Authors: The Cyberiad [v1.0] [htm]
hard by the road leading from Trurl's place to the nearest train
station.
There were many poet protests staged,
demonstrations, demands that the machine be served an injunction to
cease and desist. But no one else appeared to care. In fact,
magazine editors generally approved: Trurl's electronic bard,
writing under several thousand different pseudonyms at once, had a
poem for every occasion, to fit whatever length might be required,
and of such high quality that the magazine would be torn from hand to
hand by eager readers. On the street one could see enraptured faces,
bemused smiles, sometimes even hear a quiet sob. Everyone knew
the poems of Trurl's electronic bard, the air rang with its
delightful rhymes. Not infrequently, those citizens of a greater
sensitivity, struck by a particularly marvelous metaphor or
assonance, would actually fall into a faint. But this colossus
of inspiration was prepared even for that eventuality; it would
immediately supply the necessary number of restorative rondelets.
Trurl himself had no little trouble in
connection with his invention. The classicists, generally elderly,
were fairly harmless; they confined themselves to throwing
stones through his windows and smearing the sides of his house with
an unmentionable substance. But it was much worse with the younger
poets. One, for example, as powerful in body as his verse was in
imagery, beat Trurl to a pulp. And while the constructor lay in the
hospital, events marched on. Not a day passed without a suicide or a
funeral; picket lines formed around the hospital; one could hear
gunfire in the distance —instead of manuscripts in their
suitcases, more and more poets were bringing rifles to defeat Trurl's
electronic bard. But the bullets merely bounced off its calm
exterior. After his return from the hospital, Trurl, weak and
desperate, finally decided one night to dismantle the homeostatic
Homer he had created.
But when he approached the machine,
limping slightly, it noticed the pliers in his hand and the grim
glitter in his eye, and delivered such an eloquent, impassioned plea
for mercy, that the constructor burst into tears, threw down his
tools and hurried back to his room, wading through new works of
genius, an ocean of paper that filled the hall chest-high from end to
end and rustled incessantly.
The following month Trurl received a
bill for the electricity consumed by the machine and almost fell
off his chair. If only he could have consulted his old friend
Klapaucius! But Klapaucius was nowhere to be found. So Trurl had to
come up with something by himself. One dark night he unplugged the
machine, took it apart, loaded it onto a ship, flew to a certain
small asteroid, and there assembled it again, giving it an atomic
pile for its source of creative energy.
Then he sneaked home. But that wasn't
the end of it. The electronic bard, deprived now of the possibility
of having its masterpieces published, began to broadcast them on
all wave lengths, which soon sent the passengers and crews of passing
rockets into states of stanzaic stupefaction, and those more delicate
souls were seized with severe attacks of esthetic ecstasy besides.
Having determined the cause of this disturbance, the Cosmic Fleet
Command issued Trurl an official request for the immediate
termination of his device, which was seriously impairing the health
and well-being of all travelers.
At that point Trurl went into hiding,
so they dropped a team of technicians on the asteroid to gag the
machine's output unit. It overwhelmed them with a few ballads,
however, and the mission had to be abandoned. Deaf technicians
were sent next, but the machine employed pantomime. After that,
there began to be talk of an eventual punitive expedition, of
bombing the electropoet into submission. But just then some ruler
from a neighboring star system came, bought the machine and hauled it
off, asteroid and all, to his kingdom.
Now Trurl could appear in public again
and breathe easy. True, lately there had been supernovae exploding on
the southern horizon, the like of which no one had ever seen before,
and there were rumors that this had something to do with poetry.
According to one report, that same ruler, moved by some strange whim,
had ordered his astroengineers to connect the electronic bard to a
constellation of white supergiants, thereby transforming each line of
verse into a stupendous solar prominence; thus the Greatest Poet in
the Universe was able to transmit its thermonuclear creations to
all the illimitable reaches of space at once. But even if there were
any truth to this, it was all too far away to bother Trurl, who vowed
by everything that was ever held sacred never, never again to make a
cybernetic model of the Muse.
The
Second Sally
OR
The Offer
of King Krool
The tremendous success of their
application of the Gargantius Effect gave both constructors such an
appetite for adventure, that they resolved to sally forth once
again to parts unknown. Unfortunately, they were quite unable to
decide on a destination. Trurl, given to tropical climes, had his
heart set on Scaldonia, the land of the Flaming Flamingos, while
Klapaucius, of a somewhat cooler disposition, was equally determined
to visit the Intergalactic Cold Pole, a bleak continent adrift among
frozen stars. The friends were about to part company for good when
Trurl suddenly had an idea. "Wait," he said, "we can
advertise our services, then take the best offer!"
"Ridiculous!" snorted
Klapaucius. "How are you going to advertise? In a newspaper? Do
you have any idea how long it takes a newspaper to reach the nearest
planet? You'll be dead and buried before the first offer comes in!"
But Trurl gave a knowing smile and
revealed his plan, which Klapaucius—begrudgingly—had to
admit was ingenious, and so they set to work. All the necessary
equipment quickly thrown together, they gathered up the local stars
and arranged them in a great sign, a sign that would be visible at
truly incalculable distances. Only blue giants were used for the
first word—to get the cosmic reader's attention—and
lesser stellar material made up the others. The advertisement read:
TWO Distinguished Constructors Seek Employment Commensurate with
Their Skill and Above All Lucrative, Hence Preferably at the Court of
a Well-heeled King (Should Have His Own Kingdom), Terms to Be
Arranged. It was not long before, one bright morning, a most
marvelous craft alighted on their front lawn. It gleamed in the sun,
all inlaid with mother-of-pearl, had three legs intricately
carved and six additional supports of solid gold (quite useless,
since they didn't even reach the ground—but then, the builders
obviously had more wealth than they knew what to do with). Down a
magnificent staircase with billowing fountains on either side there
came a figure of stately bearing with a retinue of six-legged
machines: some of these massaged him, some supported him and fanned
him, and the smallest flew above his august brow and sprayed it with
eau de cologne from an atomizer. This impressive emissary
greeted the constructors on behalf of his lord and sovereign, King
Krool, who wished to engage them.
"What sort of work is it?"
asked Trurl, interested.
"The details, gentle sirs, you
shall learn at the proper time," was his reply. He was dressed
in galligaskins of gold, mink-tufted buskins, sequined earmuffs, and
a robe of most unusual cut—instead of pockets it had little
shelves full of mints and marzipan. Tiny mechanical flies also buzzed
about his person, and these he brushed away whenever they grew too
bold.
"For now," he went on, "I
can only say that His Boundless Kroolty is a great enthusiast of
the hunt, a fearless and peerless conqueror of every sort of galactic
fauna, and verily, his prowess has reached such heights that now the
fiercest predators known are no longer worthy game for him. And
herein lies our misfortune, for he craves excitement, danger,
thrills… which is why—"
"Of course!" said Trurl. "He
wants us to construct a new model of beast, something wild and
rapacious enough to present a challenge."
"You are, worthy constructor,
indeed quick!" said the King's emissary. "Then it is
agreed?"
Klapaucius began to question the
emissary more closely on certain practical matters. But after the
King's generosity was glowingly described and sufficiently elaborated
upon, they hurriedly packed their things and a few books, ran up the
magnificent staircase, hopped on board and were immediately
lifted, with a great roar and burst of flame that blackened the
ship's gold legs, into the interstellar night.
As they traveled, the emissary briefed
the constructors on the laws and customs prevailing in the Kingdom of
Krool, told them of the monarch's nature, as broad and open as a
leveled city, and of his manly pursuits, and much more, so that by
the time the ship landed, they could speak the language like
natives.
First they were taken to a splendid
villa situated on a mountainside above the village—this was
where they were to stay. Then, after a brief rest, the King sent a
carriage for them, a carriage drawn by six fire-breathing monsters.
These were muzzled with fire screens and smoke filters, had their
wings clipped to keep them on the ground, and long spiked tails and
six paws apiece with iron claws that cut deep pits in the road
wherever they went. As soon as the monsters saw the constructors, the
entire team set up a howl, belching fire and brimstone, and strained
to get at them. The coachmen in asbestos armor and the King's
huntsmen with hoses and pumps had to fall upon the crazed creatures
and beat them into submission with laser and maser clubs before Trurl
and Klapaucius could safely step into the plush carriage, which
they did without a word. The carriage tore off at breakneck speed
or—to use an appropriate metaphor— like a bat out of
hell.
"You know,” Trurl whispered
in Klapaucius' ear as they rushed along, knocking down everything in
their path and leaving a long trail of sulfurous smoke behind them,
"I have a feeling that this king won't settle for just anything.
I mean, if he has coursers like these…"
But level-headed Klapaucius said
nothing. Houses now flashed by, walls of diamonds and sapphires and
silver, while the dragons thundered and hissed and the drivers cursed
and shouted. At last a colossal portcullis loomed up ahead, opened,
and their carriage whirled into the courtyard, careening so
sharply that the flower beds all shriveled up, then ground to a stop
before a castle black as blackest night. Welcomed by an
unusually dismal fanfare and quite overwhelmed by the massive
stairs, balustrades and especially the stone giants that guarded the
main gate, Trurl and Klapaucius, flanked by a formidable escort,
entered the mighty castle.
King Krool awaited them in an enormous
hall the shape of a skull, a vast and vaulted cave of beaten silver.
There was a gaping pit in the floor, the skull's foramen magnum, and
beyond it stood the throne, over which two streams of light crossed
like swords—they came from high windows fixed in the skull's
eye sockets and with panes specially tinted to give everything a
harsh and infernal aspect. The constructors now saw Krool himself:
too impatient to sit still on his throne, this monarch paced from
wall to wall across the silver floor, his steps booming in that
cadaverous cavern, and as he spoke he emphasized his words with such
sudden stabs of the hand, that the air whistled.
"Welcome, constructors!" he
said, skewering them both with his eyes. "As you've no doubt
learned from Lord Protozor, Master of the Royal Hunt, I want you to
build me new and better kinds of game. Now I'm not interested, you
understand, in any mountain of steel on a hundred-odd treads—that's
a job for heavy artillery, not for me. My quarry must be strong and
ferocious, but swift and nimble too, and above all cunning and full
of wiles, so that I will have to call upon all my hunter's art to
drive it to the ground. It must be a highly intelligent beast, and
know all there is to know of covering tracks, doubling back, hiding
in shadows and lying in wait, for such is my will!"
"Forgive me, Your Highness,"
said Klapaucius with a careful bow, "but if we do Your Highness'
bidding too well, might not this put the royal life and limb in some
peril?"
The King roared with such laughter
that a couple of crystal pendants fell off a chandelier and shattered
at the feet of the trembling constructors.