Authors: The Cyberiad [v1.0] [htm]
rushed the barn and each time were forced to retreat, doubled over
with the beast's contractions. Much chagrined by this unforeseen
development, I realized now that the drug could be properly
tested only in the city, where there were no animals. So I quickly
packed my things and went to pay the bill. But as everyone about was
quite incapacitated in birthing that calf, there was no one available
with whom to settle accounts. I returned to my carriage, but finding
both coachman and horses deep in labor, decided instead to proceed to
the city on foot. I was crossing a small bridge when, as my ill
fortune would have it, the suitcase slipped from my hand and
fell in such a way, that it flew open and spilled my entire supply of
powder into the stream below. I stood there dazed while the quick
current carried off and dissolved all forty kilograms of Altruizine.
But nothing could be done now— the die was cast, inasmuch as
this stream happened to supply the entire city up ahead with its
drinking water.
It was evening by the time I reached
the city, the lights were lit, the streets were full of noise and
people. I found a small hotel, a place to stay and observe the first
signs of the drug taking effect, though as yet there seemed to be
none. Weary after the day's peregrination, I made straight for bed,
but was awakened in the middle of the night by the most horrible
screams. I threw off the covers and jumped up. My room was bright
from the flames that were consuming the building opposite. Running
out into the street, I stumbled over a corpse which was not yet cold.
Nearby, six thugs held down an old man and, while he cried for help,
yanked one tooth after another from his mouth with a pair of pliers—
until a unanimous shout of triumph announced that finally they had
succeeded in pulling the right one, the rotten root of which had been
driving them wild, due to the metapsychotropic transmission. Leaving
the toothless old man half-dead in the gutter, they walked off,
greatly relieved.
Yet it was not this that had roused me
from my slumber: the cause was an incident which had transpired in a
tavern across the way. It seems some drunken weightlifter had punched
his comrade in the face and, experiencing the blow forthwith, became
enraged and set upon him in earnest. Meanwhile the other customers,
no less affronted, joined in the fray, and the circle of mutual abuse
soon grew to such proportions, that it awoke half the people at my
hotel, who promptly armed themselves with canes, brooms and sticks,
rushed out in their nightshirts to the scene of battle, and hurled
themselves, one seething mass, among the broken bottles and shattered
chairs, until finally an overturned kerosene lamp started the fire.
Deafened by the wail of fire engines, as well as the wail of the
maimed and wounded, I hurried away, and after a block or two found
myself in a gathering—that is, a crowd milling about a little
white house with rose bushes. As it happened, a bride and groom were
spending their wedding night within. People pushed and pulled, there
were military men in the crowd, men of the cloth, even high-school
students; those nearest the house shoved their heads through the
windows, others clambered up on their shoulders and shouted, "Well?!
What are you waiting for?! Enough of that dawdling! Get on with it!"
and so on. An elderly gentleman, too feeble to elbow others aside,
tearfully pleaded to be let through, as he was unable to feel
anything at such a distance, advanced age having weakened his mental
faculties. His pleas, however, were ignored—some of the crowd
were lost in a transport of delight, some groaned with pleasure,
while others blew voluptuous bubbles through their noses. At first
the relatives of the newlyweds tried to drive off this band of
intruders, but they themselves were soon caught up in the
general flood of concupiscence and joined the scurrilous chorus,
cheering the young couple on, and, in this sad spectacle the
great-grandfather of the groom led the rest, repeatedly ramming the
bedroom door with his wheelchair. Utterly aghast at all of this, I
turned and hastened back to my hotel, encountering on the way several
groups, some locked in combat, others in a lewd embrace. Yet this was
nothing compared with the sight that greeted me at the hotel. People
were jumping out of windows in their underwear, more often than
not breaking their legs in the process, a few even crawled up on the
roof, while the owner, his wife, chambermaids and porters ran back
and forth inside, wild with fear, howling, hiding in closets or under
beds— all because a cat was chasing a mouse in the cellar.
Now I began to realize that I had been
somewhat precipitate in my zeal. By dawn the Altruizine effect
was so strong, that if one nostril itched, the entire neighborhood
for a mile on every side would respond with a shattering salvo of
sneezes; those suffering from chronic migraines were abandoned by
their families, and doctors and nurses fled in panic when they
approached—only a few pale masochists would hang around them,
breathing heavily. And then there were the many doubters who slapped
or kicked their compatriots, merely to ascertain whether there was
any truth to this amazing transmission of feelings everyone
spoke of, nor were these compatriots slow in returning the favor, and
soon the entire city rang with the sounds of slaps and kicks. At
breakfast time, wandering the streets in a daze, I came upon a
tearful multitude that chased an old woman in a black veil, hurling
stones after her. It so happened that this was the widow of one
much-esteemed cobbler, who had passed away the day before and was to
be buried that morning: the poor woman's inconsolable grief had so
exasperated her neighbors, and the neighbors' neighbors, that,
quite unable to comfort her in any way, they were driving her from
the town. This woeful sight lay heavy on my heart and again I
returned to my hotel, only to find it now in flames. It seems the
cook had burnt her finger in the soup, whereupon her pain caused a
certain captain, who was at that very moment cleaning his blunderbuss
on the top floor, to pull the trigger, inadvertently slaying his wife
and four children on the spot. Everyone remaining in the hotel now
shared the captain's despair; one compassionate individual, wishing
to put an end to the general suffering, doused everyone he could find
with kerosene and set them all on fire. I ran from the conflagration
like one possessed, searching frantically for at least one man who
might be considered, in any way whatever, to have been rendered
happy—but met only stragglers of the crowd returning from that
wedding night.
They were discussing it, the
scoundrels: apparently the newlyweds' performance had fallen short of
their expectations. Meanwhile each of these former vicarious
grooms carried a club and drove off any sufferer who dared to cross
his path. I felt I should die from sorrow and shame, yet still sought
a man—but one would do—who might a little lessen my
remorse. Questioning various persons on the street, I at last
obtained the address of a prominent philosopher, a true champion
of brotherhood and universal tolerance, and eagerly proceeded to that
place, confident I should find his dwelling surrounded by great
numbers of the populace. But alas! Only a few cats purred softly at
the door, basking in the aura of good will the wise man did so
abundantly exude—several dogs, however, sat at a distance and
waited for them, salivating. A cripple rushed past, crying,
"They've opened the rabbitry!" How that could be of benefit
to him, I preferred not to guess.
As I stood there, two men approached.
One looked me straight in the eye as he swung and smote the other
full force in the nose. I stared in amazement, neither grabbing my
own nose nor shouting with pain, since, as a robot, I could not feel
the blow, and that proved my undoing, for these were secret police
and they had employed this ruse precisely to unmask me. Handcuffed
and hauled off to jail, I confessed everything, trusting that they
would take into consideration my good intentions, though half the
city now lay in ashes. But first they pinched me cautiously with
pincers, and then, fully satisfied it produced no ill effects
whatever on themselves, jumped upon me and began most savagely to
batter and break every plate and filament in my weary frame. Ah, the
torments I endured, and all because I wished to make them happy! At
long last, what remained of me was stuffed down a cannon and shot
into cosmic space, as dark and serene as always. In flight I looked
back and saw, albeit in a fractured fashion, the spreading influence
of Altruizine—spreading, since the rivers and streams were
carrying the drug farther and farther. I saw what happened to the
birds of the forest, the monks, goats, knights, villagers and their
wives, roosters, maidens and matrons, and the sight made my last
tubes crack for woe, and in this state did I finally fall, O kind and
noble sir, not far from your abode, cured once and for all of my
desire to render others happy by revolutionary means…
From the
Cyphroeroticon,
OR
Tales of
Deviations,
Superfixations and
Aberrations of the
Heart
Prince Ferris and
the
Princess Crystal
King Armoric had a daughter whose
beauty outshone the shine of his crown jewels; the beams that
streamed from her mirrorlike cheeks blinded the mind as well as the
eye, and when she walked past, even simple iron shot sparks. Her
renown reached the farthermost stars. Ferrix, heir apparent to
the Ionid throne, heard of her, and he longed to couple with her
forevermore, so that nothing could ever part their input and their
output. But when he declared this passion to his father, the King was
greatly saddened and said:
"Son, thou hast indeed set upon a
mad undertaking, mad, for it is hopeless!"
"Why hopeless, O King and Sire?"
asked Ferrix, troubled by these words.
"Can it be thou knowest not,"
said the King, "that the princess Crystal has vowed to give her
hand to nothing but a paleface?"
"Paleface!" exclaimed
Ferrix. "What in creation is that? Never did I hear of such a
thing!"
"Surely not, scion, in thy
exceeding innocence," said the King. "Know then that that
race of the Galaxy originated in a manner as mysterious as it was
obscene, for it resulted from the general pollution of a certain
heavenly body. There arose noxious exhalations and putrid
excrescences, and out of these was spawned the species known as
paleface —though not all at once. First, they were creeping
molds that slithered forth from the ocean onto land, and lived by
devouring one another, and the more they devoured themselves,
the more of them there were, and then they stood upright, supporting
their globby substance by means of calcareous scaffolding, and
finally they built machines. From these protomachines came sentient
machines, which begat intelligent machines, which in turn conceived
perfect machines, for it is written that All Is Machine, from
atom to Galaxy, and the machine is one and eternal, and thou shalt
have no other things before thee!"
"Amen," said Ferrix
mechanically, for this was a common religious formula.
"The species of paleface
calciferates at last achieved flying machines," continued
the wizened monarch, "by maltreating noble metals, by
wreaking their cruel sadism on dumb electrons, by thoroughly
perverting atomic energy. And when the measure of their sins had been
attained, the progenitor of our race, the great Calculator Paternius,