Read The Making of the Representative for Planet 8 Online
Authors: Doris Lessing
âAnd when you were one of the five Representatives of the Representatives?'
âOh, that was convenience, chance â people are chosen almost at random.'
âAny one of the Representatives can represent the others?'
âYes! You know that! You know everything I am telling you â yes, I understand that I have to tell myself what I know â but we sit here, we sit talking, you and I, the pair of us, and you prod and you push me to say things that I suppose are important â¦'
âUnless you expect me not to take you seriously when you ask questions? Shall I ignore them, because you already know the answers? Representative Doeg, whom do you represent? And what are you?'
He leaned forward at this, looking straight into my face, but what welled up in me then put an end to a moment that could have saved me so much questioning, and pain. But we may not hasten certain processes in ourselves: they have to work their way, and often enough, without our active or conscious aid.
I was thinking of our poor peoples; the pain of their fate invaded me, the waste of it, the waste â¦
Johor said drily: âThis is a lavish and generous universe.'
âYou mean, it can afford the deaths of a few million people.'
âIs death something new to you? Is it only now that you begin to contemplate death â what it means?'
âAre you saying to me that the deaths of old people who have had their lives and who have used them are the same as the deaths we have to confront now?'
âHave children and young people and even infants never died with you? Have you only had to come to terms with the deaths of the aged?'
âYou cannot be saying to me that it does not matter if the populations of a whole planet have to die â a species?'
âI have not said it did not matter. Nor that we, Canopus, do not feel pain at what is happening. Nor, Doeg, that we have not done everything to prevent this happening. Nor that we are not â¦'
But indignation made me cut him short. âBut you are not able to space-lift off this planet its doomed millions? You do not have a little unwanted planet somewhere that we could be given to use and develop and make fruitful? You have no use for us?'
âAre those really questions, Doeg? Very well, I shall treat them as such â though ask yourself, does Canopus, in your experience, deal in rhetoric? No, we are not able to take off from Planet 8 all your populations. We do not have the resources â¦'
But again I was so thoroughly possessed by indignation that I could not let him go on, and I exclaimed: âYou do not have the resources! Or are you saying that
some
of us will be taken off, leaving the rest to their fates? If you are saying this, then I, for one, will refuse! I am not going to be saved at the expense of others! And I know that every one of the Representatives will say the same! We have not spent our lives working for our peoples, expressing our peoples,
being
our peoples, only to abandon them at the end â¦' My mind blacked out there, and for a long time. I knew it had been a long time, when I came to myself and found I was sitting there, in the cold shed, opposite Johor, who was patiently waiting.
His eyes were keenly searching my eyes, my face.
What had gone on, inside me, during that long dark space, now made it impossible for me to challenge him as wildly and angrily as I had before. But after a time I heard myself bring out rather feebly: âIt is strange, what you said then, that Canopus does not have resources for this or that ⦠We have always thought of you as all-powerful, able to do what you like. We have never imagined you as limited. Limited by what, Johor?' And I answered myself: âYou are the creation and creatures of something, some Being, to whom you stand in the same relation as we stand to you? ⦠Yes, that must be so. But I have not thought on those lines before ⦠And you cannot transcend your boundaries, as we may not transcend ours â¦' And here came welling up the rage again â âBut Canopus has not suddenly found itself the subject of a cosmic accident! Your planet â or is it planets? â does your star nurture more than one dependant?
Your
planet has not found itself suddenly, and almost from one day to the next, blighted and cursed by some movement of stars so distant you probably have never even known they existed â have not even given names to?'
He said gently, humorously: âWell, not yet. But you know, it could happen to us, as it has happened to you.'
âAnd to Rohanda.'
âAnd to Rohanda.' And here, at the name, he let out a sigh so deep and so painful that I had to cry out: âAh, Johor, I wonder if you sigh and suffer for us, Planet 8, as I can see you do for Rohanda. Do you care for it so much? Is it so much more beautiful a place than this is â was? In talking to others, perhaps to your peers, on Canopus, do you sigh as you did then, at the word Rohanda, when someone says: Planet 8?'
He said: âIt is true that I am at this time afflicted by Rohanda. I have just come from there. It is hard to see something as healthy and good and promising as Rohanda was lose its impetus, its direction.'
âWorse than seeing us do the same?'
âYou forget, the future of your planet was to be the future of Rohanda! We sent to Rohanda especially skilled and admirable colonists, from Planet 10, to make a synthesis with a species we were bringing to a certain level, so that you, from this planet, might make a synthesis with them, and become something quite extraordinary â so we hoped â¦'
I said: âYou were planning to take off our populations to Rohanda. You have resources and intention for
that
â but not to save us now.'
âThere is nowhere to take you. Our economy is a very finely tuned one. Our empire isn't random, or made by the decisions of self-seeking rulers or by the unplanned developments of our technologies. No, we have a very long time ago grown out of that barbarism. Our growth, our existence,
what we are
is a unit, a unity, a whole â in a way that, as far as we know, does not exist anywhere in our galaxy.'
âSo we are victims of your perfection!'
âPerfection is not a word we have ever used of ourselves â and not in thought either ⦠that word belongs only â to something higher.'
âVictims nevertheless.'
I said this briskly, coldly, and with finality. I did not feel able to continue with the colloquy. I was tired in a way which had become only too familiar â as if movement, every word, even a thought that came into my head â was too heavy and difficult. I needed to sleep.
âYou can, if you need privacy, use my ice cave,' I said. âBut I have to sleep ⦠I have to ⦠I have to â¦'
As I sank down among my shaggy furs, I thrust towards him a skein of dried meats, and I saw him break off a piece and taste it, not with pleasure, but certainly with interest â Canopus was going to be
interested
in everything that happened, had to be, by its nature âeven if this was the death of a planet â¦
I woke to a consciousness of being awake:
I am here, in this heavy warmth of hides and furs.
I was understanding that while in happier days I had woken thus, thinking:
This is my condition
,
that was my sleep
,
I shall now move myself into this or that activity
, it had never been with this sharpness, this urgency.
The ease of our old sensuous life had not needed from us a certain kind of self-awareness. Now I came up through layers of sleep, and my body was supported on warmth as it might have been on the warm waters of our old life, and my mind was easy and free too, yet I knew that almost at once the strain and the pain of our new life must begin. I was wondering if this was how our vast shaggy beasts woke on a half-frozen hillside, muscles and bones relaxed inside their housing of shaggy pelt. Did they feel, as they lifted their heads, their eyes opening on a spin of snowflakes, that in a moment effort was going to drive through those cumbersome limbs of theirs, forcing them to their feet, and to the work of keeping themselves fed and fuelled ⦠but meanwhile, while they lay there, they floated on sleep, and the good memories held in sleep ⦠but up they must clamber, hooves slipping on rocks and pebbles, and their teeth would scrape on the surfaces of bitterly cold stones for the lichens there, and soft noses would be pushing aside loose snow to reach the earth that is half vegetable, the earth food that lies thick and uncomfortably on the stomach? I was beast with them, inside beast's covering, thinking of beast's food, and so strong was my identification with them that I felt cold air sinking in through the mats of hair on my shoulder and half believed it wind, and I turned my head and saw Johor come quietly in a door he opened as little as he could, shutting it at once against the cold.
He sat down on a heap of half-dried heather, and looked at me. I quickly shut my eyes, for I did not feel, yet, like facing the effort of making my mind meet his.
âThere is a blizzard,' he said â for he knew I was awake. âNo one is out â I have been from house to house through the town and in each one, they are lying as you do, silent and still inside layers of hides.'
I was looking up at the roof over us: a mass of heather over which had been piled sods and earth. There was a bloom of frost on the heather, and on the stone of the walls.
âAnd as you stood there in the doorways,' I said, âyou saw heads lift, one after another, and the eyes shine up at you, and then go out, as the heads were lowered back into sleep.'
âYes. Back into sleep.'
âBack into the dark from which we all come.'
âBack into the â light from which we all come.'
âI have not been dreaming of the light, Johor! I came to myself out of â¦'
âWhat?'
âSomething sweet and wonderful â I know that. Something I long for.'
âThe light. A world of dazzling light, all a shimmering marvel â where the colours you yearn to see are shining â from whence you came.'
âSo you say, Johor.'
âAnd where you will return.'
âAh, but when, when,
when â¦'
âWhen you earn it, Doeg,' he said softly, but strongly enough to make me move inside my skins, stretch, and take on the burden of my limbs that did not want to feel my weight â the weight of living. The weight of thought â¦
But I made myself sit up and face him.
âAnd they,' I said, âthose poor people huddled there dreaming of paradises that were falsely promised to them â how will they earn it? How will they reach the light at last â wherever it might be, for you haven't told me that, Johor.'
He looked hard at me and said: âRepresentative Doeg, when you lie there dreaming, do you imagine your dreams are only yours â do you imagine that you spin dreams out of yourself that are uniquely yours? Do you believe that when you come to yourself from a world of dreams you think no one else shares, your consciousness of yourself, this feeling
I am here, Doeg is here
â belongs only to yourself, and no one else shares that feeling? As you come awake, feeling
This is Doeg, this is the feeling of me, Doeg
â how many others are at the very moment coming awake all over your planet, thinking
This is me, this is the feeling of me?'
It was bitter to me, to let go that little place I was able to rest on, take refuge in â the thought,
This is me, I, Doeg
â and I resisted.
I said: âNot long ago I was a quick-moving, slender, brown-skinned creature, who woke in the morning thinking: Soon I will step out into a sun that will polish my brown skin into little gleams of colour, and the air will flow in and out of my lungs in balmy mildness ⦠that was I, then, that was Doeg. And now I am a thick heavy greasy creature with dull greyish brown skin. But I am still Doeg, Johor â that feeling has stayed â and so, now, you say I must let that go too. Very well, I am not the elegant handsome animal I was, and I am not this lump of uncouthness. But I still come up out of sleep and feel:
Here I am.
I recognise myself.
It is I who lie here, after so many journeys and adventures in my sleep.'
âYour shared sleep.'
âMy shared waking â very well then, Johor, what am I to hold on to in this â blizzard that is blowing away everything, everything, everything â¦'
âDo you remember how we, Canopus, came to you all and gave you instruction in what made you, made your world?'
âYes, it was not long before you came to us and told us to build â the wall that would shield us from the ice.'
âWhich has, and does shield you from the ice.'
âWhich would have done better to give way long ago, putting an end to this long dreariness and torment.'
âNo.'
âBecause there is something left to be done? What? You have come all the way here from your place in the galaxy, and you have sent away your Traveller, and you sit here with me in this shed, and â¦'
âWell, Representative?'
âWhat do I represent, Johor?'
âDo you remember what we taught you?'
I sat up in my nest, and pulled up the thick coverings all around me and over my head, so that only my face was bare. Close to me, Johor's face showed under his hood.
âI remember how we first understood that you were teaching us something in a way none of us had done before â directly. You asked us all to go up into the hills on the other side of the wall, and to choose a place where the ground rose all around. We massed there, all of us from the town and from a long way about. You asked us to bring one of the animals â those that are extinct now â that we intended to kill for food. You asked us to have it killed before the people assembled, and we, the Representatives, were pleased that the act of killing was not to be associated with your presence, for while we did not conceal what lay behind our eating of meat, we tried to see that there was no reason to dwell on it all â the slaughterhouses, the preparations. For when we came together to discuss this particular thing, we Representatives, we always found for some reason a reluctance in us, a fear, to do with this business of killing other animals: It has always seemed to us that here was an area of danger. Something that could take hold and spread â and yet we did not remember Canopus ever saying anything about it.'