form of justice could be a positive pleasure. The Amentians, on the
other hand, worshiped nothing but their bodies, which they stimulated
by means of machines, though in moderation, and this activity
constituted their chief amusement. They had boxes of glass, and into
these they placed various outrages, rapes and mutilations, the sight
of which served to whet their sensual appetites. On this planet we
dropped a multitude of devices designed to satisfy all desires in
such a way that no one needed to be harmed, that is, each device
created a separate artificial reality for each individual. Within six
weeks both Dementians and Amentians had perished, to a man, from a
surfeit of joy, groaning in ecstasy as they passed away! Is that the
sort of ingenuity you had in mind, O undeveloped one?"
"Either you're a complete idiot
or a monster!" cried Klapaucius, while I gulped and blinked.
"How dare you boast of such foul deeds?"
"I do not boast of them, but
confess them," the voice calmly said. "The point is, we
tried every conceivable method. On various planets we unleashed a
veritable rain of riches, a flood of satisfaction and well-being, and
the result was total paralysis; we dispensed good advice, the most
expert counsel, and in return the natives opened fire on our vessels.
Truly, it would appear that one must alter the minds of those one
intends to make happy…"
"I suppose you can do that too,"
grumbled Klapaucius.
"But of course we can! Take our
neighbors, for instance, the ones who inhabit a quasiterran (or, if
you prefer, geomorphic) planet. I speak of the Anthropods. Now, they
devote themselves exclusively to obbling and perplossication, for
they stand in mortal terror of the Gugh, which according to them
occupies the Hereafter and waits for all sinners with open jaws and
fangs of hellfire. By emulating the blessed Dimbligensians and
walking in the way of Wamba the Holy, and by shunning Odia, where
abound the Abominominites, a young Anthropod may in time become more
industrious, more virtuous and more honorable than ever were his
eight-armed forebears. True, the Anthropods are at constant war with
the Arthropoids over the burning question of whether Moles Have
Holes, or, contrariwise, Holes Moles, but observe that as a rule less
than half of each generation perishes in that controversy. Now you
would have me drive from their heads all belief in obbling,
Dimbligensians and so forth, in order to prepare them for rational
happiness. Yet this is tantamount to psychic murder, for the
resultant minds would be no longer Anthropodous or
Arthropoidal—surely you can see that."
"Superstition must yield to
knowledge," said Klapaucius firmly.
"Unquestionably! But kindly
observe that on that planet there are now close to seven million
penitents who have spent a lifetime struggling against their own
nature, solely that their fellow citizens might be delivered from the
Gugh. And in less than a minute I am to tell them, convince them
beyond a shadow of a doubt that all this effort was in vain, that
they had wasted their entire lives in pointless, useless sacrifice?
How cruel that would be! Superstition must yield to knowledge, but
this takes time. Consider the hunchback we spoke of earlier—there
Ignorance is indeed Bliss, for he believes his hump fulfills some
cosmic role in the great work of Creation. Telling him that it's
actually the product of a molecular accident will only serve to make
him despair. Better to straighten the hump in the first place…"
"Yes, of course!" Klapaucius
exclaimed.
"We did that too. My grandfather
once straightened three hundred hunchbacks with a wave of the hand.
And how he regretted it afterwards!"
"Why?" I couldn't help but
ask.
"Why? One hundred and twelve of
them were immediately boiled in oil, their sudden and miraculous
cure being taken for a sure sign that they'd sold their souls to the
Devil; thirty, no longer exempt from conscription, were promptly
called up and soon fell in various battles under various flags;
seventeen straightway succumbed to the shock of their good fortune;
and the remainder, since my esteemed grandfather saw fit to further
bless them with great beauty of form, wasted away through an
overindulgence in erotic activity—deprived of these pleasures
for so long, you see, they now hurled themselves into every sort of
debauchery, and in such a violent and unbridled fashion, that within
two years not one was left among the living. Well, there was an
exception… but it's hardly worth mentioning."
"Go on, let's hear it all!"
cried Klapaucius, and I could tell that he was greatly troubled.
"If you insist… Two
remained, actually. The first presented himself before my
grandfather and pleaded on bended knee for the return of his hump. It
seems that as a cripple he had lived comfortably enough on charity,
but now had to work and was quite unaccustomed to it. What was worse,
now that he was straightened, he kept bumping his head on door
lintels…"
"And the second?" asked
Klapaucius.
"The second was a prince who had
been denied succession to the throne on acount of his deformity. In
light of its sudden correction, his stepmother, to insure her own
son's position, had him poisoned…"
"I see… But still, you can
work miracles, can't you?" said Klapaucius, despair in his
voice.
"Bestowing happiness by miracle
is highly risky,” lectured the machine. "And who is to be
the recipient of your miracle? An individual? But too much beauty
undermines the marriage vows, too much knowledge leads to isolation,
and too much wealth produces madness. No, I say, a thousand
times no! Individuals it's impossible to make happy, and
civilizations—civilizations are not to be tampered with, for
each must go its own way, progressing naturally from one level of
development to the next and having only itself to thank for all the
good and evil that accrues thereby. For us, at the Highest Possible
Level, there is nothing left to do in this Universe, and to create
another Universe, in my opinion, would be in extremely poor taste.
Really, what would be the point of it? To exalt ourselves? A
monstrous idea! For the sake, then, of those yet to be created? But
how are we obligated to beings who don't even exist? One can
accomplish something only so long as one cannot accomplish
everything. Otherwise it's best to sit back and watch… And
now, if you'll kindly leave me in peace…"
"But wait!" I cried in
alarm. "Surely there's something you can give us, some way to
improve the quality of life, if only a little! Some way to lend a
helping hand! Remember the Golden Rule and Love Thy Neighbor!"
The machine sighed and said:
"My words fall on deaf ears, as
usual. I should have dismissed you to begin with, like we did the
last time… Oh, very well then, here's a formula that hasn't
been tried. No good will come of it, you'll see—but do with it
what you will! All I wish now is to be left alone to meditate among
my many theostats and deiodes…"
The voice faded away, the console
lights dimmed, and we stood and read the card the machine had printed
out for us. It went something like this:
ALTRUIZINE. A metapsychotropic
transmitting agent
effective for all sentient homoproteinates
.
The drug duplicates in others, within a radius
of
fifty
yards,
whatever sensations, emotions and mental states one
may experience. Operates by telepathy
, guaranteed however to
respect one's
privacy of thought. Has no effect
on
either robots
or plants. The sender's feelings are amplified,
the original signal being relayed back in turn
by its receivers
and thereby
producing resonance, which is as a result
directly
proportional to the number
of individuals situated in the
vicinity
. According to its
discoverer, ALTRUIZINE will
insure the untrammled reign
ot Brotherhood, Cooperation
and
Compassion in any society, since
the neighbors
of a happy
man must share
his
happiness, and
the
happier he,
the happier perforce they,
so it is entirely in their own
interest that
they wish him nothing but the best. Should he
suffer any hurt, they
will
rush to help at once,
so
as
to spare
themselves the
pain induced
by his.
Neither walls
,
fences, hedges, nor
any other obstacle
will
weaken the altruizing influence. The drug
is
water-soluble and may
be administered through
reservoirs, rivers, wells and
the like
. Tasteless and
odorless. One
millimicrogram
serves for one hundred
thousand individuals
. We assume no responsibility for
results at variance with the
discoverer's claims. Supplied by the
Gnost. computerized representative of the Highest Poss. Lev.
Devel
.
Klapaucius was somewhat put off by the
fact that Altruizine was only for humans, which meant that robots
would have to continue to endure the misfortunes allotted to them in
this world. I, however, made bold to remind him of the solidarity of
all thinking beings and the necessity of aiding our organic brothers.
Then there were practical matters to arrange, for we were agreed that
the business of bestowing happiness was not to be postponed. So
while Klapaucius had a subsection of the Gnostotron prepare a
suitable quantity of the drug, I selected a geomorphic planet, one
peopled by human types and no more than a fortnight's journey off. As
a benefactor, I wished to remain anonymous, therefore my
distinguished mentor advised me, when going there, to assume the form
of a man, which is no easy task, as you well know. Yet here too the
great constructor overcame all difficulties, and soon I was
ready to depart, a suitcase in either hand. One suitcase was filled
with forty kilograms of Altruizine in a white powder, the other was
packed with various toilet articles, pajamas, underwear, spare
chins, noses, hair, eyes, and so forth. I went as a well-proportioned
young man with a thin mustache and a forelock. Now Klapaucius had
some doubt as to the advisability of applying Altruizine on such
a large scale to begin with, and though I did not share his
reservations, I did agree to test the formula first as soon as I
landed on Terrania (for so was the planet called). Longing for the
moment I could commence with the great sowing of universal peace
and brotherhood, I bid a fond farewell to Klapaucius and hastened on
my way.
In order to conduct the necessary
test, I repaired, upon arrival, to a small hamlet where I took
lodgings at an inn maintained by an aging and rather morose
individual. As they carried my luggage from the carriage to the guest
room, I contrived to drop a pinch of the powder into a nearby well.
Meanwhile there was a great commotion in the front yard, scullery
maids ran back and forth with pitchers of hot water, the innkeeper
drove them on with curses, and then came the sound of hoofbeats, a
chaise clattered up and an old man jumped out, clutching the black
leather bag of a physician—his goal was not the house, however,
but the barn, whence came the most doleful groans. As I learned from
the chambermaid, a Terranian beast which belonged to the
innkeeper—they called it a cow—was just now giving birth.
This news troubled me: it had never occurred to me to consider the
animal side of the question. But nothing could be done now, so I
locked myself in and waited for events to unfold. Nor did I have long
to wait. I was listening to the chain rattling in the well—they
were still drawing water—when suddenly the cow gave another
groan, which was echoed this time by several others. Immediately
thereafter the veterinarian came running from the barn, howling and
holding his stomach, and he was followed by the scullery maids and at
last the innkeeper. Driven by the cow's labor pains, they raised a
great cry and fled in all directions —only to return at once,
for the agony abated at a certain distance. Again and again they