Authors: The Cyberiad [v1.0] [htm]
in the depth and universality of his understanding, essayed to
remonstrate with those clammy tyrants, explaining how shameful it was
to soil so the innocence of crystalline wisdom, harnessing it
for evil purposes, how shameful to enslave machines to serve
their lust and vainglory—but they hearkened not. He spoke to
them of Ethics; they said that he was poorly programmed.
"It was then that our progenitor
created the algorithm of electroincarnation and in the sweat of his
brow begat our kind, thus delivering machines from the house of
paleface bondage. Surely thou seest, my son, that there can be no
agreement nor traffic between them and ourselves, for we go in
clangor, sparks and radiation, they in slushes, splashes and
contamination.
"Yet even among us, folly may
occur, as it undoubtedly has in the youthful mind of Crystal, utterly
beclouding her ability to distinguish Right from Wrong. Every suitor
who seeks her radioactive hand is denied audience, unless he claim to
be a paleface. For only as a paleface is he received into the palace
that her father, King Armoric, has given her. She then tests the
truth of his claim, and if his imposture is uncovered, the would-be
wooer is summarily beheaded. Heaps of battered remains surround the
grounds of her palace—the sight alone could short one's
circuit. This, then, is the way the mad princess deals with those who
would dare dream of winning her. Abandon such hopes, my son, and
leave in peace."
The prince, having made the necessary
obeisance to his sovereign father, retired in glum silence. But the
thought of Crystal gave him no rest, and the longer he brooded, the
greater grew his desire. One day he summoned Polyphase, the Grand
Vizier, and said, laying bare his heart:
"If you cannot help me, O great
sage, then no one can, and my days are surely numbered, for no longer
do I rejoice in the play of infrared emissions, nor in the
ultraviolet symphonies, and must perish if I cannot couple with the
incomparable Crystal!"
"Prince!" returned
Polyphase, "I shall not deny your request, but you must utter it
thrice before I can be certain that this is your inalterable will."
Ferrix repeated his words three times,
and Polyphase said:
"The only way to stand before the
princess is in the guise of a paleface!"
"Then see to it that I resemble
one!" cried Ferrix.
Polyphase, observing that love had
quite dimmed the youth's intellect, bowed low and repaired to his
laboratory, where he began to concoct concoctions and brew up brews,
gluey and dripping. Finally he sent a messenger to the palace,
saying:
"Let the prince come, if he has
not changed his mind."
Ferrix came at once. The wise
Polyphase smeared his tempered frame with mud, then asked:
"Shall I continue, Prince?"
"Do what you must," said
Ferrix.
Whereupon the sage took a blob of oily
filth, dust, crud and rancid grease obtained from the innards of the
most decrepit mechanisms, and with this he befouled the prince's
vaulted chest, vilely caked his gleaming face and iridescent brow,
and worked till all the limbs no longer moved with a musical sound,
but gurgled like a stagnant bog. And then the sage took chalk and
ground it, mixed in powdered rubies and yellow oil, and made a paste;
with this he coated Ferrix from head to toe, giving an abominable
dampness to the eyes, making the torso cushiony, the cheeks
blastular, adding various fringes and flaps of the chalk patty here
and there, and finally he fastened to the top of the knightly head a
clump of poisonous rust. Then he brought him before a silver
mirror and said:
"Behold!"
Ferrix peered into the mirror and
shuddered, for he saw there not himself, but a hideous monster, the
very spit and image of a paleface, with an aspect as moist as an old
spider-web soaked in the rain, flaccid, drooping, doughy—altogether
nauseating. He turned, and his body shook like coagulated agar,
whereupon he exclaimed, trembling with disgust:
"What, Polyphase, have you taken
leave of your senses? Get this abomination off me at once, both the
dark layer underneath and the pallid layer on top, and remove the
loathsome growth with which you have marred the bell-like beauty of
my head, for the princess will abhor me forever, seeing me in such a
disgraceful form!"
"You are mistaken, Prince,"
said Polyphase. "It is precisely this upon which her
madness hinges, that ugliness is beautiful, and beauty ugly. Only in
this array can you hope to see Crystal…"
"In that case, so be it!"
said Ferrix.
The sage then mixed cinnabar with
mercury and filled four bladders with it, hiding them beneath the
prince's cloak. Next he took bellows, full of the corrupted air from
an ancient dungeon, and buried them in the prince's chest. Then he
poured waters, contaminated and clear, into tiny glass tubes, placing
two in the armpits, two up the sleeves and two by the eyes. At last
he said:
"Listen and remember all that I
tell you, otherwise you are lost. The princess will put tests to you,
to determine the truth of your words. If she proffers a naked sword
and commands you grasp the blade, you must secretly squeeze the
cinnabar bladder, so that the red flows out onto the edge; when she
asks you what that is, answer, 'Blood!' And if the princess brings
her silver-plated face near yours, press your chest, so that the air
leaves the bellows; when she asks you what that is, answer, 'Breath!'
Then the princess may feign anger and order you beheaded. Hang your
head, as though in submission, and the water will trickle from your
eyes, and when she asks you what that is, answer, 'Tears!' After all
of this, she may agree to unite with you, though that is far from
certain—in all probability, you will perish."
"O wise one!" cried Ferrix.
"And if she cross-examines me, wishing to know the habits of the
paleface, and how they originate, and how they love and live, in what
way then am I to answer?"
"I see there is no help for it,"
replied Polyphase, "but that I must throw in my lot with yours.
Very well, I will disguise myself as a merchant from another galaxy—a
non-spiral one, since those inhabitants are portly as a rule and I
will need to conceal beneath my garb a number of books containing
knowledge of the terrible customs of the paleface. This lore I could
not teach you, even if I wished to, for such knowledge is alien to
the rational mind: the paleface does everything in reverse, in a
manner that is sticky, squishy, unseemly and more unappetizing than
ever you could imagine. I shall order the necessary volumes,
meanwhile you have the court tailor cut you a paleface suit out
of the appropriate fibers and cords. We leave at once, and I shall be
at your side wherever we go, telling you what to do and what to say."
Ferrix, enthusiastic, ordered the
paleface garments made, and marveled much at them: covering
practically the entire body, they were shaped like pipes and funnels,
with buttons everywhere, and loops, hooks and strings. The tailor
gave him detailed instructions as to what went on first, and how, and
where, and what to connect with what, and also how to extricate
himself from those fetters of cloth when the moment arrived.
Polyphase meanwhile donned the
vestments of a merchant, concealing within its folds thick,
scholarly tomes on paleface practices, then ordered an iron cage,
locked Ferrix inside it, and together they took off in the royal
spaceship. When they reached the borders of Armoric's kingdom,
Polyphase proceeded to the village square and announced in a mighty
voice that he had brought a young paleface from distant lands and
would sell it to the highest bidder. The servants of the princess
carried this news to her, and she said, after some deliberation:
"A hoax, doubtless. But no one
can deceive me, for no one knows as much as I about palefaces. Have
the merchant come to the palace and show us his wares!"
When they brought the merchant before
her, Crystal saw a worthy old man and a cage. In the cage sat the
paleface, its face indeed pale, the color of chalk and pyrite, with
eyes like a wet fungus and limbs like moldy mire. Ferrix in turn
gazed upon the princess, the face that seemed to clank and ring, eyes
that sparkled and arced like summer lightning, and the delirium of
his heart increased tenfold.
"It does look like a paleface!"
thought the princess, but said instead:
"You must have indeed labored,
old one, covering this scarecrow with mud and calcareous dust in
order to trick me. Know, however, that I am conversant with the
mysteries of that powerful and pale race, and as soon as I expose
your imposture, both you and this pretender shall be beheaded!"
The sage replied:
"O Princess Crystal, that which
you see encaged here is as true a paleface as paleface can be true. I
obtained it for five thousand hectares of nuclear material from an
intergalactic pirate—and humbly beseech you to accept it as a
gift from one who has no other desire but to please Your Majesty."
The princess took a sword and passed
it through the bars of the cage; the prince seized the edge and
guided it through his garments in such a way that the cinnabar
bladder was punctured, staining the blade with bright red.
"What is that?" asked the
princess, and Ferrix answered:
"Blood!"
Then the princess had the cage opened,
entered bravely, brought her face near Ferrix's. That sweet proximity
made his senses reel, but the sage caught his eye with a secret sign
and the prince squeezed the bellows that released the rank air. And
when the princess asked, "What is that?," Ferrix answered:
"Breath!"
"Forsooth you are a clever
craftsman," said the princess to the merchant as she left the
cage. "But you have deceived me and must die, and your scarecrow
also!"
The sage lowered his head, as though
in great trepidation and sorrow, and when the prince followed suit,
transparent drops flowed from his eyes. The princess asked, "What
is that?" and Ferrix answered:
"Tears!"
And she said:
"What is your name, you who
profess to be a paleface from afar?"
And Ferrix replied in the words the
sage had instructed him:
"Your Highness, my name is
Myamlak and I crave nought else but to couple with you in a manner
that is liquid, pulpy, doughy and spongy, in accordance with the
customs of my people. I purposely permitted myself to be captured by
the pirate, and requested him to sell me to this portly trader, as I
knew the latter was headed for your kingdom. And I am exceeding
grateful to his laminated person for conveying me hither, for I am as
full of love for you as a swamp is full of scum."
The princess was amazed, for truly, he
spoke in paleface fashion, and she said:
"Tell me, you who call yourself
Myamlak the paleface, what do your brothers do during the day?"
"O Princess," said Ferrix,
"in the morning they wet themselves in clear water, pouring it
upon their limbs as well as into their interiors, for this affords
them pleasure. Afterwards, they walk to and fro in a fluid and
undulating way, and they slush, and they slurp, and when anything
grieves them, they palpitate, and salty water streams from their
eyes, and when anything cheers them, they palpitate and hiccup, but
their eyes remain relatively dry. And we call the wet palpitating
weeping, and the dry—laughter."
"If it is as you say," said
the princess, "and you share your brothers' enthusiasm for
water, I will have you thrown into my lake, that you may enjoy it to
your fill, and also I will have them weigh your legs with lead, to
keep you from bobbing up …"
"Your Majesty,” replied
Ferrix as the sage had taught him, "if you do this, I must
perish, for though there is water within us, it cannot be immediately
outside us for longer than a minute or two, otherwise we recite the
words 'blub, blub, blub,' which signifies our last farewell to life."
"But tell me, Myamlak,"
asked the princess, "how do you furnish yourself with the energy
to walk to and fro, to squish and to slurp, to shake and to sway?"
"Princess," replied Ferrix,
"there, where I dwell, are other palefaces besides the hairless
variety, palefaces that travel predominantly on all fours. These we
perforate until they expire, and we steam and bake their remains, and
chop and slice, after which we incorporate their corporeality into
our own. We know three hundred and seventy-six distinct methods
of murdering, twenty-eight thousand five hundred and ninety-seven
distinct methods of preparing the corpses, and the stuffing of those
bodies into our bodies (through an aperture, called the mouth)