Authors: The Cyberiad [v1.0] [htm]
THE
CYBERIAD
FABLES FOR THE
CYBERNETIC AGE
STANISLAW LEM
Translated from the Polish by MICHAEL
KANDEL
Illustrated by DANIEL MROZ
A CONTINUUM BOOK
THE SEABURY PRESS
NEW YORK
English translation copyright ©
1974 by The Seabury Press, Inc. Printed in the United States of
America.
Original edition:
Cyberiada
,
Wydawnictwo Literackie, Cracow, 1967, 1972
All rights reserved. No part of this
book may be reproduced in any form, except for brief reviews, without
the written permission of the publisher.
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING IN
PUBLICATION DATA
Lem, Stanislaw. The cyberiad.
(A continuum book)
I. Title.
Contents
How the World Was Saved |
Trurl's Machine |
A Good Shellacking |
THE SEVEN SALLIES OF TRURL AND |
The First Sally, |
The First Sally (A), |
The Second Sally, |
The Third Sally, |
The Fourth or How Trurl Built a Femfatalatron to Save Prince Pantagoon from the Pangs of Love, and How Later He Resorted to a Cannonade of |
Babies
The Fifth Sally,
or The Mischief of King Balerion
The Fifth Sally
(
A
), or Trurl's Prescription
The Sixth Sally,
or How Trurl and Klapaucius Created a Demon of the Second Kind to
Defeat the Pirate Pugg
The Seventh Sally,
or How Trurl's Own Perfection Led to No Good
Tale
of the Three
Storytelling Machines of King Genius
Altruizine
FROM THE CYPHROEROTICON,
OR TALES OF
DEVIATIONS, SUPERFIXATIONS AND
ABERRATIONS OF THE HEART
Prince Ferrix and
the Princess Crystal
THE
CYBERIAD
How the World
Was Saved
One day Trurl the constructor put
together a machine that could create anything starting with
n
.
When it was ready, he tried it out, ordering it to make needles, then
nankeens and negligees, which it did, then nail the lot to narghiles
filled with nepenthe and numerous other narcotics. The machine
carried out his instructions to the letter. Still not completely sure
of its ability, he had it produce, one after the other, nimbuses,
noodles, nuclei, neutrons, naphtha, noses, nymphs, naiads, and
natrium. This last it could not do, and Trurl, considerably
irritated, demanded an explanation.
"Never heard of it," said
the machine.
"What? But it's only sodium. You
know, the metal, the element…"
"Sodium starts with an
s
,
and I work only in
n
."
"But in Latin it's
natrium
."
"Look, old boy," said the
machine, "if I could do everything starting with
n
in
every possible language, I'd be a Machine That Could Do Everything in
the Whole Alphabet, since any item you care to mention undoubtedly
starts with
n
in one foreign language or another. It's not
that easy. I can't go beyond what you programmed. So no sodium."
"Very well," said Trurl and
ordered it to make Night, which it made at once—small perhaps,
but perfectly nocturnal. Only then did Trurl invite over his friend
Klapaucius the constructor, and introduced him to the machine,
praising its extraordinary skill at such length, that Klapaucius grew
annoyed and inquired whether he too might not test the machine.
"Be my guest," said Trurl.
"But it has to start with
n
."
"
N
?" said
Klapaucius. "All right, let it make Nature."
The machine whined, and in a trice
Trurl's front yard was packed with naturalists. They argued, each
publishing heavy volumes, which the others tore to pieces; in the
distance one could see flaming pyres, on which martyrs to Nature were
sizzling; there was thunder, and strange mushroom-shaped columns of
smoke rose up; everyone talked at once, no one listened, and there
were all sorts of memoranda, appeals, subpoenas and other documents,
while off to the side sat a few old men, feverishly scribbling on
scraps of paper.
"Not bad, eh?" said Trurl
with pride. "Nature to a T, admit it!"
But Klapaucius wasn't satisfied.
"What, that mob? Surely you're
not going to tell me that's Nature?"
"Then give the machine something
else," snapped Trurl. "Whatever you like." For a
moment Klapaucius was at a loss for what to ask. But after a little
thought he declared that he would put two more tasks to the machine;
if it could fulfill them, he would admit that it was all Trurl said
it was. Trurl agreed to this, whereupon Klapaucius requested
Negative.
"Negative?!" cried Trurl.
"What on earth is Negative?"
"The opposite of positive, of
course," Klapaucius coolly replied. "Negative attitudes,
the negative of a picture, for example. Now don't try to pretend you
never heard of Negative. All right, machine, get to work!"
The machine, however, had already
begun. First it manufactured antiprotons, then antielectrons,
antineutrons, antineutrinos, and labored on, until from out of all
this antimatter an antiworld took shape, glowing like a ghostly cloud
above their heads.
"H'm," muttered Klapaucius,
displeased. "That's supposed to be Negative? Well… let's
say it is, for the sake of peace. … But now here's the third
command: Machine, do Nothing!"
The machine sat still. Klapaucius
rubbed his hands in triumph, but Trurl said:
"Well, what did you expect? You
asked it to do nothing, and it's doing nothing."
"Correction: I asked it to do
Nothing, but it's doing nothing."
"Nothing is nothing!"
"Come, come. It was supposed to
do Nothing, but it hasn't done anything, and therefore I've won. For
Nothing, my dear and clever colleague, is not your run-of-the-mill
nothing, the result of idleness and inactivity, but dynamic,
aggressive Nothingness, that is to say, perfect, unique, ubiquitous,
in other words Nonexistence, ultimate and supreme, in its very own
nonperson!"
"You're confusing the machine!"
cried Trurl. But suddenly its metallic voice rang out:
"Really, how can you two bicker
at a time like this? Oh yes, I know what Nothing is, and Nothingness,
Nonexistence, Nonentity, Negation, Nullity and Nihility, since all
these come under the heading of
n
,
n
as in Nil.
Look then upon your world for the last time, gentlemen! Soon it shall
no longer be…"
The constructors froze, forgetting
their quarrel, for the machine was in actual fact doing Nothing, and
it did it in this fashion: one by one, various things were removed
from the world, and the things, thus removed, ceased to exist, as if
they had never been. The machine had already disposed of nolars,
nightzebs, nocs, necs, nallyrakers, neotremes and nonmalrigers. At
moments, though, it seemed that instead of reducing, diminishing and
subtracting, the machine was increasing, enhancing and adding, since
it liquidated, in turn: nonconformists, nonentities, nonsense,
nonsupport, nearsightedness, narrowmindedness, naughtiness, neglect,
nausea, necrophilia and nepotism. But after a while the world very
definitely began to thin out around Trurl and Klapaucius.
"Omigosh!" said Trurl. "If
only nothing bad comes out of all this…"
"Don't worry," said
Klapaucius. "You can see it's not producing Universal
Nothingness, but only causing the absence of whatever starts with n.
Which is really nothing in the way of nothing, and nothing is what
your machine, dear Trurl, is worth!"
"Do not be deceived,"
replied the machine. "I've begun, it's true, with everything in
n
, but only out of familiarity. To create however is one
thing, to destroy, another thing entirely. I can blot out the world
for the simple reason that I'm able to do anything and everything—and
everything means everything—in
n
, and consequently
Nothingness is child's play for me. In less than a minute now you
will cease to have existence, along with everything else, so tell me
now, Klapaucius, and quickly, that I am really and truly everything I
was programmed to be, before it is too late."
"But—" Klapaucius was
about to protest, but noticed, just then, that a number of things
were indeed disappearing, and not merely those that started with n.
The constructors were no longer surrounded by the gruncheons, the
targalisks, the shupops, the calinatifacts, the thists, worches and
pritons.
"Stop! I take it all back!
Desist! Whoa! Don't do Nothing!!" screamed Klapaucius. But
before the machine could come to a full stop, all the brashations,
plusters, laries and zits had vanished away. Now the machine stood
motionless. The world was a dreadful sight. The sky had particularly
suffered: there were only a few, isolated points of light in the
heavens—no trace of the glorious worches and zits that had,
till now, graced the horizon!
"Great Gauss!" cried
Klapaucius. "And where are the gruncheons? Where my dear,
favorite pritons? Where now the gentle zits?!"
"They no longer are, nor ever
will exist again," the machine said calmly. "I executed, or
rather only began to execute, your order…"
"I tell you to do Nothing, and
you… you…"
"Klapaucius, don't pretend to be
a greater idiot than you are," said the machine. "Had I
made Nothing outright, in one fell swoop, everything would have
ceased to exist, and that includes Trurl, the sky, the Universe, and
you—and even myself. In which case who could say and to whom
could it be said that the order was carried out and I am an efficient
and capable machine? And if no one could say it to no one, in what
way then could I, who also would not be, be vindicated?"
"Yes, fine, let's drop the
subject," said Klapaucius. "I have nothing more to ask of
you, only please, dear machine, please return the zits, for without