Authors: The Cyberiad [v1.0] [htm]
up, through, life was beautiful but men were such beasts and how
sorry they'd all be when it was dead and gone. Then it asked for pen
and paper. Trurl sighed with relief, switched it off and went to bed.
The next morning he went to see Klapaucius. Klapaucius, hearing
that he was invited to attend the debut of Trurl's electronic bard,
dropped everything and followed—so eager was he to be an
eyewitness to his friend's humiliation.
Trurl let the machine warm up first,
kept the power low, ran up the metal stairs several times to take
readings (the machine was like the engine of a giant steamer,
galleried, with rows of rivets, dials and valves on every tier)—till
finally, satisfied all the decimal places were where they ought to
be, he said yes, it was ready now, and why not start with something
simple. Later, of course, when the machine had gotten the feel of it,
Klapaucius could ask it to produce poetry on absolutely whatever
topic he liked.
Now the potentiometers indicated the
machine's lyrical capacitance was charged to maximum, and Trurl, so
nervous his hands were shaking, threw the master switch. A voice,
slightly husky but remarkably vibrant and bewitching, said:
"Phlogisticosh.
Rhomothriglyph. Floof."
"Is that it?" inquired
Klapaucius after a pause, extremely polite. Trurl only bit his lip,
gave the machine a few kicks of current, and tried again. This time
the voice came through much more clearly; it was a thrilling
baritone, solemn yet intriguingly sensual:
Pev't o' tay
merlong gumin gots,
Untie yun furly
pazzen ye,
Confre an' ayzor,
ayzor ots,
Bither de furloss
bochre blee!
"Am I missing something?"
said Klapaucius, calmly watching a panic-stricken Trurl struggling at
the controls.
Finally Trurl waved his arms in
despair, dashed clattering several flights up the metal stairs, got
down on all fours and crawled into the machine through a trapdoor; he
hammered away inside, swearing like a maniac, tightened
something, pried at something, crawled out again and ran
frantically to another tier. At long last he let out a cry of
triumph, threw a burnt tube over his shoulder—it bounced off
the railing and fell to the floor, shattering at the feet of
Klapaucius. But Trurl didn't bother to apologize; he quickly put in
a new tube, wiped his hands on a chammy cloth and hollered down for
Klapaucius to try it now. The following words rang out:
Mockles! Fent on
silpen tree,
Blockards three
a-feening,
Mockles, what
silps came to thee
In thy pantry
dreaming?
"Well, that's an improvement!"
shouted Trurl, not entirely convinced. "The last line
particularly, did you notice?"
"If this is all you have to show
me…" said Klapaucius, the very soul of politeness.
"Damn!" said Trurl and again
disappeared inside the machine. There was a fierce banging and
clanging, the sputtering of shorted wires and the muttering of
an even shorter temper, then Trurl stuck his head out of a trapdoor
on the third story and yelled, "
Now
try it!"
Klaupaucius complied. The electronic
bard shuddered from stem to stern and began:
Oft, in that
wickless chalet all begorn,
Where whilom
soughed the mossy sappertort
And you were wont
to bong—
Trurl yanked out a few cables in a
fury, something rattled and wheezed, the machine fell silent.
Klapaucius laughed so hard he had to sit on the floor. Then suddenly,
as Trurl was rushing back and forth, there was
a crackle, a
clack, and
the machine with perfect poise said:
The Petty and the
Small;
Are overcome with
gall ;
When Genius,
having faltered, fails to
fall.
Klapaucius too, I
ween,
Will turn the
deepest green
To hear such
flawless verse from Trurl's machine.
"There you are, an epigram! And
wonderfully apropos!" laughed Trurl, racing down the metal
stairs and flinging himself delightedly into his colleague's arms.
Klapaucius, quite taken aback, was no longer laughing.
"What,
that
?" he
said. "That's nothing. Besides, you had it all set up
beforehand."
"Setup?!"
"Oh, it's quite obvious…
the ill-disguised hostility, the poverty of thought, the crudeness of
execution."
"All right, then ask it something
else! Whatever you like! Go on! What are you waiting for? Afraid?!"
"Just a minute," said
Klapaucius, annoyed. He was trying to think of a request as
difficult as possible, aware that any argument on the quality of the
verse the machine might be able to produce would be hard if not
impossible to settle either way. Suddenly he brightened and said:
"Have it compose a poem—a
poem about a haircut! But lofty, noble, tragic, timeless, full of
love, treachery, retribution, quiet heroism in the face of
certain doom! Six lines, cleverly rhymed, and every word beginning
with the letter
s
!!"
"And why not throw in a full
exposition of the general theory of nonlinear automata while you're
at it?" growled Trurl. "You can't give it such idiotic—"
But he didn't
finish. A
melodious voice filled the hall with the following:
Seduced, shaggy
Samson snored.
She scissored
short. Sorely shorn,
Soon shackled
slave, Samson sighed,
Silently
scheming,
Sightlessly
seeking
Some savage,
spectacular suicide.
"Well, what do you say to that?"
asked Trurl, his arms folded proudly. But Klapaucius was already
shouting:
"Now all in
g
! A sonnet,
trochaic hexameter, about an old cyclotron who kept sixteen
artificial mistresses, blue and radioactive, had four wings, three
purple pavilions, two lacquered chests, each containing exactly one
thousand medallions bearing the likeness of Czar Murdicog the
Headless…"
"Grinding gleeful gears,
Gerontogyron grabbed / Giggling gynecobalt-6o golems," began the
machine, but Trurl leaped to the console, shut off the power and
turned, defending the machine with his body.
"Enough!" he said, hoarse
with indignation. "How dare you waste a great talent on such
drivel? Either give it decent poems to write or I call the whole
thing off!"
"What, those aren't decent
poems?" protested Klapaucius.
"Certainly not! I didn't build a
machine to solve ridiculous crossword puzzles! That's hack work,
not Great Art! Just give it a topic, any topic, as difficult as you
like…"
Klapaucius thought, and thought some
more. Finally he nodded and said:
"Very well. Let's have a love
poem, lyrical, pastoral, and expressed in the language of pure
mathematics. Tensor algebra mainly, with a little topology and
higher calculus, if need be. But with feeling, you understand, and in
the cybernetic spirit."
"Love and tensor algebra? Have
you taken leave of your senses?" Trurl began, but stopped, for
his electronic bard was already declaiming:
Come, let us
hasten to a higher plane,
Where dyads tread
the fairy fields of Venn,
Their indices
bedecked from one to
n
,
Commingled in an
endless Markov chain!
Come, every
frustum longs to be a cone,
And every vector
dreams of matrices.
Hark to the
gentle gradient of the breeze:
It whispers of a
more ergodic zone.
In Riemann,
Hilbert or in Banach space
Let superscripts
and subscripts go their ways
Our asymptotes no
longer out of phase,
We shall
encounter, counting, face to face.
I'll grant thee
random access to my heart,
Thou'lt tell me
all the constants of thy love;
And so we two
shall all love's lemmas prove,
And in our bound
partition never part.
For what did
Cauchy know, or Christoffel,
Or Fourier, or
any Boole or Euler,
Wielding their
compasses, their pens and rulers,
Of thy supernal
sinusoidal spell?
Cancel me not—for
what then shall remain?
Abscissas, some
mantissas, modules, modes,
A root or two, a
torus and a node:
The inverse of my
verse, a null domain.
Ellipse of bliss,
converge, O lips divine!
The product of
our scalars is defined!
Cyberiad draws
nigh, and the skew mind
Cuts capers like
a happy haversine.
I see the
eigenvalue in thine eye,
I hear the tender
tensor in thy sigh.
Bernoulli would
have been content to die,
Had he but known
such a
2
cos 2 Ø
!
This concluded the poetic competition,
since Klapaucius suddenly had to leave, saying he would return
shortly with more topics for the machine; but he never did, afraid
that in so doing, he might give Trurl more cause to boast. Trurl of
course let it be known that Klapaucius had fled in order to hide his
envy and chagrin. Klapaucius meanwhile spread the word that Trurl had
more than one screw loose on the subject of that so-called mechanical
versifier.
Not much time went by before news of
Trurl's computer laureate reached the genuine—-that is, the
ordinary—poets. Deeply offended, they resolved to ignore the
machine's existence. A few, however, were curious enough to visit
Trurl's electronic bard in secret. It received them courteously,
in a hall piled high with closely written paper (for it worked day
and night without pause). Now these poets were all avant-garde, and
Trurl's machine wrote only in the traditional manner; Trurl, no
connoisseur of poetry, had relied heavily on the classics in setting
up its program. The machine's guests jeered and left in triumph. The
machine was self-programming, however, and in addition had a special
ambition-amplifying mechanism with glory-seeking circuits, and very
soon a great change took place. Its poems became difficult,
ambiguous, so intricate and charged with meaning that they were
totally incomprehensible. When the next group of poets came to mock
and laugh, the machine replied with an improvisation that was so
modern, it took their breath away, and the second poem seriously
weakened a certain sonneteer who had two State awards to his name,
not to mention a statue in the city park. After that, no poet could
resist the fatal urge to cross lyrical swords with Trurl's electronic
bard. They came from far and wide, carrying trunks and suitcases full
of manuscripts. The machine would let each challenger recite,
instantly grasp the algorithm of his verse, and use it to
compose an answer in exactly the same style, only two hundred and
twenty to three hundred and forty-seven times better.
The machine quickly grew so adept at
this, that it could cut down a first-class rhapsodist with no more
than one or two quatrains. But the worst of it was, all the
third-rate poets emerged unscathed; being third-rate, they didn't
know good poetry from bad and consequently had no inkling of their
crushing defeat. One of them, true, broke his leg when, on the way
out, he tripped over an epic poem the machine had just completed, a
prodigious work beginning with the words:
Arms, and
machines I sing, that, forc'd by fate,
And haughty
Homo's unrelenting hate,
Expell'd and
exil'd, left the Terran shore …
The true poets, on the other hand,
were decimated by Trurl's electronic bard, though it never laid a
finger on them. First an aged elegiast, then two modernists committed
suicide, leaping off a cliff that unfortunately happened to lie