The Seventh Sally or How Trurl's Own Perfection
Led to No Good
Stanislaw Lem
The Universe is infinite but
bounded, and therefore a beam of light, in whatever direction it may travel,
will after billions of centuries return— if powerful enough—to the
point of its departure; and it is no different with rumor, that flies about
from star to star and makes the rounds of every planet. One day Trurl heard
distant reports of two mighty constructor-benefactors, so wise and so
accomplished that they had no equal; with this news he ran to Klapaucius, who
explained to him that these were not mysterious rivals, but only themselves,
for their fame had circumnavigated space. Fame, however, has this fault, that
it says nothing of one's failures, even when those very failures are the
product of a great perfection. And he who would doubt this, let him recall the
last of the seven sallies of Trurl, which was undertaken without Klapaucius,
whom certain urgent duties kept at home at the time.
In those days Trurl was
exceedingly vain, receiving all marks of veneration and honor paid to him as
his due and a perfectly normal thing. He was heading north in his ship, as he
was the least familiar with that region, and had flown through the void for
quite some time, passing spheres full of the clamor of war as well as spheres
that had finally obtained the perfect peace of desolation, when suddenly a
little planet came into view, really more of a stray fragment of matter than a
planet.
On the surface of this chunk of
rock someone was running back and forth, jumping and waving his arms in the
strangest way. Astonished by a scene of such total loneliness and concerned by
those wild gestures of despair, and perhaps of anger as well, Trurl quickly
landed.
He was approached by a personage
of tremendous hauteur, iridium and vanadium all over and with a great deal of
clanging and clanking, who introduced himself as Excelsius the Tartarian, ruler
of Pancreon and Cyspenderora; the inhabitants of both these kingdoms had, in a
fit of regicidal madness, driven His Highness from the throne and exiled him to
this barren asteroid, eternally adrift among the dark swells and currents of
gravitation.
Learning in turn the identity of
his visitor, the deposed monarch began to insist that Trurl—who after all
was something of a professional when it came to good deeds—immediately
restore him to his former position. The thought of such a turn of events
brought the flame of vengeance to the monarch's eyes, and his iron fingers
clutched the air, as if already closing around the throats of his beloved
subjects.
Now Trurl had no intention of
complying with this request of Excelsius, as doing so would bring about untold
evil and suffering, yet at the same time he wished somehow to comfort and
console the humiliated king. Thinking a moment or two, he came to the
conclusion that, even in this case, not all was lost, for it would be possible
to satisfy the king completely—without putting his former subjects in
jeopardy. And so, rolling up his sleeves and summoning up all his mastery,
Trurl built the king an entirely new kingdom. There were plenty of towns,
rivers, mountains, forests, and brooks, a sky with clouds, armies full of
derring-do, citadels, castles, and ladies' chambers; and there were
marketplaces, gaudy and gleaming in the sun, days of back-breaking labor,
nights full of dancing and song until dawn, and the gay clatter of swordplay.
Trurl also carefully set into this kingdom a fabulous capital, all in marble
and alabaster, and assembled a council of hoary sages, and winter palaces and
summer villas, plots, conspirators, false witnesses, nurses, informers, teams
of magnificent steeds, and plumes waving crimson in the wind; and then he
crisscrossed that atmosphere with silver fanfares and twenty-one gun salutes,
also threw in the necessary handful of traitors, another of heroes, added a
pinch of prophets and seers, and one messiah and one great poet each, after
which he bent over and set the works in motion, deftly making last-minute
adjustments with his microscopic tools as it ran, and he gave the women of that
kingdom beauty, the men—sullen silence and surliness when drunk, the
officials—arrogance and servility, the astronomers—an enthusiasm
for stars, and the children—a great capacity for noise. And all of this,
connected, mounted and ground to precision, fit into a box, and not a very
large box, but just the size that could be carried about with ease. This Trurl
presented to Excelsius, to rule and have dominion over forever; but first he
showed him where the input and output of his brand-new kingdom were, and how to
program wars, quell rebellions, exact tribute, collect taxes, and also
instructed him in the critical points and transition states of that
microminiaturized society—in other words the maxima and minima of palace
coups and revolutions— and explained everything so well that the king, an
old hand in the running of tyrannies, instantly grasped the directions and,
without hesitation, while the constructor watched, issued a few trial
proclamations, correctly manipulating the control knobs, which were carved with
imperial eagles and regal lions. These proclamations declared a state of
emergency, martial law, a curfew, and a special levy. After a year had passed
in the kingdom, which amounted to hardly a minute for Trurl and the king, by an
act of the greatest magnanimity—that is, by a flick of the finger at the
controls—the king abolished one death penalty, lightened the levy, and
deigned to annul the state of emergency, whereupon a tumultuous cry of gratitude,
like the squeaking of tiny mice lifted by their tails, rose up from the box,
and through its curved glass cover one could see, on the dusty highways and
along the banks of lazy rivers that reflected the fluffy clouds, the people
rejoicing and praising the great and unsurpassed benevolence of their sovereign
lord.
And so, though at first he had
felt insulted by Trurl's gift, in that the kingdom was too small and very like
a child's toy, the monarch saw that the thick glass lid made everything inside
seem large; perhaps too he dully understood that size was not what mattered
here, for government is not measured in meters and kilograms, and emotions are
somehow the same, whether experienced by giants or dwarfs—and so he
thanked the constructor, if somewhat stiffly. Who knows, he might even have
liked to order him thrown in chains and tortured to death, just to be
safe—that would have been a sure way of nipping in the bud any gossip
about how some common vagabond tinkerer presented a mighty monarch with a kingdom.
Excelsius was sensible enough, however, to see that this was out of the
question, owing to a very fundamental disproportion, for fleas could sooner
take their host into captivity than the king's army seize Trurl. So with
another cold nod, he stuck his orb and scepter under his arm, lifted the box
kingdom with a grunt, and took it to his humble hut of exile. And as blazing
day alternated with murky night outside, according to the rhythm of the
asteroid's rotation, the king, who was acknowledged by his subjects as the
greatest in the world, diligently reigned, bidding this, forbidding that,
beheading, rewarding—in all these ways incessantly spurring his little
ones on to perfect fealty and worship of the throne.
As for Trurl, he returned home and
related to his friend Klapaucius, not without pride, how he had employed his
constructor's genius to indulge the autocratic aspirations of Excelsius and, at
the same time, safeguard the democratic aspirations of his former subjects. But
Klapaucius, surprisingly enough, had no words of praise for Trurl; in fact,
there seemed to be rebuke in his expression.
"Have I understood you
correctly?" he said at last. "You gave that brutal despot, that born
slave master, that slavering sadist of a pain- monger, you gave him a whole civilization
to rule and have dominion over forever? And you tell me, moreover, of the cries
of joy brought on by the repeal of a fraction of his cruel decrees! Trurl, how
could you have done such a thing?"
"You must be joking!"
Trurl exclaimed. "Really, the whole kingdom fits into a box three feet by
two by two and a half ... it's only a model...."
"A model of what?"
"What do you mean, of what?
Of a civilization, obviously, except that it's a hundred million times
smaller.Ó
"And how do you know there
aren't civilizations a hundred million times larger than our own? And if there
were, would ours then be a model? And what importance do dimensions have
anyway? In that box kingdom, doesn't a journey from the capital to one of the
corners take months—for those inhabitants? And don't they suffer, don't
they know the burden of labor, don't they die?"
"Now just a minute, you know
yourself that all these processes take place only because I programmed them,
and so they aren't genuine...."
"Aren't genuine? You mean to
say the box is empty, and the parades, tortures, and beheadings are merely an
illusion?"
"Not an illusion, no, since
they have reality, though purely as certain microscopic phenomena, which I
produced by manipulating atoms," said Trurl. "The point is, these
births, loves, acts of heroism, and denunciations are nothing but the minuscule
capering of electrons in space, precisely arranged by the skill of my nonlinear
craft, which—"
"Enough of your boasting, not
another word!" Klapaucius snapped. "Are these processes
self-organizing or not?"
"Of course they are!"
"And they occur among
infinitesimal clouds of electrical charge?"
"You know they
do.""And the phenomenological events of dawns, sunsets, and bloody
battles are generated by the concatenation of real variables?"
"Certainly."
"And are not we as well, if
you examine us physically, mechanistically, statistically, and meticulously,
nothing but the miniscule capering of electron clouds? Positive and negative
charges arranged in space? And is our existence not the result of subatomic
collisions and the interplay of particles, though we ourselves perceive those
molecular cartwheels as fear, longing, or meditation? And when you daydream,
what transpires within your brain but the binary algebra of connecting and disconnecting
circuits, the continual meandering of electrons?"
"What, Klapaucius, would you
equate our existence with that of an imitation kingdom locked up in some glass
box?!" cried Trurl. "No, really, that's going too far! My purpose was
simply to fashion a simulator of statehood, a model cybernetically perfect,
nothing more!"
"Trurl! Our perfection is our
curse, for it draws down upon our every endeavor no end of unforeseeable
consequences!" Klapaucius said in a stentorian voice. "If an
imperfect imitator, wishing to inflict pain, were to build himself a crude idol
of wood or wax, and further give it some makeshift semblance of a sentient
being, his torture of the thing would be a paltry mockery indeed! But consider
a succession of improvements on this practice! Consider the next sculptor, who
builds a doll with a recording in its belly, that it may groan beneath his
blows; consider a doll which, when beaten, begs for mercy, no longer a crude
idol, but a homeostat; consider a doll that sheds tears, a doll that bleeds, a
doll that fears death, though it also longs for the peace that only death can
bring! Don't you see, when the imitator is perfect, so must be the imitation,
and the semblance becomes the truth, the pretense a reality! Trurl, you took an
untold number of creatures capable of suffering and abandoned them forever to
the rule of a wicked tyrant.... Trurl, you have committed a terrible
crime!"
"Sheer sophistry!"
shouted Trurl, all the louder because he felt the force of his friend's
argument. "Electrons meander not only in our brains, but in phonograph
records as well, which proves nothing, and certainly gives no grounds for such
hypostatical analogies! The subjects of that monster Excelsius do in fact die
when decapitated, sob, fight, and fall in love, since that is how I set up the
parameters, but it's impossible to say, Klapaucius, that they feel anything in
the process—the electrons jumping around in their heads will tell you
nothing of that!"
"And if I were to look inside
your head, I would also see nothing but electrons," replied Klapaucius.
"Come now, don't pretend not to understand what I'm saying, I know you're
not that stupid! A phonograph record won't run errands for you, won't beg for
mercy or fall on its knees! You say there's no way of knowing whether
Excelsius's subjects groan, when beaten, purely because of the electrons
hopping about inside—like wheels grinding out the mimicry of a
voice—or whether they really groan, that is, because they honestly
experience the pain? A pretty distinction, this! No, Trurl, a sufferer is not
one who hands you his suffering, that you may touch it, weigh it, bite it like
a coin; a sufferer is one who behaves like a sufferer! Prove to me here and
now, once and for all, that they do not feel, that they do not think, that they
do not in any way exist as being conscious of their enclosure between the two
abysses of oblivion—the abyss before birth and the abyss that follows
death—prove this to me, Trurl, and I'll leave you be! Prove that you only
imitated suffering, and did not create it!
"You know perfectly well
that's impossible," answered Trurl quietly. "Even before I took my
instruments in hand, when the box was still empty, I had to anticipate the
possibility of precisely such a proof—in order to rule it out. For
otherwise the monarch of that kingdom sooner or later would have gotten the
impression that his subjects were not real subjects at all, but puppets,
marionettes. Try to understand, there was no other way to do it! Anything that
would have destroyed in the littlest way the illusion of complete reality would
have also destroyed the importance, the dignity of governing, and turned it
into nothing but a mechanical game...."
"I understand, I understand
all too well!" cried Klapaucius. "Your intentions were the
noblest—you only sought to construct a kingdom as lifelike as possible,
so similar to a real kingdom, that no one, absolutely no one, could ever tell
the difference, and in this, I am afraid, you were successful! Only hours have
passed since your return, but for them, the ones imprisoned in that box, whole
centuries have gone by—how many beings, how many lives wasted, and all to
gratify and feed the vanity of King Excelsius!"
Without another word Trurl rushed
back to his ship, but saw that his friend was coming with him. When he had
blasted off into space, pointed the bow between two great clusters of eternal
flame and opened the throttle all the way, Klapaucius said:
"Trurl, you're hopeless. You
always act first, think later. And now what do you intend to do when we get
there?"
"I'll take the kingdom away
from him!"
"And what will you do with
it?"
"Destroy it!" Trurl was
about to shout, but choked on the first syllable when he realized what he was
saying. Finally he mumbled:
"I'll hold an election. Let them
choose just rulers from among themselves."
"You programmed them all to
be feudal lords or shiftless vassals. What good would an election do? First
you'd have to undo the entire structure of the kingdom, then assemble from
scratch ...""And where," exclaimed Trurl, "does the
changing of structures end and the tampering with minds begin?!"
Klapaucius had no answer for this, and they flew on in gloomy silence, till the
planet of Excelsius came into view. As they circled it, preparing to land, they
beheld a most amazing sight.
The entire planet was covered with
countless signs of intelligent life. Microscopic bridges, like tiny lines,
spanned every rill and rivulet, while the puddles, reflecting the stars, were
full of microscopic boats like floating chips.... The night side of the sphere
was dotted with glimmering cities, and on the day side one could make out
flourishing metropolises, though the inhabitants themselves were much too
little to observe, even through the strongest lens. Of the king there was not a
trace, as if the earth had swallowed him up.
"He isn't here," said
Trurl in an awed whisper. "What have they done with him? Somehow they
managed to break through the walls of their box and occupy the
asteroid...."
"Look!" said Klapaucius,
pointing to a little cloud no larger than a thimble and shaped like a mushroom;
it slowly rose into the atmosphere. "They've discovered atomic energy....
And over there—you see that bit of glass? It's the remains of the box,
they've made it into some sort of temple...."
"I don't understand. It was
only a model, after all. A process with a large number of parameters, a
simulation, a mock-up for a monarch to practice on, with the necessary
feedback, variables, multistats ..." muttered Trurl, dumbfounded.
"Yes. But you made the
unforgivable mistake of overperfecting your replica. Not wanting to build a
mere clocklike mechanism, you inad vertently—in your punctilious
way—created that which was possible, logical, and inevitable, that which
became the very antithesis of a mechanism...."
"Please, no more!" cried
Trurl. And they looked out upon the asteroid in silence, when suddenly
something bumped their ship, or rather grazed it slightly. They saw this
object, for it was illuminated by the thin ribbon of flame that issued from its
tail. A ship, probably, or perhaps an artificial satellite, though remarkably
similar to one of those steel boots the tyrant Excelsius used to wear. And when
the constructors raised their eyes, they beheld a heavenly body shining high
above the tiny planet— it hadn't been there previously—and they
recognized, in that cold, pale orb, the stern features of Excelsius himself,
who had in this way become the Moon of the Microminians.