We - Yevgeny Zamyatin
We - Yevgeny Zamyatin
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We
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Endnotes
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                                      FOREWORD
In submitting this book to the American public the translator has this to say.
   The artistic and psychological sides of the novel are hardly to be discussed in a preface.
Great as the art of a writer may be and profound as his psychology may seem to one, the
impression is largely a matter of individual variations, and this side must naturally be left
to each individual’s judgment and sensibilities.
   There is, however, one side of the matter which deserves particular mention and
motivated emphasis.
   It is perhaps for the first time in the history of the last few decades that a Russian book,
inspired by Russian life, written in Russia and in the Russian language, should see its first
light not in Russia but abroad, and not in the language it was originally written but
translated into a foreign tongue. During the darkest years of Russian history, in the ’forties,
’sixties, ’eighties and ’nineties of the last century, many Russian writers were forced by
oppression and reaction to live abroad and to write abroad, yet their writings would reach
Russia, as they were intended primarily for the Russian reader and Russian life. Most of
Turgenev’s novels were written while he was in France, and with the exception of his last
short story which he dictated on his deathbed, all his novels and stories were written in
Russian. Hertzen, Kropotkin, and at one time Dostoevsky, were similarly obliged to write
while away from their native land.
   Here is a book written by an artist who lived and still lives in Russia, and whose intimate
love for Russia and her suffering is so great that he finds it impossible to leave Russia even
in these days of stress and sorrow. But his book may not appear in the country where it
was written. It is a great tragedy—this spiritual loneliness of the artist who cannot speak to
his own people. In bringing out this book in English, the author tries to address himself to
the world without having the opportunity of being heard by his own people. This situation,
however, is to a great extent symbolic of the spiritual mission of Zamyatin, for no matter
what the language in which he originally writes, and no matter how typically national his
artistic perception and intuition, he is essentially universal and his vision transcends the
boundaries of a purely national art. Moreover, is it not true that the more genuinely
national a man’s art, and the more sincerely national his personality, the more is he
universal? Abraham Lincoln is more than an American national figure, and I doubt if the
appeal Lincoln’s personality makes would be universal as it is if he were not so typically
American. It is difficult to find personalities more national than Tolstoy or Dostoevsky, and
this is perhaps the reason why they stand out as two of the most typically universal minds
with a universal appeal that the nineteenth century gave us.
   Zamyatin is not so great as the men referred to above, but despite his youth, he already
proves to be the bearer of that quality of greatness which characterizes a personality with a
universal appeal.
   We is, as Zamyatin himself calls it, the most jocular and the most earnest thing he has
thus far written. It is a novel that puts most poignantly and earnestly before every
thoughtful reader the most difficult problem that exists today in the civilized world—the
problem of preservation of the independent original creative personality. Our civilization
today depends upon the energetic movement of great masses of people. Wars, revolutions,
general strikes—all these phenomena involve great masses, large groups, enormous mobs.
Despite the fact that there is hardly a corner in the world today where the average man
does not make the trite complaint, “What we need is leadership,” the world today seems for
a time at least to have lost its capacity for producing real leaders. For our great successes in
mechanical civilization, our exceptional efforts in efficiency, tend to bring into play large
numbers rather than great individualities. What under these conditions is the lot of a
creative individuality? What the tragedy of an independent spirit under present conditions
is, is pointed out in an unique way in We. The problem of creative individuality versus mob
is today not a mere Russian problem. It is as poignant under Bolshevist dictatorship as it is
in Ford’s factory.
   Of course the sincere, honest and frank treatment of this problem seems offensive to
anyone who prefers to be a member of a mob or keep this or that part of humanity in the
state of a mob. That is why We could not see light in Russia, and will probably be disliked
by those whose spiritual activities are reduced to the mechanical standards of a mechanical
civilization which is devoid of original creative effort.
   A few words about the method by which Zamyatin tries to drive home to the reader his
main ideas. It is the method of “Laughter through tears,” to use an old expression of Gogol.
It is the form which is dictated by profound love for humanity, mixed with pity and hatred
of those factors which are the cause of the disindividualization of man today. It is the old
emotion of the ancient Catul: “Odi et amo.” Zamyatin laughs in order to hide his tears, hence
amusing as We may seem and really is, it barely conceals a profound human tragedy which
is universal today.
   The reader may be interested in knowing something about Zamyatin himself. Zamyatin
does not like to tell about himself and the translator does not think he has the right to tell
more than to quote Zamyatin’s own answer to a request addressed to him a couple of years
ago to write his autobiography:
“I see you want my autobiography by all means, but I assure you that you will have to limit
yourself only to an outside inspection and get but a glimpse, perhaps, into the dark
windows. I seldom ask anybody to enter.
   “As to the outside, you will see a lonely child without playmates, lying on a Turkish divan,
hind-side up, reading a book, or under the grand piano while his mother plays Chopin. Two
steps away from Chopin, just outside the window with the geraniums, in the middle of the
street, there is a small pig tied to a stake and hens fluttering in the dust.
   “If you are interested in the geography, here it is—Lebedyan, in the most Russian
Tambov province about which Tolstoy and Turgenev wrote so much. Chronology?—The
end of the ’eighties and early ’nineties, then Voronesh, the Gymnasium pension, boredom
and rabid dogs on Main Street. One of these dogs got me by the leg. At that time I loved to
make different experiments on myself, and I decided to wait and see whether I would or
would not get the rabies and what is most important, I was very curious: What would I feel
when the time would come for the rabies (about two weeks after the bite)? I felt a great
many things, but two weeks later I did not get the rabies, therefore I announced to the
inspector in the school that I got the rabies and must go at once to Moscow for vaccination.
   “In the Gymnasium I would get A plus for composition and was not always on good terms
with mathematics. Perhaps because of that (sheer stubbornness) I chose the most
mathematical career—the shipbuilding department of the Petrograd Polytech.
   “Thirteen years ago in the month of May—and that May was remarkable in that the snow
covered the flowers—I simultaneously finished my work for my diploma and my first short
story. The short story was published in the old Obrazovanye.
   “Well, what else do you want? That meant that I was going to write short stories and was
going to publish them. Therefore for the following three years I wrote about nothing but ice
cutters, steam engines, refillers and The Theoretical Exploration of the Works of Floating
Steam Shovels. I couldn’t help myself. I was attached to the chair of Ship Architecture and
busied myself with teaching in the shipbuilding faculty, where I teach until now.
   “If I mean anything in Russian Literature, I owe this completely to the Petrograd Secret
Service. In 1911 this service exiled me from Petrograd and I was forced to spend two years
in a non-populated place in Lachta. There, in the midst of the white winter silence and the
green summer silence, I wrote my ‘Provincial.’ After that the late Ismaylov expressed in
print his belief that I wore very high boots and was a long-haired provincial type, carrying a
heavy stick, and he was later very much surprised that I ‘didn’t look a bit like that.’
Incidentally, ‘not a bit like that’ I became in England where, during the War, I spent about
two years, building ships and visiting the ruins of ancient castles. I listened to the banging
of the German Zeppelin bombs and wrote a short novel The Islanders.
   “I regret immensely that I did not witness the Russian Revolution in February and know
only the October Revolution, because it was in October, a life preserver around my body
and all the lights out, passing German submarines, that I returned to Petrograd. Because of
this I felt like one who never having been in love gets up one morning and finds himself
married about ten years.
   “Now I write little, perhaps because my requirements towards myself become greater.
Three new volumes are in the hands of the publisher and begin to be published only now.
The fourth will be my novel We, the funniest and most earnest thing I have written.
However, the most serious and most interesting novels I never wrote. They happened to
me in my life.”
   Zamyatin continues to live in Russia and continues to live with Russia, but such is the
sarcasm of Fate that the first Russian novel giving a real synthesis of the Russian revolution
and its greater universal meaning, this novel written by Zamyatin, should remain unknown
to the Russians in Russia.
                                                                              GREGORY ZILBOORG.
                                                                                New York, 1924.
WE
                                     RECORD ONE
This is merely a copy, word by word, of what was published this morning in the State
newspaper:
“In another hundred and twenty days the building of the Integral will be completed. The
great historic hour is near, when the first Integral will rise into the limitless space of the
universe. A thousand years ago your heroic ancestors subjected the whole earth to the
power of the United State. A still more glorious task is before you—the integration of the
indefinite equation of the Cosmos by the use of the glass, electric, fire-breathing Integral.
Your mission is to subjugate to the grateful yoke of reason the unknown beings who live on
other planets, and who are perhaps still in the primitive state of freedom. If they will not
understand that we are bringing them a mathematically faultless happiness, our duty will
be to force them to be happy. But before we take up arms, we shall try the power of words.
   “In the name of The Well-Doer, the following is announced herewith to all Numbers of
the United State:
   “Whoever feels capable must consider it his duty to write treatises, poems, manifestoes,
odes and other compositions on the greatness and the beauty of the United State.
   “This will be the first load which the Integral will carry.
   “Long live the United State! Long live the Numbers!! Long live the Well-Doer!!!”
   I feel my cheeks are burning as I write this. To integrate the colossal, universal equation!
To unbend the wild curve, to straighten it out to a tangent—to a straight line! For the
United State is a straight line, a great, divine, precise, wise line, the wisest of lines!
   I, D-503, the builder of the Integral, I am only one of the many mathematicians of the
United State. My pen, which is accustomed to figures, is unable to express the march and
rhythm of consonance; therefore I shall try to record only the things I see, the things I
think, or to be more exact, the things we think. Yes, we; that is exactly what I mean, and
“We” shall, therefore, be the title of my records. But this will only be a derivative of our
life—of our mathematical, perfect life in the United State. If this be so, will not this
derivative be a poem in itself, despite my limitations? It will. I believe, I know it.
   I feel my cheeks are burning as I write this. I feel something similar to what a woman
probably feels when for the first time she senses within herself the pulse of a tiny, blind,
human being. It is I, and at the same time it is not I. And for many long months it will be
necessary to feed it with my life, with my blood, and then with a pain at my heart, to tear it
from myself and lay it at the feet of the United State.
   Yet I am ready, as everyone, or nearly everyone of us, is. I am ready.
                                    RECORD TWO
Ballet—Square harmony—X.
Spring. From behind the Green Wall from some unknown plains the wind brings to us the
yellow honeyed pollen of flowers. One’s lips are dry from this sweet dust. Every moment
one passes one’s tongue over them. Probably, all women whom I meet in the street (and
men certainly also), have today sweet lips. This disturbs somewhat my logical thinking. But
the sky! The sky is blue. Its limpidness is not marred by a single cloud. (How primitive was
the taste of the ancients, since their poets were always inspired by these senseless,
formless, stupidly rushing accumulations of steam!) I love, I am sure it will not be an error
if I say we love, only such a sky—a sterile, faultless sky. On such days the whole universe
seems to be moulded of the same eternal glass, like the Green Wall, and like all our
buildings. On such days one sees into the very blue depth of things. One sees their
wonderful equations, hitherto unknown. One sees them in everything, even in the most
ordinary everyday things.
    Here is an example: this morning I was on the dock where the Integral is being built, and
I saw the lathes; blindly, with abandon, the balls of the regulators were rotating; the cranks
were swinging from side to side with a glimmer; the working-beam proudly swung its
shoulder; and the mechanical chisels were dancing to the melody of an unheard Tarantella.
I suddenly perceived all the music, all the beauty, of this colossal, of this mechanical ballet,
illumined by light blue rays of sunshine. Then the thought came: why beautiful? Why is a
dance beautiful? Answer: because it is an unfree movement. Because the deep meaning of
the dance is contained in its absolute, ecstatic submission, in the ideal non-freedom. If it is
true that our ancestors would abandon themselves in dancing at the most inspired
moments of their lives (religious mysteries, military parades) then it means only one thing:
the instinct of non-freedom has been characteristic of human nature from ancient times,
and we in our life of today, we are only consciously—
    I was interrupted. The switchboard clicked. I raised my eyes—O-90, of course! In half a
minute she herself will be here to take me for the walk.
    Dear O-! She always seems to me to look like her name, O-. She is approximately ten
centimeters shorter than the required Maternal Norm. Therefore she appears all round; the
rose-colored O of her lips is open to meet every word of mine. She has a round soft dimple
on her wrist. Children have such dimples. As she came in, the logical flywheel was still
buzzing in my head, and following its inertia, I began to tell her about my new formula
which embraced the machines and the dancers and all of us.
    “Wonderful, isn’t it!” I asked.
    “Yes, wonderful … Spring!” she replied, with a rosy smile.
   You see? Spring! She talks about Spring! Females! … I became silent.
   We were down in the street. The avenue was crowded. On days when the weather is so
beautiful the afternoon personal hour is usually the hour of the supplementary walk. As
always the big Musical Tower was playing with all its pipes, the March of the United State.
The Numbers, hundreds, thousands of Numbers in light blue unifs (probably a derivative of
the ancient uniform) with golden badges on the chest—the State number of each one, male
or female—the Numbers were walking slowly, four abreast, exaltedly keeping the step. I,
we four, were but one of the innumerable waves of a powerful torrent. To my left, O-90 (if
one of my long-haired ancestors were writing this a thousand years ago, he would probably
call her by that funny word, mine), to my right, two unknown Numbers, a she-Number and
a he-Number.
   Blue sky, tiny baby suns in each one of our badges; our faces are unclouded by the
insanity of thoughts. Rays. … Do you picture it? Everything seems to be made of a kind of
smiling, a ray-like matter. And the brass measures: Tra-ta-ta-tam. … Tra-ta-ta-tam …
stamping on the brassy steps which sparkle in the sun; with every step you rise higher and
higher into the dizzy blue heights. … Then, as this morning on the dock, again I saw as if for
the first time in my life, the impeccably straight streets, the glistening glass of the
pavement, the divine parallelopipeds of the transparent dwellings, the square harmony of
the grayish-blue rows of Numbers. And it seemed to me that not past generations, but I
myself, had won a victory over the old god and the old life, that I myself had created all this.
I felt like a tower: I was afraid to move my elbow, lest the walls, the cupola and the
machines should fall to pieces.
   Then without warning—a jump through centuries: I remembered (apparently through
an association by contrast) a picture in the museum, a picture of an avenue of the twentieth
century, a thundering many-colored confusion of men, wheels, animals, billboards, trees,
colors, and birds. … They say all this once actually existed!
   It seemed to me so incredible, so absurd, that I lost control of myself and laughed aloud.
A laugh, as if an echo of mine, reached my ear from the right. I turned. I saw white, very
white, sharp teeth, and an unfamiliar female face.
   “I beg your pardon,” she said, “but you looked about you like an inspired mythological
god on the seventh day of creation. You look as though you are sure that I, too, was created
by you, by no one but you. It is very flattering.”
   All this without a smile, even with a certain degree of respect—(she may know that I am
the builder of the Integral). In her eyes nevertheless, in her brows, there was a strange
irritating X, and I was unable to grasp it, to find an arithmetical expression for it. Somehow
I was confused; with a somewhat hazy mind, I tried logically to motivate my laughter.
   “It was absolutely clear that this contrast, this impassable abyss, between the things of
today and of years ago—”
   “But why impassable?” (What bright, sharp teeth!) “One might throw a bridge over that
abyss. Please imagine: a drum battalion, rows—all this existed before and consequently—”
   “Oh, yes, it is clear,” I exclaimed.
   It was a remarkable intersection of thoughts. She said almost in the same words the
things I wrote down before the walk! Do you understand? Even the thoughts! It is because
nobody is one, but one of. We are all so much alike—
   “Are you sure?” I noticed her brows which rose to the temples in an acute angle—like the
sharp corners of an X. Again I was confused, casting a glance to the right, then to the left. To
my right—she, slender, abrupt, resistantly flexible like a whip, I-330 (I saw her number
now). To my left, O-, totally different, made all of circles with a childlike dimple on her
wrist; and at the very end of our row, an unknown he-Number, double-curved like the
letter S. We were all so different from one another. …
   The one to my right, I-330, apparently caught my confused eye, for she said with a sigh,
“Yes, alas!”
   I don’t deny that this exclamation was quite in place, but again there was something in
her face or in her voice. …
   With an abruptness unusual for me, I said, “Why ‘alas’? Science is developing and if not
now, then within fifty or one hundred years—”
   “Even the noses will—”
   “Yes, noses!” This time I almost shouted, “Since there is still a reason, no matter what, for
envy. … Since my nose is button-like and someone else’s is—”
   “Well your nose is rather classic, as they would say in the ancient days, although your
hands—No, no, show me your hands!”
   I hate to have anyone look at my hands; they are covered with long hair—a stupid
atavism. I stretched out my hand and said as indifferently as I could, “Apelike.”
   She glanced at my hand, then at my face.
   “No, a very curious harmony.”
   She weighed me with her eyes as though with scales. The little horns again appeared at
the corners of her brows.
   “He is registered in my name,” exclaimed O-90 with a rosy smile.
   I made a grimace. Strictly speaking, she was out of order. This dear O-, how shall I say it?
the speed of her tongue is not correctly calculated; the speed per second of her tongue
should be slightly less than the speed per second of her thoughts—at any rate not the
reverse.
   At the end of the avenue the big bell of the Accumulating Tower resounded seventeen.
The personal hour was at an end. I-330 was leaving us with that S-like he-Number. He has
such a respectable, and I noticed then, such a familiar face. I must have met him
somewhere, but where I could not remember. Upon leaving me I-330 said with the same X-
like smile:
   “Drop in day after tomorrow at auditorium 112.”
   I shrugged my shoulders: “If I am assigned to the auditorium you just named—”
   She, with a peculiar, incomprehensible certainty: “You will.”
   The woman had upon me a disagreeable effect, like an irrational component of an
equation which you cannot eliminate. I was glad to remain alone with dear O-, at least for a
short while. Hand in hand with her, I passed four lines of avenues; at the next corner she
went to the right, I to the left. O- timidly raised her round blue crystalline eyes:
   “I would like so much to come to you today and pull down the curtains, especially today,
right now. …”
   How funny she is. But what could I say to her? She was with me only yesterday and she
knows as well as I that our next sexual day is day-after-tomorrow. It is merely another case
in which her thoughts are too far ahead. It sometimes happens that the spark comes too
early to the motor.
   At parting I kissed her twice—no, I shall be exact, three times, on her wonderful blue
eyes, such clear, unclouded eyes.
                                   RECORD THREE
I looked over all that I wrote down yesterday and I find that my descriptions are not
sufficiently clear. That is, everything would undoubtedly be clear to one of us but who
knows to whom my Integral will some day bring these records? Perhaps you, like our
ancestors, have read the great book of civilization only up to the page of nine hundred
years ago. Perhaps you don’t know even such elementary things as the Hour Tables,
Personal Hours, Maternal Norm, Green Wall, Well-Doer. It seems droll to me and at the
same time very difficult, to explain these things. It is as though, let us say, a writer of the
twentieth century should start to explain in his novel such words as coat, apartment, wife.
Yet if his novel had been translated for primitive races, how could he have avoided
explaining what a coat meant? I am sure that the primitive man would look at a coat and
think, “What is this for? It is only a burden, an unnecessary burden.” I am sure that you will
feel the same, if I tell you that not one of us has ever stepped beyond the Green Wall since
the Two Hundred Years’ War.
   But, dear readers, you must think, at least a little. It helps.
   It is clear that the history of mankind as far as our knowledge goes, is a history of the
transition from nomadic forms to more sedentary ones. Does it not follow that the most
sedentary form of life (ours) is at the same time, the most perfect one? There was a time
when people were rushing from one end of the earth to another, but this was the
prehistoric time when such things as nations, wars, commerce, different discoveries of
different Americas still existed. Who has need of these things now?
   I admit humanity acquired this habit of a sedentary form of life not without difficulty and
not at once. When the Two Hundred Years’ War had destroyed all the roads which later
were overgrown with grass, it was probably very difficult at first. It seemed uncomfortable
to live in cities which were cut off from each other by green debris. But what of it? Man
soon after he lost his tail probably did not learn at once how to chase away flies without its
help. I am almost sure that at first he was even lonesome without his tail, but now, can you
imagine yourself with a tail? Or can you imagine yourself walking in the street naked,
without clothes? (It is possible you go without clothes still.) Here we have the same case. I
cannot imagine a city which is not clad with a Green Wall; I cannot imagine a life which is
not clad with the figures of our Tables.
   Tables. … Now even, purple figures look at me austerely yet kindly from the golden
background of the wall. Involuntarily I am reminded of the thing which was called by the
ancients, “Sainted Image,” and I feel a desire to compose verses, or prayers which are the
same. Oh, why am not I a poet, so as to be able properly to glorify the Tables, the heart and
pulse of the United State!
   All of us and perhaps all of you read in childhood while in school, that greatest of all
monuments of ancient literature, the Official Railroad Guide. But if you compare this with
the Tables, you will see side by side graphite and diamonds. Both are the same, carbon. But
how eternal, transparent, how shining the diamond! Who does not lose his breath when he
runs through the pages of the Guide? The Tables transformed each one of us, actually, into a
six-wheeled steel hero of a great poem. Every morning with six-wheeled precision, at the
same hour, at the same minute, we wake up, millions of us at once. At the very same hour
millions like one we begin our work, and millions like one, we finish it. United into a single
body with a million hands, at the very same second, designated by the Tables, we carry the
spoons to our mouths; at the same second we all go out to walk, go to the auditorium, to the
halls for the Taylor exercises and then to bed.
   I shall be quite frank: even we have not attained the absolute, exact solution of the
problem of happiness. Twice a day, from sixteen to seventeen o’clock and from twenty-one
to twenty-two, our united powerful organism dissolves into separate cells; these are the
personal hours designated by the Tables. During these hours you would see the curtains
discreetly drawn in the rooms of some; others march slowly over the pavement of the main
avenue or sit at their desks as I sit now. But I firmly believe, let them call me an idealist and
a dreamer, I believe that sooner or later we shall somehow find even for these hours, a
place in the general formula. Somehow, all of the 86,400 seconds will be incorporated in
the Tables of Hours.
   I have had opportunity to read and hear many improbable things about those times
when human beings still lived in the state of freedom, that is, an unorganized primitive
state. One thing has always seemed to me the most improbable: how could a government,
even a primitive government, permit people to live without anything like our Tables—
without compulsory walks, without precise regulation of the time to eat, for instance? They
would get up and go to bed whenever they liked. Some historians even say that in those
days the streets were lighted all night; and all night people went about the streets.
   That I cannot understand; true, their minds were rather limited in those days. Yet they
should have understood, should they not, that such a life was actually wholesale murder,
although slow murder, day after day? The State (humanitarianism) forbade in those days
the murder of one person, but it did not forbid the killing of millions slowly and by half. To
kill one, that is, to reduce the general sum of human life by fifty years, was considered
criminal, but to reduce the general sum of human life by fifty million years was not
considered criminal! Is it not droll? Today this simple mathematical moral problem could
easily be solved in half a minute’s time by any ten-year-old Number, yet they couldn’t do it!
All their Immanuel Kants together couldn’t do it! It didn’t enter the heads of all their Kants
to build a system of scientific ethics, that is, ethics based on adding, subtracting, multiplying
and dividing.
   Further, is it not absurd that their State (they called it State!) left sexual life absolutely
without control? However, whenever and as much as they wanted. … Absolutely
unscientific like beasts; and like beasts they blindly gave birth to children! Is it not strange
to understand gardening, chicken-farming, fishery (we have definite knowledge that they
were familiar with all these things), and not to be able to reach the last step in this logical
scale, namely, production of children—not to be able to discover such things as Maternal
and Paternal Norms?
   It is so droll, so improbable, that while I write this I am afraid lest you, my unknown
future readers, should think I am merely a bad jester. I feel almost as though you may think
I simply want to mock you and with a most serious appearance try to relate to you absolute
nonsense. But first, I am incapable of jesting, for in every joke a lie has its hidden function.
And second, the science of the United State contends that the life of the ancients was
exactly what I am describing, and the science of the United State cannot make a mistake!
Yet how could they have State logic, since they lived in a condition of freedom like beasts,
like apes, like herds? What could one expect of them, since even in our day one hears from
time to time, coming from the bottom, the primitive depths, the echo of the apes?
   Fortunately it happens only from time to time, very seldom. Happily it is only a case of
small parts breaking; these may easily be repaired without stopping the eternal great
march of the whole machine. And in order to eliminate a broken peg we have the skillful
heavy hand of the Well-Doer, we have the experienced eyes of the Guardians. …
   By the way, I just thought of that Number whom I met yesterday, the double-curved one
like the letter S; I think I have seen him several times coming out of the Bureau of the
Guardians. Now I understand why I felt such an instinctive respect for him and a kind of
awkwardness when that strange I-330 at his side. … I must confess that, that I— … they
ring the bell, time to sleep, it is twenty-two-thirty. Till tomorrow, then.
                                    RECORD FOUR
Until today everything in life seemed to me clear (that is why, I think, I always had a sort of
partiality toward the word “clear”), but today … I don’t understand. First, I really was
assigned to auditorium 112 as she said, although the probability was as 500:10,000,000 or
1:20,000. (500 is the number of auditoriums and there are 10,000,000 Numbers.) And
second … but let me relate things in successive order. The auditorium: an enormous half-
globe of glass with the sun piercing through. The circular rows of noble, globe-like, closely-
shaven heads. With joy in my heart I looked around. I believe I was looking in the hope of
seeing the rose-colored scythe, the dear lips of O-, somewhere among the blue waves of the
unifs. Then I saw extraordinarily white, sharp teeth like the. … But no! Tonight at twenty-
one o’clock O- was to come to me; therefore my desire to see her was quite natural. The
bell. We stood up, sang the Hymn of the United State, and our clever phono-lecturer
appeared on the platform with a sparkling golden megaphone.
   “Respected Numbers, not so long ago our archaeologists dug up a book written in the
twentieth century. In this book the ironical author tells about a Wild Man and a barometer.
The Wild Man noticed that every time the barometer’s hand stopped on the word ‘rain,’ it
actually rained. And as the Wild Man craved rain, he let out as much mercury as was
necessary to put it at the level of the word ‘rain’ (on the screen a Wild Man with feathers,
letting out the mercury. Laughter).
   “You are laughing at him, but don’t you think the ‘European’ of that age deserves more to
be laughed at? He, like the Wild Man, wanted rain—rain with a little r, an algebraic rain; but
he remained standing before the barometer like a wet hen. The Wild Man at least had more
courage and energy and logic, although primitive logic. The Wild Man showed the ability to
establish a connection between cause and effect: by letting out the mercury he made the
first step on the path which. …”
   Here (I repeat, I am not concealing anything, I am setting down everything) I suddenly
became impermeable to the quickening currents coming from the megaphone. I suddenly
felt I had come here in vain (why in vain and how could I not have come here, where I was
assigned?). Everything seemed to me empty like a shell. I succeeded with difficulty in
switching my attention in again when the phono-lecturer came to the main theme of the
evening—to our music as a mathematical composition (mathematics is the cause, music the
effect). The phono-lecturer began the description of the recently invented musicometer.
   “… By merely rotating this handle anyone is enabled to produce about three sonatas per
hour. What difficulties our predecessors had in making music! They were able to compose
only by bringing themselves to strokes of inspiration—an extinct form of epilepsy. Here
you have an amusing illustration of their achievements: the music of Scriabin, twentieth
century. This black box,” (a curtain parted on the platform, and we saw an ancient
instrument) “this box they called the ‘Royal Grand.’ They attached to this the idea of
regality, which also goes to prove how their music. …”
   And I don’t remember anything further. Very possibly because … I’ll tell you frankly,
because she, I-330, came to the “Royal” box. Probably I was simply startled by her
unexpected appearance on the platform.
   She was dressed in a fantastic dress of the ancient time, a black dress closely fitting the
body, sharply delimiting the white of her shoulders and breast and that warm shadow
waving with her breath between. … And the dazzling, almost angry teeth. A smile, a bite,
directed downward. She took her seat; she began to play something wild, convulsive, loud
like all their life then—not a shadow of rational mechanism. Of course all those around me
were right; they were laughing. Only a few … but why is it that I too, I … ?
   Yes, epilepsy, a mental disease, a pain. A slow, sweet pain, bite, and it goes deeper and
becomes sharper. And then, slowly, sunshine—not our sunshine, not crystalline, bluish and
soft, coming through the glass bricks. No, a wild sunshine, rushing and burning, tearing
everything into small bits. …
   The Number at my left glanced at me and chuckled. I don’t know why but I remember
exactly how a microscopic saliva bubble appeared on his lips and burst. That bubble
brought me back to myself. I was again I.
   Like all the other Numbers I heard now only the senseless, disorderly cracking of the
chords. I laughed; I felt so light and simple. The gifted phono-lecturer represented to us
only too well that wild epoch. And that was all.
   With what a joy I listened afterward to our contemporary music. It was demonstrated to
us at the end of the lecture for the sake of contrast. Crystalline, chromatic scales converging
and diverging into endless series; and synthetic harmony of the formulae of Taylor and
McLauren, wholesome, square and massive like the “trousers of Pythagoras.” Sad melodies
dying away in waving movements. The beautiful texture of the spectrum of planets,
dissected by Frauenhofer lines … what magnificent, what perfect regularity! How pitiful
the wilful music of the ancients, not limited except by the scope of their wild imaginations!
   As usual in good order, four abreast, all of us left the auditorium. The familiar double-
curved figure passed swiftly by. I respectfully bowed.
   Dear O- was to come in an hour. I felt agitated—agreeably and usefully. Home at last! I
rushed to the house-office, handed over to the controller on duty my pink ticket and
received a certificate permitting the use of the curtains. This right exists in our State only
for the sexual days. Normally we live surrounded by transparent walls which seem to be
knitted of sparkling air; we live beneath the eye of everyone, always bathed in light. We
have nothing to conceal from one another; besides, this mode of living makes the difficult
and exalted task of the Guardians much easier. Without it many bad things might happen. It
is possible that the strange opaque dwellings of the ancients were responsible for their
pitiful cellish psychology. “My (sic!) home is my fortress!” How did they manage to think of
such things?
   At twenty-two o’clock I lowered the curtain and at the same second O- came in smiling,
slightly out of breath. She extended to me her rosy lips and her pink ticket. I tore off the
stub but I could not tear myself away from the rosy lips up to the last moment—twenty-
two-fifteen.
  Then I showed her my diary and I talked; I think I talked very well on the beauty of a
square, a cube, a straight line. At first she listened so charmingly, she was so rosy, when
suddenly a tear appeared in her blue eyes, then another, and a third fell straight on the
open page (page 7). The ink blurred; well, I shall have to copy it again.
  “My dear O-, if only you, if. …”
  “What if? If what?”
  Again the old lament about a child or perhaps something new regarding, regarding …
the other one? Although it seems as though some … but that would be too absurd!
                                     RECORD FIVE
Again with you, my unknown reader; I talk to you as though you were, let us say, my old
comrade, R-13, the poet with the lips of a negro—well, everyone knows him. Yet you are
somewhere on the moon, or on Venus, or on Mars. Who knows you? Where and who are
you?
   Imagine a square, a living, beautiful square. Imagine that this square is obliged to tell you
about itself, about its life. You realize that this square would hardly think it necessary to
mention the fact that all its four angles are equal. It knows this too well. This is such an
ordinary, obvious thing. I am in exactly the same square position. Take the pink checks for
instance, and all that goes with them: for me they are as natural as the equality of the four
angles of the square. But for you they are perhaps more mysterious and hard to understand
than the binom of Newton. Let me explain: an ancient sage once said a clever thing
(accidentally, beyond doubt). He said, “Love and Hunger rule the world.” Consequently, to
dominate the world, man had to win a victory over hunger after paying a very high price. I
refer to the great Two Hundred Years’ War, the war between the city and the land.
Probably on account of religious prejudices, the primitive peasants stubbornly held on to
their “bread.”1 In the 35th year before the foundation of the United State, our contemporary
petroleum food was invented. True, only about two-tenths of the population of the globe
did not die out. But how beautifully shining the face of the earth became when it was
cleared of its impurities!
   Accordingly the 0.2 which survived, have enjoyed the greatest happiness in the bosom of
the United State. But is it not clear that supreme bliss and envy are only the numerator and
the denominator respectively, of the same fraction, happiness? What sense would the
innumerable sacrifices of the Two Hundred Years’ War have for us if a reason were left in
our life for jealousy? Yet such a reason persisted because there remained button-like noses
and classical noses (cf.: our conversation during the promenade). For there were some
whose love was sought by everyone and others whose love was sought by no one.
   Naturally, having conquered hunger (that is, algebraically speaking, having achieved the
total of bodily welfare), the United State directed its attack against the second ruler of the
world, against love. At last this element also was conquered, that is, organized and put into
a mathematical formula. It is already three hundred years since our great historic Lex
Sexualis was promulgated: “A Number may obtain a license to use any other Number as a
sexual product.”
   The rest is only a matter of technique. You are carefully examined in the laboratory of the
Sexual Department where they find the content of the sexual hormones in your blood, and
they make out for you accordingly a Table of sexual days. Then you file an application to
enjoy the services of Number so-and-so, or Numbers so-and-so. You get for that purpose a
checkbook (pink). That is all.
   It is clear that under such circumstances there is no more reason for envy or jealousy.
The denominator of the fraction of happiness is reduced to zero and the whole fraction is
thus converted into a magnificent infiniteness. The thing which was for the ancients the
source of innumerable stupid tragedies has been converted in our time into an harmonious,
agreeable and useful function of the organism, a function like sleep, like physical labor, the
taking of food, digestion, etc., etc. Hence you see how the great power of logic purifies
everything it happens to touch. Oh, if only you unknown readers can conceive this divine
power! If you will only learn to follow it to the end!
   It is very strange: while I was writing today of the loftiest summit of human history, all
the while I breathed the purest mountain air of thought, but within me it was and remains
cloudy, cobwebby, and there is a kind of cross-like, four-pawed X. Or perhaps it is my paws
and I feel like that only because they are always before my eyes, my hairy paws. I don’t like
to talk about them. I dislike them. They are a trace of a primitive epoch. Is it possible that
there is in me … ?
   I wanted to strike out all this because it trespasses on the limits of my synopsis. But then
I decided: no, I shall not! Let this diary give the curve of the most imperceptible vibrations
of my brain, like a precise seismograph, for at times such vibrations serve as forewarnings.
… Certainly this is absurd! This certainly should be stricken out; we have conquered all the
elements; catastrophes are not possible any more.
   Now everything is clear to me. The peculiar feeling inside is a result of that very same
square situation of which I spoke in the beginning. There is no X in me. There can be none. I
am simply afraid lest some X will be left in you, my unknown readers. I believe you will
understand that it is harder for me to write than it ever was for any author throughout
human history. Some of them wrote for contemporaries, some for the future generations
but none of them ever wrote for their ancestors, or beings like their primitive, distant
ancestors.
                                      RECORD SIX
I must repeat, I made it my duty to write concealing nothing. Therefore I must point out
now that sad as it may be, the process of hardening and crystallization of life has evidently
not been completed even here in our State. A few steps remain to be made before we reach
the ideal. The ideal (it’s clear), is to be found where nothing happens, but here. … I will give
you an example: in the State paper I read that in two days the holiday of Justice will be
celebrated on the Plaza of the Cube. This means that again some Number has impeded the
smooth run of the great State machine. Again something that was not foreseen, or
forecalculated happened.
   Besides, something happened to me. True, it occurred during the personal hour, that is
during the time specifically assigned to unforeseen circumstances, yet. …
   At about sixteen (to be exact, ten minutes to sixteen), I was at home. Suddenly the
telephone: “D-503?”—a woman’s voice.
   “Yes.”
   “Are you free?”
   “Yes.”
   “It is I, I-330. I shall run over to you immediately. We shall go together to the Ancient
House. Agreed?”
   I-330! … This I- irritates me, repels me. She almost frightens me; but just because of that
I answered, “Yes.”
   In five minutes we were in an aero. Blue sky of May. The light sun in its golden aero
buzzed behind us without catching up and without lagging behind. Ahead of us a white
cataract of a cloud. Yes, a white cataract of a cloud nonsensically fluffy like the cheeks of an
ancient cupid. That cloud was disturbing. The front window was open; it was windy; lips
were dry. Against one’s will one passed the tongue constantly over them and thought about
lips.
   Already we saw in the distance the hazy green spots on the other side of the Wall. Then a
slight involuntary sinking of the heart, down—down—down, as if from a steep mountain,
and we were at the Ancient House.
   That strange, delicate, blind establishment is covered all around with a glass shell,
otherwise it would undoubtedly have fallen to pieces long ago. At the glass door we found
an old woman all wrinkles, especially her mouth which was all made up of folds and pleats.
Her lips had disappeared, having folded inward; her mouth seemed grown together. It
seemed incredible that she should be able to talk and yet she did:
   “Well, dear, come again to see my little house?”
   Her wrinkles shone, that is, her wrinkles diverged like rays, which created the
impression of shining.
   “Yes, grandmother,” answered I-330.
   The wrinkles continued to shine.
   “And the sun, eh—do you see it, you rogue, you! I know, I know. It’s all right. Go all by
yourselves—I shall remain here in the sunshine.”
   Hmm. … Apparently my companion was a frequent guest here. Something disturbed me;
probably that unpleasant optical impression—the cloud on the smooth blue surface of the
sky.
   While we were ascending the wide, dark stairs, I-330 said, “I love her, that old woman.”
   “Why?”
   “I don’t know. Perhaps for her mouth—or perhaps for nothing, just so.”
   I shrugged my shoulders. She continued walking upstairs with a faint smile or perhaps
without a smile at all.
   I felt very guilty. It is clear that there must not be “love, just so,” but “love because of.” For
all elements of nature should be. …
   “It’s clear …” I began, but I stopped at that word and cast a furtive look at I-330. Did she
notice it or not? She looked somewhere, down; her eyes were closed like curtains.
   It struck me suddenly: evening about twenty-two; you walk on the avenue and among
the brightly lighted, transparent, cubic cells, are dark spaces, lowered curtains, and there
behind the curtains. … What has she behind her curtains? Why did she phone me today?
Why did she bring me here? and all this. …
   She opened a heavy, squeaking, opaque door and we found ourselves in a sombre
disorderly space (they called it an “apartment”). The same strange “royal” musical
instrument and a wild, unorganized, crazy loudness of colors and forms like their ancient
music. A white plane above, dark blue walls, red, green, orange bindings of ancient books,
yellow bronze candelabras, a statue of Buddha, furniture with lines distorted by epilepsy,
impossible to reduce to any clear equation.
   I could hardly bear that chaos. But my companion apparently possessed a stronger
constitution.
   “This is my most beloved—” she suddenly caught herself (again a smile—bite, and white
sharp teeth), “to be more exact, the most nonsensical of all ‘apartments.’ ”
   “Or to be most exact, of all the States. Thousands of microscopic States, fighting eternal
wars, pitiless like—”
   “Oh yes, it’s clear,” said I-330 with apparent sincerity.
   We passed through a room where we found a few small children’s beds (children in
those days were also private property). Then more rooms, glimmering mirrors, sombre
closets, unbearably loud-colored divans, an enormous “fireplace,” a large mahogany bed.
Our contemporary beautiful, transparent, eternal glass was represented here only by
pitiful, delicate, tiny squares of windows.
   “And to think; here there was love ‘just so’; they burned and tortured themselves” (again
the curtain of the eyes was lowered), “What a stupid, uneconomical spending of human
energy. Am I not right?”
   She spoke as though reading my thoughts but in her smile there remained always that
irritating X. There behind the curtains something was going on, I don’t know what, but
something that made me lose my patience. I wanted to quarrel with her, to scream at her
(exactly, to scream), but I had to agree. It was impossible not to agree.
   We stopped in front of a mirror. At that moment I saw only her eyes. An idea came to me:
human beings are built as nonsensically as these stupid “apartments,” human heads are
opaque, and there are only two very small windows that lead inside—the eyes. She seemed
to have guessed my thoughts; she turned around: “Well, here they are, my eyes—well” (this
suddenly, then silence).
   There were in front of me two gloomy dark windows and behind them inside, such
strange hidden life. I saw there only fire, burning like a peculiar “fireplace” and unknown
figures resembling. …
   All this was certainly very natural; I saw in her eyes the reflection of my own face. But my
feelings were unnatural and not like me. Evidently the depressing influence of the
surroundings was beginning to tell on me. I felt definitely fear. I felt as if I were trapped and
caged in a strange cage. I felt that I was caught in the wild hurricane of ancient life.
   “Do you know …” said I-330, “step out for a moment into the next room.” Her voice came
from there—from inside, from behind the dark window-eyes—where the fireplace was
blazing.
   I went out, sat down. From a shelf on the wall there looked straight into my face,
somewhat smiling, a snub-nosed, asymmetrical physiognomy of one of the ancient poets; I
think it was Pushkin.
   “Why do I sit here enduring this smile with such resignation and what is this all about?
Why am I here? And why all these strange sensations, this irritating, repellent female, this
strange game?”
   The door of the closet slammed; there was the rustle of silk. I felt it difficult to restrain
myself from getting up and, and. … I don’t remember exactly; probably I wanted to tell her
a number of disagreeable things. But she had already appeared.
   She was dressed in a short bright-yellowish dress, black hat, black stockings. The dress
was of light silk—I saw clearly very long black stockings above the knees, an uncovered
neck and the shadow between. …
   “It’s clear that you want to seem original. But is it possible that you—?”
   “It is clear,” interrupted I-330, “that to be original means to stand out among others;
consequently to be original means to violate the law of equality. What was called in the
language of the ancients ‘to be common’ is with us only the fulfilling of one’s duty. For—”
   “Yes, yes, exactly,” I interrupted impatiently, “and there is no use, no use. …”
   She came near the bust of the snub-nosed poet, lowered the curtains on the wild fire of
her eyes and said, this time I think she was really in earnest, or perhaps she merely wanted
to soften my impatience with her, but she said a very reasonable thing:
   “Don’t you think it surprising that once people could stand types like this? Not only stand
them but worship them. What a slavish spirit, don’t you think so?”
   “It’s clear … that is … !” I wanted … (damn that cursed “it’s clear!”).
   “Oh, yes, I understand. But in fact these were rulers stronger than the crowned ones.
Why were they not isolated and exterminated? In our State—”
   “Oh, yes, in our State—” I began.
   Suddenly she laughed. I saw the laughter in her eyes. I saw the resounding sharp curve of
that laughter, flexible, tense like a whip. I remember my whole body shivered. I thought of
grasping her … and I don’t know what. … I had to do something, mattered little what;
automatically I looked at my golden badge, glanced at my watch—ten minutes to
seventeen!
   “Don’t you think it is time to go?” I said in as polite a tone as possible.
   “And if I should ask you to stay here with me?”
   “What? Do you realize what you are saying? In ten minutes I must be in the auditorium.”
   “And ‘all the Numbers must take the prescribed courses in art and science,’ ” said I-330
with my voice.
   Then she lifted the curtain, opened her eyes—through the dark windows the fire was
blazing.
   “I have a physician in the Medical Bureau; he is registered to me; if I ask him, he will give
you a certificate declaring that you are ill. All right?”
   Understood! At last I understood where this game was leading.
   “Ah, so! But you know that every honest Number as a matter of course must immediately
go to the office of the Guardians and—”
   “And as a matter not of course?” (Sharp smile-bite) “I am very curious to know; will you
or will you not go to the Guardians?”
   “Are you going to remain here?”
   I grasped the knob of the door. It was a brass knob, a cold, brass knob and I heard, cold
like brass, her voice:
   “Just a minute, may I?”
   She went to the telephone, called a Number—I was so upset it escaped me—and spoke
loudly: “I shall be waiting for you in the Ancient House. Yes, yes, alone.”
   I turned the cold brass knob.
   “May I take the aero?”
   “Oh yes, certainly, please!”
   In the sunshine at the gate the old woman was dozing like a plant. Again I was surprised
to see her grown-together mouth open, and to hear her say:
   “And your lady, did she remain alone?”
   “Alone.”
   The mouth of the old woman grew together again; she shook her head; apparently even
her weakening brain understood the stupidity and the danger of the behaviour of that
woman.
   At seventeen o’clock exactly, I was at the lecture. There I suddenly realized that I did not
tell the whole truth to the old woman. I-330 was not there alone now. Possibly this fact, that
I involuntarily told the old woman a lie, was torturing me now and distracting my attention.
Yes, not alone—that was the point.
   After twenty-one-thirty o’clock I had a free hour. I could therefore have gone to the office
of the Guardians to make my report; but after that stupid adventure I was so tired—
besides, the law provides two days. I shall have time tomorrow; I have another twenty-four
hours.
                                    RECORD SEVEN
Night. Green, orange, blue. The red royal instrument. The yellow dress. Then a brass
Buddha. Suddenly it lifted the brass eyelids and sap began to flow from it, from Buddha.
Sap also from the yellow dress. Even in the mirror—drops of sap, and from the large bed
and from the children’s bed and soon from myself. … It is horror, mortally sweet horror! …
   I woke up. Soft blue light, the glass of the walls, of the chairs, of the table was glimmering.
This calmed me. My heart stopped palpitating. Sap! Buddha! How absurd! I am sick, it is
clear; I never saw dreams before. They say that to see dreams was a common normal thing
with the ancients. Yes, after all, their life was a whirling carousel: green, orange, Buddha,
sap—but we, people of today, we know all too well that dreaming is a serious mental
disease. I. … Is it possible that my brain, this precise, clean, glittering mechanism, like a
chronometer without a speck of dust on it, is … ? Yes it is, now. I really feel there in the
brain some foreign body like an eyelash in the eye. One does not feel one’s whole body but
this eye with a hair in it, one cannot forget it for a second. …
   The cheerful, crystalline sound of the bell at my head. Seven o’clock. Time to get up. To
the right and to the left as in mirrors, to the right and to the left through the glass walls I
see others like myself, other rooms like my own, other clothes like my own, movements like
mine, duplicated thousands of times. This invigorates me; I see myself as a part of an
enormous, vigorous, united body; and what precise beauty! Not a single superfluous
gesture, or bow, or turn. Yes, this Taylor was undoubtedly the greatest genius of the
ancients. True, he did not come to the idea of applying his method to the whole life, to every
step throughout the twenty-four hours of the day; he was unable to integrate his system
from one o’clock to twenty-four. I cannot understand the ancients. How could they write
whole libraries about some Kant and take notice only slightly of Taylor, of this prophet who
saw ten centuries ahead?
   Breakfast was over. The hymn of the United State had been harmoniously sung;
rhythmically, four abreast we walked to the elevators, the motors buzzed faintly and
swiftly we went down—down—down, the heart sinking slightly. Again that stupid dream
or some unknown function of that dream. Oh, yes! Yesterday in the aero, then down—
down! Well, it is all over, anyhow. Period. It is very fortunate that I was so firm and brusque
with her.
   The car of the underground railway carried me swiftly to the place where the motionless,
beautiful body of the Integral, not yet spiritualized by fire, was glittering in the docks in the
sunshine. With closed eyes I dreamed in formulae. Again I calculated in my mind what was
the initial velocity required to tear away the Integral from the earth. Every second the mass
of the Integral would change because of the expenditure of the explosive fuel. The equation
was very complex with transcendant figures. As in a dream I felt, right here in the firm
calculated world, how someone sat down at my side, barely touching me and saying,
“Pardon.” I opened my eyes. At first, apparently because of an association with the Integral,
I saw something impetuously flying into the distance: a head; I saw pink wing-ears sticking
out on the sides of it, then the curve of the overhanging back of the head, the double-curved
letter S.
   Through the glass walls of my algebraic world, again I felt the eyelash in my eye. I felt
something disagreeable, I felt that today I must. …
   “Certainly, please,”—I smiled at my neighbor and bowed.
   Number S-4711 I saw glittering on his golden badge (that is why I associated him with
the letter S from the very first moment: an optical impression which remained unregistered
by consciousness). His eyes sparkled, two sharp little drills; they were revolving swiftly,
drilling in deeper and deeper. It seemed that in a moment they would drill in to the bottom
and would see something that I do not even dare to confess to myself. …
   That bothersome eyelash became wholly clear to me. S- was one of them, one of the
Guardians, and it would be the simplest thing immediately, without deferring to tell him
everything!
   “I went yesterday to the Ancient House …” my voice was strange, husky, flat—I tried to
cough.
   “That is good. It must have given you material for some instructive deductions.”
   “Yes … but … You see, I was not alone; I was in the company of I-330, and then. …”
   “I-330? You are fortunate. She is a very interesting, gifted woman; she has a host of
admirers.”
   But he too—then during the promenade. … Perhaps he is even assigned as her he-
Number! No, it is impossible to tell him, unthinkable. This was perfectly clear.
   “Yes, yes, certainly, very,” I smiled, broader and broader, more stupidly, and felt as if my
smile made me look foolish, naked.
   The drills reached the bottom; revolving continually they screwed themselves back into
his eyes. S- smiled double-curvedly, nodded and slid to the exit.
   I covered my face with the newspaper (I felt as if everybody were looking at me), and
soon I forgot about the eyelash, about the little drills, about everything, I was so upset by
what I read in the paper: “According to authentic information, traces of an organization
which still remains out of reach, have again been discovered. This organization aims at
liberation from the beneficial yoke of the State.”
   Liberation! It is remarkable how persistent human criminal instincts are! I use
deliberately the word “criminal,” for freedom and crime are as closely related as—well, as
the movement of an aero and its speed: if the speed of an aero equals zero, the aero is
motionless; if human liberty is equal to zero, man does not commit any crime. That is clear.
The way to rid man of criminality is to rid him of freedom. No sooner did we rid ourselves
of freedom (in the cosmic sense centuries are only a “no sooner”), than suddenly some
unknown pitiful degenerates. … No, I cannot understand why I did not go immediately
yesterday to the Bureau of the Guardians. Today, after sixteen o’clock, I shall go there
without fail.
   At sixteen-ten I was in the street; at once I noticed O-90 at the corner; she was all rosy
with delight at the encounter. She has a simple, round mind. A timely meeting; she would
understand and lend me support. Or, … no, I did not need any support; my decision was
firm.
   The pipes of the Musical Tower thundered out harmoniously the March—the same daily
March. How wonderful the charm of this dailiness, of this constant repetition and mirror-
like smoothness!
   “Out for a walk?” Her round blue eyes opened toward me widely, blue windows leading
inside; I penetrate there unhindered; there is nothing in there, I mean nothing foreign,
nothing superfluous.
   “No, not for a walk. I must go.” I told her where. And to my astonishment I saw her rosy
round mouth form a crescent with the horns downward as if she tasted something sour.
This angered me.
   “You she-Numbers seem to be incurably eaten up by prejudices. You are absolutely
unable to think abstractly. Forgive me the word but this I call bluntness of mind.”
   “You? … to the spies? How ugly! And I went to the Botanical Garden and brought you a
branch of lily-of-the-valley. …”
   “Why, ‘and I’? Why this ‘and’? Just like a woman!”
   Angrily (this I must confess), I snatched the flowers. “Here they are, your lilies-of-the-
valley. Well, smell them! Good? Yes? Why not use a little bit of logic? The lilies-of-the-valley
smell good; all right! But you cannot say about an odor, about the conception of an odor,
that it is good or bad, can you? You can’t, can you? There is the smell of lilies-of-the-valley
and there is the disagreeable smell of henbane. Both are odors. The ancient States had their
spies; we have ours … yes, spies! I am not afraid of words. But is it not clear to you that
there the spies were henbane; here they are lilies-of-the-valley? Yes, lilies-of-the-valley,
yes!”
   The rosy crescent quivered. Now I understand that it was only my impression but at that
moment I was certain she was going to laugh. I shouted still louder:
   “Yes, lilies-of-the-valley! And there is nothing funny about it, nothing funny!”
   The smooth round globes of heads passing by were turning towards us. O-90 gently took
my hand.
   “You are so strange today … are you ill?”
   My dream. … Yellow color. … Buddha. … It was at once born clearly upon me that I
must go to the Medical Bureau.
   “Yes, you are right, I am sick,” I said with joy (that seems to me an inexplicable
contradiction; there was nothing to be joyful about).
   “You must go at once to the doctor. You understand that; you are obliged to be healthy; it
seems strange to have to prove it to you.”
   “My dear O-, of course you are right. Absolutely right.”
   I did not go to the Bureau of the Guardians; I could not; I had to go to the Medical Bureau;
they kept me there until seventeen o’clock.
   In the evening (incidentally, the Bureau of Guardians is closed evenings)—in the evening
O- came to see me. The curtains were not lowered. We busied ourselves with the
arithmetical problems of an ancient textbook. This occupation always calms and purifies
our thoughts. O- sat over her note book, her head slightly inclined to the left; she was so
assiduous that she poked out her left cheek with the tongue from within. She looked so
childlike, so charming. … I felt everything in me was pleasant, precise and simple.
  She left. I remained alone. I breathed deeply two times (it is very good exercise before
retiring for the night). Suddenly—an unexpected odor reminiscent of something very
disagreeable! I soon found out what was the matter: a branch of lily-of-the-valley was
hidden in my bed. Immediately everything was aroused again, came up from the bottom.
Decidedly, it was tactless on her part surreptitiously to put these lilies-of-the-valley there.
Well, true I did not go; I didn’t, but was it my fault that I felt indisposed?
                                    RECORD EIGHT
It was long ago during my schooldays, when I first encountered the square-root of minus
one. I remember it all very clearly; a bright globe-like class hall, about a hundred round
heads of children and Plappa—our mathematician. We nicknamed him Plappa; it was a
very much used-up mathematician, loosely screwed together; as the member of the class
who was on duty that day would be putting the plug into the socket behind we would hear
at first from the megaphone, “Plap-plap-plap-plap—tshshsh. …” Only then the lesson would
follow. One day Plappa told us about irrational numbers, and I remember I wept and
banged the table with my fist and cried, “I do not want that square-root of minus one; take
that square-root of minus one away!” This irrational root grew into me as something
strange, foreign, terrible; it tortured me; it could not be thought out. It could not be
defeated because it was beyond reason.
   Now that square-root of minus one is here again. I read over what I have written and I
clearly see that I was insincere with myself, that I lied to myself in order to avoid seeing
that square-root of minus one. My sickness, etc., is all nonsense; I could go there. I feel sure
that if such a thing had happened a week ago I should have gone without hesitating. Why
then am I unable to go now? … Why?
   Today, for instance, at exactly sixteen-ten I stood before the glittering Glass Wall. Above
was the shining, golden, sun-like sign: “Bureau of Guardians.” Inside, a long queue of bluish-
gray unifs awaiting their turns, faces shining like the oil lamps in an ancient temple. They
came to accomplish a great thing: they came to put on the altar of the United State their
beloved ones, their friends, their own selves. My whole being craved to join them, yet … I
could not; my feet were as though melted into the glass plates of the sidewalk. I simply
stood there looking foolish.
   “Heh, mathematician! Dreaming?”
   I shivered. Black eyes varnished with laughter looked at me—thick negro lips! It was my
old friend the poet, R-13, and with him rosy O-. I turned around angrily (I still believe that if
they had not appeared I should have entered the Bureau and have torn the square-root of
minus one out of my flesh).
   “Not dreaming at all; if you will, ‘standing in adoration,’ ” I retorted quite brusquely.
   “Oh, certainly, certainly! You, my friend, should never have become a mathematician; you
should have become a poet, a great poet! Yes, come over to our trade, to the poets. Heh? If
you will, I can arrange it in a jiffy. Heh?”
   R-13 usually talks very fast: His words run in torrents, his thick lips sprinkle. Every p is a
fountain, every “poets” a fountain.
   “So far I have served knowledge, and I shall continue to serve knowledge.”
   I frowned. I do not like, I do not understand jokes, and R-13 has the bad habit of joking.
   “Heh, to the deuce with knowledge. Your much-heralded knowledge is but a form of
cowardice. It is a fact! Yes, you want to encircle the infinite with a wall and you fear to cast
a glance behind the wall. Yes, sir! And if ever you should glance beyond the wall you would
be dazzled and close your eyes—yes—”
   “Walls are the foundation of every human—” I began.
   R-13 sprinkled his fountain. O- laughed rosily and roundly. I waved my hand: “Well, you
may laugh, I don’t care.” I was busy with something else. I had to find a way of eating up, of
crushing down, that square-root of minus one. “Suppose,” I offered, “we go to my place and
do some arithmetical problems.” (The quiet hour of yesterday afternoon came to my
memory; perhaps today also. …)
   O- glanced at R-, then serenely and roundly at me; the soft, endearing color of our pink
checks came to her cheeks.
   “But today I am. … I have a check to him today.” (A glance at R-.) “And tonight he is busy,
so that—”
   The moist varnished lips whispered good-naturedly: “Half an hour is plenty for us, is it
not, O-? I am not a great lover of your problems; let us simply go over to my place and chat.”
   I was afraid to remain alone with myself, or to be more correct, with that new strange
self, who by some curious coincidence bore my number, D-503. So I went with R-. True, he
is not precise, not rhythmic, his logic is jocular and turned inside out, yet we are. … Three
years ago we both chose our dear, rosy O-. This tied our friendship more firmly together
than our schooldays did. In R-’s room everything seems like mine; the Tables, the glass of
the chairs, the table, the closet, the bed. But as we entered, R- moved one chair out of place,
then another—the room became confused, everything lost the established order and
seemed to violate every rule of Euclid’s geometry. R- remained the same as before; in
Taylor and in mathematics he always lagged at the tail of the class.
   We recalled Plappa, how we boys used to paste the whole surface of his glass legs with
paper notes expressing our thanks (we all loved Plappa). We recalled our priest (it goes
without saying that we were taught not the “law” of ancient religion but the law of the
United State). Our priest had a very powerful voice; a real hurricane would come out of the
megaphone. And we children would yell the prescribed texts after him with all our lung-
power. We recalled how our scapegrace, R-13, used to stuff the priest with chewed paper;
every word was thus accompanied by a paper wad shot out. Naturally, R- was punished, for
what he did was undoubtedly wrong, but now we laughed heartily;—by we I mean our
triangle, R-, O-, and I, I must confess, I too.
   “And what if he had been a living one? Like the ancient ones, heh?” We’d have b … b … ,
a fountain running from the fat bubbling lips. The sun was shining through the ceiling, the
sun above, the sun from the sides, its reflection from below. O- on R-13’s lap and minute
drops of sunlight in O-’s blue eyes. Somehow my heart warmed up. The square-root of
minus one became silent and motionless. …
   “Well, how is your Integral? Will you soon hop off to enlighten the inhabitants of the
planets? You’d better hurry up, my boy, or we poets will have produced such a devilish lot
that even your Integral will be unable to lift the cargo. ‘Every day from eight to eleven’ …”
R- wagged his head and scratched the back of it. The back of his head is square; it looks like
a little valise (I recalled for some reason an ancient painting In the Cab). I felt more lively.
   “You too are writing for the Integral? Tell me about it. What are you writing about? What
did you write today, for instance?”
   “Today I did not write; today I was busy with something else.” “B-b-busy” sprinkled
straight into my face.
   “What else?”
   R- frowned. “What? What? Well, if you insist I’ll tell you. I was busy with the Death
Sentence. I was putting the Death Sentence into verse. An idiot—and to be frank, one of our
poets. … For two years we all lived side by side with him and nothing seemed wrong.
Suddenly he went crazy. ‘I,’ said he, ‘am a genius! And I am above the law.’ All that sort of
nonsense. … But it is not a thing to talk about.”
   The fat lips hung down. The varnish disappeared from the eyes. He jumped up, turned
around and stared through the wall. I looked at his tightly closed little “valise” and thought,
“What is he handling in his little valise now?”
   A moment of awkward asymmetric silence. I could not see clearly what was the matter
but I was certain there was something. …
   “Fortunately the antediluvian time of those Shakespeares and Dostoevskys (or what
were their names?) is past,” I said in a voice deliberately loud.
   R- turned his face to me. Words sprinkled and bubbled out of him as before, but I thought
I noticed there was no more joyful varnish to his eyes.
   “Yes, dear mathematician, fortunately, fortunately. We are the happy arithmetical mean.
As you would put it, the integration from zero to infinity, from imbeciles to Shakespeare. Do
I put it right?”
   I do not know why (it seemed to me absolutely uncalled for) I recalled suddenly the
other one, her tone. A thin invisible thread stretched between her and R- (what thread?).
The square-root of minus one began to bother me again. I glanced at my badge; sixteen-
twenty-five o’clock! They had only thirty-five minutes for the use of the pink check.
   “Well, I must go.” I kissed O-, shook hands with R- and went to the elevator.
   As I crossed the avenue I turned around. Here and there in the huge mass of glass
penetrated by sunshine there were grayish-blue squares, the opaque squares of lowered
curtains—the squares of rhythmic, Taylorized happiness. On the seventh floor I found R-
13’s square. The curtains were already lowered.
   Dear O-. … Dear R-. … He also has (I do not know why I write this “also,” but I write as it
comes from my pen), he too has something which is not entirely clear in him. Yet I, he and
O-, we are a triangle; I confess, not an isosceles triangle but a triangle nevertheless. We, to
speak in the language of our ancestors (perhaps to you, my planetary readers, this is the
more comprehensible language) we are a family. And one feels so good at times, when one
is able for a short while, at least, to close oneself within a firm triangle, to close oneself
away from anything that. …
                                    RECORD NINE
A solemn bright day. On such days one forgets one’s weaknesses, inexactitudes, illnesses,
and everything is crystalline and imperturbable like our new glass. …
   The Plaza of the Cube. Sixty-six imposing concentric circles—stands. Sixty-six rows of
quiet serene faces. Eyes reflecting the shining of the sky—or perhaps it is the shining of the
United State. Red like blood, are the flowers—the lips of the women. Like soft garlands the
faces of the children in the first rows, nearest the place of action. Profound, austere, gothic
silence.
   To judge by the descriptions which reach us from the ancients, they felt somewhat like
this during their “Church services,” but they served their nonsensical unknown god; we
serve our rational god, whom we most thoroughly know. Their god gave them nothing but
eternal, torturing seeking; our god gives us absolute truth, that is, he has rid us of any kind
of doubt. Their god did not invent anything cleverer than sacrificing oneself, nobody knows
what for; we bring to our god, The United State, a quiet, rational, carefully thought-out
sacrifice.
   Yes, it was a solemn liturgy for the United State, a reminiscence of the great days, years,
of the Two Hundred Years’ War—a magnificent celebration of the victory of all over one, of
the sum over the individual!
   That one stood on the steps of the Cube which was filled with sunlight. A white, no not
even white, but already colorless glass face, lips of glass. And only the eyes—thirsty,
swallowing, black holes leading into that dreadful world from which he was only a few
minutes away. The golden badge with the number already had been taken off. His hands
were tied with a red ribbon. (A symbol of ancient custom. The explanation of it is that in the
old times when this sort of thing was not done in the name of the United State, the
convicted naturally considered that they had the right to resist, hence their hands were
usually bound with chains.)
   On the top of the Cube, next to the Machine, the motionless, metallic figure of him whom
we call the Well-Doer. One could not see his face from below. All one could see was that it
was bounded by austere, magnificent, square lines. And his hands. … Did you ever notice
how sometimes in a photograph the hands, if they were too near the camera, come out
enormous? They then compel your attention, overshadow everything else. Those hands of
his, heavy hands, quiet for the time being, were stony hands—it seemed the knees on which
they rested must have had pains to bear their weight.
   Suddenly one of those hands rose slowly. A slow cast-iron gesture; obeying the will of the
lifted hand, a Number came out on the platform. It was one of the State poets, whose
fortunate lot it was to crown our celebration with his verses.
   Divine iambic brass verses thundered over the many stands. They dealt with the man,
who, his reason lost and lips like glass, stood on the steps and waited for the logical
consequences of his own insane deeds.
   … A blaze. … Buildings were swaying in those iambic lines, and sprinkling upward their
liquified golden substance, they broke and fell. The green trees were scorched, their sap
slowly ran out and they remained standing like black crosses, like skeletons. Then
appeared Prometheus (that meant us).
“… he harnessed fire
A letter—A manhunt—Hairy I.
Yesterday was for me a kind of filter-paper which chemists use for filtering their solutions
(all suspended and superfluous particles remain on the paper). This morning I went
downstairs all purified and distilled, transparent.
   Downstairs in the hall the controller sat at a small table, constantly looking at her watch
and recording the Numbers who were leaving. Her name is U- … well, I prefer not to give
her Number, for I fear I may not write kindly about her. Although, as a matter of fact, she is
a very respectable, mature woman. The only thing I do not like in her is that her cheeks fold
down a little like gills of a fish (although I do not see anything wrong in this appearance).
She scratched with her pen and I saw on the page “D-503”—and suddenly, splash! an
inkblot. No sooner did I open my mouth to call her attention to that, than she raised her
head and blotted me with an inky smile. “There is a letter for you. You will receive it, dear.
Yes, yes, you will.”
   I knew a letter, after she had read it, must go through the Bureau of the Guardians (I
think it is unnecessary to explain in detail this natural order of things); I would receive it
not later than twelve o’clock. But that tiny smile confused me; the drop of ink clouded the
transparency of the distilled solution. At the dock of the Integral I could not concentrate; I
even made a mistake in my calculations—that never happened to me before.
   At twelve o’clock, again the rosy-brown fish-gills’ smile, and at last the letter was in my
hands. I cannot say why I did not read it right there, but I put it in my pocket and ran into
my room. I opened it and glanced it over and … and sat down. It was the official
notification advising me that Number I-330 had had me assigned to her and that today at
twenty-one o’clock, I was to go to her. Her address was given.
   “No! After all that happened! After I showed her frankly my attitude toward her! Besides,
how could she know that I did not go to the Bureau of the Guardians? She had no way of
knowing that I was ill and could not. … And despite all this. …”
   A dynamo was whirling and buzzing in my head. Buddha … yellow … lilies-of-the-valley
… rosy crescent. … Besides—besides, O- wanted to come to see me today! I am sure she
would not believe (how could one believe), that I had absolutely nothing to do with the
matter, that … I am sure also that we (O- and I) will have a difficult, foolish and absolutely
illogical conversation. No, anything but that! Let the situation solve itself mechanically; I
shall send her a copy of this official communication.
   While I was hastily putting the paper in my pocket, I noticed my terrible apelike hand. I
remembered how that day during our walk, she took my hand and looked at it. Is it possible
that she really … that she. …
   A quarter to twenty-one. A white northern night. Everything was glass—greenish. But it
was a different kind of glass, not like ours, not genuine but very breakable—a thin glass
shell and within that shell things were flying, whirling, buzzing. I should not have been
surprised if suddenly the cupola of the auditorium had risen in slow, rolling clouds of
smoke; or if the ripe moon had sent an inky smile—like that one at the little table this
morning; or if in all the houses suddenly all the curtains had been lowered and behind the
curtains. …
   I felt something peculiar; my ribs were like iron bars that interfered, decidedly
interfered, with my heart, giving it too little space. I stood at a glass door on which were the
golden letters I-330; I-330 sat at the table with her back to me; she was writing something. I
stepped in.
   “Here. …” I held out the pink check, “… I received the notification this noon and here I
am!”
   “How punctual you are! Just a minute please, may I? Sit down. I shall finish in a minute.”
   She lowered her eyes to the letter. What had she there, behind her lowered curtains?
What would she say? What would she do in a second? How to learn it? How to calculate it,
since she comes from beyond, from the wild ancient land of dreams? I looked at her in
silence. My ribs were iron bars. The space for the heart was too small. … When she speaks
her face is like a swiftly revolving, glittering wheel; you cannot see the separate bars. But at
that moment the wheel was motionless. I saw a strange combination: dark eyebrows
running right to the temples—a sharp, mocking triangle; and still another dark triangle
with its apex upward—two deep wrinkles from the nose to the angles of the mouth. And
these two triangles somehow contradicted each other. They gave the whole face that
disagreeable, irritating X, or cross; a face obliquely marked by a cross.
   The wheel started to turn; its bars blurred.
   “So you did not go to the Bureau of Guardians after all?”
   “I did … I did not feel well … I could not.”
   “Yes? I thought so; something must have prevented you, matters little what (sharp
teeth—a smile). But now you are in my hands. You remember: ‘Any Number who within
forty-eight hours fails to report to the Bureau is considered. …’ ”
   My heart banged so forcibly that the iron bars bent. If I were not sitting … like a little
boy, how stupid! I was caught like a little boy and stupidly I kept silent. I felt I was in a net;
neither my legs nor my arms. …
   She stood up and stretched herself lazily. She pressed the button and the curtains on all
four walls fell with a slight rustle. I was cut off from the rest of the world, alone with her.
   She was somewhere behind me, near the closet door. The unif was rustling, falling. I was
listening, all listening. I remembered—no, it glistened in my mind for one hundredth of a
second—I once had to calculate the curve of a street membrane of a new type. (These
membranes are handsomely decorated and are placed on all the avenues, registering all
street conversations for the Bureau of Guardians.) I remembered a rosy concave, trembling
membrane—a strange being consisting of one organ only, an ear. I was at that moment
such a membrane.
   Now the “click” of the snap-button at her collar, at her breast, and … lower. The glassy
silk rustled over her shoulders and knees, over the floor. I heard—and this was clearer than
actual seeing—I heard how one foot stepped out of the grayish-blue heap of silk, then the
other. … Soon I’d hear the creak of the bed and …
   The tensely stretched membrane trembled and registered the silence—no, the sharp
hammer-like blows of the heart against the iron bars and endless pauses between beats.
And I heard, saw, how she, behind me hesitated for a second, thinking. The door of the
closet. … It slammed; again silk … silk. …
   “Well, all right.”
   I turned around. She was dressed in a saffron-yellow dress of an ancient style. This was a
thousand times worse than if she had not been dressed at all. Two sharp points, through
the thin tissue glowing with rosiness, two burning embers piercing through ashes; two
tender, round knees. …
   She was sitting in a low armchair. In front of her on a small square table, I noticed a
bottle filled with something poisonously green and two small glasses on thin legs. In the
corner of her mouth she had a very thin paper tube; she was ejecting smoke formed by the
burning of that ancient smoking substance whose name I do not now remember.
   The membrane was still vibrating. Within the sledgehammer was pounding the red-hot
iron bars of my chest. I heard distinctly every blow of the hammer, and … what if she too
heard it?
   But she continued to produce smoke very calmly; calmly she looked at me; and
nonchalantly she flicked ashes on the pink check!
   With as much self-control as possible I asked, “If you still feel that way, why did you have
me assigned to you? And why did you make me come here?”
   As if she had not heard at all, she poured some of the green liquid from the bottle into a
small glass and sipped it.
   “Wonderful liqueur! Want some?”
   Then I understood; alcohol! Like lightning there came to memory what I saw yesterday:
the stony hand of the Well-Doer, the unbearable blade of the electric ray; there on the Cube,
the head thrown backward, the stretched-out body! I shivered.
   “Please listen,” I said, “You know, do you not, that anyone who poisons himself with
nicotine, more particularly with alcohol, is severely treated by the United State?”
   Dark brows raised high to the temples, the sharp mocking triangle.
   “ ‘It is more reasonable to annihilate a few than to allow many to poison themselves. …
And degeneration,’ … etc. … This is true to the point of indecency.”
   “Indecency?”
   “Yes. To let out into the street such a group of bald-headed naked little truths. Only
imagine please. Imagine, say, that persistent admirer of mine, S-, well, you know him. Then
imagine: if he should discard the deception of clothes and appear in public in his true
form … oh!” She laughed. But I clearly saw her lower, sorrowful triangle; two deep grooves
from the nose to the mouth. And for some reason these grooves made me think: that
double-curved being, half-hunched, with winglike ears—he embraced her? her, such … Oh!
   Naturally, I try now merely to express my abnormal feelings of that moment. Now, as I
write, I understand perfectly that all this is as it should be; that he, S-4711, like any other
honest Number has a perfect right to the joys of life and that it would be unjust. … But I
think the point is quite clear.
   I-330 laughed a long, strange laugh. Then she cast a look at me, into me.
   “The most curious thing is that I am not in the least afraid of you. You are such a dear, I
am sure of it! You would never think of going to the Bureau and reporting that I drink
liqueurs and smoke. You will be sick or busy, or I don’t know what. … Furthermore, I am
sure you will drink this charming poison with me.”
   What an impertinent, mocking tone! I felt definitely that in a moment I should hate her.
(Why in a moment? In fact I hated her all the time.)
   I-330 turned over the little glass of green poison straight into her mouth. Then she stood
up, and all rosy through the translucent saffron-yellow tissue, she made a few steps and
stopped behind my chair. … Suddenly her arms were about my neck … her lips grew into
mine, no, even somewhere much deeper, much more terribly. … I swear all this was very
unexpected for me. That is why perhaps … for I could not (at this moment I see clearly) I
could not myself have the desire to. …
   Unbearably sweet lips. (I suppose it was the taste of the liqueur.) It was as though
burning poison were being poured into me, and more and more. …
   I tore away from the earth and began revolving as an independent planet—down—
down—following an uncalculable curve. …
   What happened next I am able to describe only in an approximate way, only by way of
more or less corresponding analogies.
   It never occurred to me before but it is true: we who live on the earth, we are always
walking over a seething red sea of fire which is hidden in the womb of the earth. We never
think of it. But imagine the ground under our feet suddenly transformed into a thin glass
shell; suddenly we should behold … !
   I became glass-like and saw within myself. There were two selves in me. One, the former
D-503, Number D-503; and the other. … Before, that other used only to show his hairy
paws from time to time, but now the whole other self left his shell. That shell was breaking,
and in a moment. …
   Grasping with all my strength the last straw (the arms of the chair), I asked loudly (so as
to hear my first self), “Where, where did you get this poison?”
   “Oh, this? A physician, one of my. …”
   “ ‘One of my! one of my’ what?” And my other self jumped up suddenly and yelled: “I
won’t allow it! I want no one but me. … I shall kill anyone who. … Because I. … You.” … I
saw my other self grasp her rudely with his hairy paws, tear the silk, and put his teeth in
her flesh! … I remember exactly, his teeth! …
   I do not remember how, but I-330 slipped away and I saw her straightened, her head
raised high, her eyes overlain by that cursed impenetrable curtain. She stood leaning with
her back against the closet door and listening to me.
   I remember I was on the floor; I embraced her limbs, kissed her knees and cried
supplicatingly, “At once, right away, right away.”
   Sharp teeth. … The sharp mocking triangle of the brows. … She bent over and in silence
unbuttoned my badge.
   “Yes, yes, dear—dear.”
   I began hastily to remove my unif. But I-330, silent as before, lifted my badge to my eyes,
showing me the clock upon it. It was twenty-two-twenty-five.
   I became cold. I knew what it meant to be out in the street after twenty-two-thirty. My
insanity disappeared at once. I was again I. I saw clearly one thing: I hated her, hated her,
hated— … Without saying goodbye, without looking back, I ran out of the room. Hurriedly
trying to fasten the badge back in its place, I ran down the stairs (I was afraid lest someone
notice me in the elevator), and jumped out into a deserted street.
  Everything was in its place; life so simple, ordinary, orderly. Glittering glass houses, pale
glass sky, a greenish, motionless night. But under that cool glass something wild, something
red and hairy, was silently seething. I was gasping for breath but I continued to run, so as
not to be late.
  Suddenly I felt that my badge which I had hurriedly pinned on, was detaching itself; it
came off and fell to the sidewalk. I bent over to pick it up and in the momentary silence I
heard somebody’s steps. I turned. Someone small and hunched was disappearing around
the corner. At least so it seemed. I started to run as fast as I could. The wind whistled in my
ears. At the entrance of my house I stopped and looked at the clock; one minute to twenty-
two-thirty! I listened; nobody behind. It was my foolish imagination, the effect of the
poison.
  The night was full of torture. My bed seemed to lift itself under me, then to fall again,
then up again! I used autosuggestion: “At night all the Numbers must sleep; sleeping at
night is a duty just like working during the day. To sleep at night is necessary for the next
day’s work. Not to sleep at night is criminal.” Yet I could not sleep—I could not. I was
perishing! I was unable to fulfill my duties to the United State! I. …
                                  RECORD ELEVEN
Evening. It is somewhat foggy. The sky is covered with a milky-golden tissue, and one
cannot see what is there, beyond, on the heights. The ancients “knew” that the greatest,
bored skeptic—their God, lived there. We know that crystalline, blue, naked, indecent
Nothing is there. I do not know any more what is there. I have learned too many things of
late. Knowledge, self-confident knowledge which is sure that it is faultless, is faith. I had
firm faith in myself; I believed that I knew all about myself. But then. … I look in the mirror.
And for the first time in my life, yes, for the first time in my life, I see clearly, precisely,
consciously and with surprise, I see myself as some “him!” I am “he.” Frowning, black,
straight brows; between them like a scar, there is a vertical wrinkle. (Was there that
wrinkle before?) Steel gray eyes encircled by the shadow of a sleepless night. And behind
that steel … I understand; I never before knew what there was behind that steel. From
there (this “there” is at once so near and so infinitely distant!) I look at myself—at “him.”
And I know surely that “he” with his straight brows is a stranger, that I meet him here for
the first time in my life. The real I is not he.
   No. Period. All this is nonsense. And all these foolish emotions are only delirium, the
result of last night’s poisoning. … Poisoning with what? With a sip of that green poison or
with her? It matters little. I write all this merely in order to demonstrate how strangely the
precise and sharp human reason may become confused. This reason, strong enough to
make infinity which the ancients feared so much, understandable by means of. … The
switch buzzes, “Number R-13.” Well, I am even glad; alone I should. …
                                        Twenty minutes later:
On the plane of this paper, in a world of two dimensions, these lines follow each other, but
in another world they. … I am losing the sense for figures. … Twenty minutes! Perhaps two
hundred or two hundred thousand! …
   It seems so strange, quietly, deliberately, measuring every word, to write down my
adventure with R-. Imagine yourself sitting down at your own bed, crossing your legs,
watching curiously how you yourself shrivel in the very same bed. My mental state is
similar to that.
   When R-13 came in I was perfectly quiet and normal. I began with sincere admiration to
tell him how wonderfully he succeeded in versifying the death sentence of that insane man,
and that his poem more than anything else had smothered and annihilated the transgressor
of the law.
   “More than that,” I said, “if I were ordered to prepare a mathematical draught of the
Machine of the Well-Doer, I should undoubtedly—undoubtedly, put on that draught some
of your verses!”—Suddenly I saw R-’s eyes becoming more and more opaque, his lips
acquiring a gray tint.
   “What is the matter?”
   “What?—Well. … Merely that I am dead sick of it; everybody keeps on: ‘the death-
sentence, the death-sentence!’ I want to hear no more of it! You understand? I do not want.
…” He became serious, rubbing his neck—that little valise filled with luggage which I
cannot understand. A silence. There! He found something in that little valise of his,
removed it, unwrapped it, spread it out; his eyes became covered with the varnish of
laughter. He began:
   “I am writing something for your Integral. Yes. … I am!” He was himself again; bubbling,
sprinkling lips; words splashing like a fountain.
   “You see, it is the ancient legend of paradise.” (p like a fountain.) “That legend referred to
us of today, did it not? Yes. Only think of it, think of it a moment! There were two in
paradise and the choice was offered to them: happiness without freedom, or freedom
without happiness. No other choice. Tertium non datur. They, fools that they were, chose
freedom. Naturally, they longed for centuries afterwards for fetters, for the fetters of yore.
This was the meaning of their world-weariness, Weltschmerz. For centuries! And only we
found a way to regain happiness. … No, listen, follow me! The ancient god and we, side by
side at the same table! Yes, we helped god definitely and finally to defeat the devil. It was
he, the devil, who lead people to transgression, to taste pernicious freedom, he the cunning
serpent? And we came along, planted a boot on his head and … squash! Done with him!
Paradise again! We returned to the simple-mindedness and innocence of Adam and Eve. No
more meddling with good and evil and all that; everything is simple again, heavenly,
childishly simple! The Well-Doer, The Machine, The Cube, the giant Gas Bell, The
Guardians—all these are good. All this is magnificent, beautiful, noble, lofty, crystalline,
pure. For all this preserves our non-freedom, that is, our happiness. In our place those
ancients would indulge in discussions, deliberations, etc. They would break their heads
trying to make out what was moral or unmoral. But we. … Well, in short, these are the
highlights of my little paradise poem. What do you think of it? And above all the style is
most solemn, pious. Understand me? Nice little idea, is it not? Do you understand?”
   Of course I understood. I remember my thoughts at that moment: “his appearance is
nonsensical and lacking in symmetry, yet what an orderly-working mind he has!” This
made him dear to me, that is to the real me. (I still insist that I of before is the real one; my I
of late is, certainly, only an illness.)
   Apparently R- read my thought in my face; he put his hand on my shoulders and laughed:
“Oh you! … Adam! By the way, about Eve. …” He searched for something in his pockets,
took out a little book, turned over a few leaves and said, “For the day-after-tomorrow—oh,
no, two days from now—O-90 has a pink check on you. How about it? … As before? … You
want her to?”
   “Of course, of course!”
   “All right then, I’ll tell her. You see she herself is very bashful. … What a funny story! You
see, for me she has only a pink-check affection, but for you! … And you, you did not even
come to tell us how a fourth member sneaked into our triangle! Who is it? Repent, sinner!
Come on!”
   A curtain rose inside me; rustle of silk, green bottle, lips. … Without any reason
whatever I exclaimed (oh, why didn’t I restrain myself at that moment?), “Tell me, R-, did
you ever have the opportunity to try nicotine or alcohol?”
   R- sucked in his lips, looked at me from under his brows. I distinctly heard his thoughts:
“Friend though he is, yet. …” And he answered:
   “What shall I say? Strictly speaking, no. But I know a woman. …”
   “I-330?” I cried.
   “What! You? You too?” R- was full of laughter; he chuckled, ready to splash over.
   My mirror was hanging in such a way that in order to see R- clearly I had to turn and look
across the table. From my armchair I could see now only my own forehead and eyebrows.
Then I, the real I, suddenly saw in the mirror a broken, quivering line of brow; I, the real I,
heard suddenly a wild disgusting cry: “What? What does that ‘also’ mean? What does that
‘also’ mean? I demand. …”
   Widely parted negro lips. … Eyes bulging. I (the real I) grasped my other wild, hairy,
heavily breathing self forcibly. I (the real I) said to him, to R-, “In the name of the Well-Doer,
please forgive me. I am very sick; I don’t sleep; I do not know what is the matter with me.”
   A swiftly passing smile appeared on the thick lips.
   “Yes, yes, I understand, I understand. I am familiar with all this, theoretically, of course.
Goodbye.”
   At the door he turned around like a little black ball, came back to the table and put a book
upon it. “This is my latest book. I came to bring it to you. Almost forgot. Goodbye.” (b like a
splash.) The little ball rolled out.
   I am alone. Or, to be more exact, I am tête-à-tête with that other self. I sit in the armchair
and having crossed my legs, I watch curiously from some indefinite “there,” how I (myself)
am shrivelling in my bed!
   Why, oh, why is it, that for three years R-, O-, and I were so friendly together and now
suddenly—one word only about that other female, about I-330, and. … Is it possible that
that insanity called love and jealousy does exist not only in the idiotic books of the
ancients? What seems most strange is that I, I! … Equations, formulae, figures, and
suddenly this! I can’t understand it, I can’t! Tomorrow I shall go to R- and tell him. … No, it
isn’t true; I shall not go; neither tomorrow nor day after tomorrow, nor ever. … I can’t, I do
not want to see him. This is the end. Our triangle is broken up.
   I am alone. It is evening. There is a light fog. The sky is covered by a thin milky-golden
tissue. If I only knew what is there—higher. If I only knew who I am. Which I am I?
                                  RECORD TWELVE
I continue to believe that I shall recover, that I may recover. I slept very well. No dreams or
any other symptoms of disease. Dear O-90 will come tomorrow. Everything will again be
simple, regular and limited like a circle. I am not afraid of this word “limited.” The work of
the highest faculty of man, judgment, is always directed toward the constant limiting of the
infinite, toward the breaking up of the infinite into comfortably digestible portions—
differentials. This is what gives divine beauty to my element, mathematics. And it is exactly
this beauty that that other female lacks. But this last thought of mine is only an accidental
mental association.
   These thoughts swarmed in my mind while I was listening to the regular, rhythmic
sounds of the underground railway. Silently I followed the rhythm of its wheels and recited
to myself R-’s verses (from the book which he gave me yesterday), and I felt that behind me
someone was leaning over my shoulder and looking at the open pages. I did not turn
around but with the corner of my eye I noticed pink ears, spread like wings, the double-
curved … like the letter. … It was he, but I did not want to disturb him. I feigned not to
have noticed him. How he came in, I do not know. I did not see him when I got into the car.
   This incident, insignificant in itself, had an especially good effect upon me; it invigorated
me, I should say. It is pleasant to feel that somebody’s penetrating eye is watching you from
behind your shoulder, lovingly guarding you from making the most minute mistake, from
the most minute incorrect step. It may seem to you too sentimental but I see in all this the
materialization of the dream of the ancients about a Guardian-Angel. How many things
about which the ancients had only dreams, are materialized in our life!
   At the moment when I became aware of the presence of the Guardian-Angel behind me I
was enjoying a poem entitled “Happiness.” I think I am not mistaken when I say that it is a
piece of rare beauty and depth of thought. Here are the first four lines:
“Two times two—eternal lovers;
I awoke at dawn. The rose-colored firmament looked into my eyes. Everything was
beautiful, round. “O-90 is to come tonight. Surely I am healthy again.” I smiled and fell
asleep. The Morning Bell! I got up; everything looked different. Through the glass of the
ceiling, through the walls, nothing could be seen but fog—fog everywhere, strange clouds,
becoming heavier and nearer; the boundary between earth and sky disappeared.
Everything seemed to be floating and thawing and falling. … Not a thing to hold to. No
houses to be seen; they all were dissolved in the fog like crystals of salt in water. On the
sidewalks and inside the houses dark figures like suspended particles in a strange milky
solution, were hanging, below, above—up to the tenth floor. Everything seemed to be
covered with smoke, as though a fire were somewhere raging noiselessly.
   At eleven-forty-five exactly (I looked at the clock particularly at that time to catch the
figures, to save at least the figures) at eleven-forty-five, just before leaving, according to our
Table of Hours, to go and occupy myself with physical labor, I dropped into my room for a
moment. Suddenly the telephone rang. A voice—a long needle slowly penetrating my heart:
   “Oh, you are at home? I am very glad! Wait for me at the corner. We shall go together. …
Where? Well, you’ll see.”
   “You know perfectly well that I am going to work now.”
   “You know perfectly well that you’ll do as I say! Au revoir. In two minutes! …”
   I stood at the corner. I had to wait to try to make clear to her that only the United State
directs me, not she. “You’ll do as I say!” How sure she is! One hears it in her voice. And what
if … ?
   Unifs, dull gray as if woven of damp fog would appear for a second at my side and then
soundlessly redissolve. I was unable to turn my eyes away from the clock. … I seemed
myself to have become that sharp, quivering hand which marked the seconds. Ten, eight
minutes … three … two minutes to twelve. … Of course! I was late! Oh, how I hated her,
yet I had to wait to prove that I. …
   A red line in the milky whiteness of the fog—like blood, like a wound made by a sharp
knife—her lips.
   “I made you wait, I think? And now you are late for your work anyway?”
   “How … ? Well, yes, it is too late now.”
   I glanced at her lips in silence. All women are lips, lips only. Some are rosy lips, tense and
round, a ring, a tender fence separating one from the world. But these! A second ago they
were not here, and suddenly … the slash of a knife! I seemed to see even the dripping
sweet blood. …
   She came nearer. She leaned gently against my shoulder; we became one. Something
streamed from her into me. I felt, I knew, it should be so. Every fibre of my nervous system
told me this, every hair on my head, every painfully sweet heartbeat. And what a joy it was
to submit to what should be. A fragment of iron-ore probably feels the same joy of
submission to precise, inevitable law, when it clings to a loadstone. The same joy is in a
stone which thrown aloft, hesitates a little at the height of its flight and then rushes down
to the ground. It is the same with a man when in his final convulsion he takes a last deep
breath and dies.
   I remember I smiled vaguely and said for no reason at all, “Fog … very.”
   “Thou lovest fog, dost thou?”
   This ancient, long-forgotten thou—the thou of a master to his slave—penetrated me
slowly, sharply. … Yes, I was a slave. … This too was inevitable, was good.
   “Yes, good …” I said aloud to myself, and then to her, “I hate fog. I am afraid of fog.”
   “Then you love it. For if you fear it because it is stronger than you, hate it because you
fear it, you love it. For you cannot subject it to yourself. One loves only the things one
cannot conquer.”
   “Yes, that is so. That is why … that is precisely why I. …”
   We were walking—as one. Somewhere beyond the fog the sun was singing in a faint
tone, gradually swelling, filling the air with tension and with pearl and gold and rose and
red. … The whole world seemed to be one unembraceable woman, and we who were in her
body were not yet born; we were ripening in joy. It was clear to me, absolutely clear, that
everything existed only for me: the sun, the fog, the gold—for me. I did not ask where we
were going; what did it matter? It was pleasure to walk, to ripen, to become stronger and
more tense. …
   “Here …” I-330 stopped at a door. “It so happens that today there is someone on duty
who … I told you about him in the Ancient House.”
   Carefully guarding the forces ripening within me, I read the sign: “Medical Bureau.”
Automatically only I understood.
   … A glass room, filled with golden fog; shelves of glass, colored bottles, jars, electric
wires, bluish sparks in tubes; and a male Number—a very thinly flattened man. He might
have been cut out of a sheet of paper. Wherever he was, whichever way he turned, he
showed only a profile, a sharply pointed, glittering blade of a nose and lips like scissors.
   I could not hear what I-330 told him; I merely saw her lips when she was talking; and I
felt that I was smiling, irrepressibly, blissfully. The scissors-like lips glittered and the
doctor said, “Yes, yes, I see. A most dangerous disease. I know of nothing more dangerous.”
And he laughed. With his thin, flat, papery hand he wrote something on a piece of paper
and gave it to I-330; he wrote on another piece of paper and handed it over to me. He had
given us certificates, testifying that we were ill, that we were unable to go to work. Thus I
stole my work from the United State; I was a thief; I deserved to be put beneath the
Machine of the Well-Doer. Yet I was indifferent to this thought; it was as distant from me as
though it were written in a novel. I took the certificate without an instant’s hesitation. I, all
my being, my eyes, my lips, my hands … knew it was as it should be.
   At the corner, from a half empty garage we took an aero. I-330 took the wheel as she had
done before, pressed the starter and we tore away from the earth. We soared. Behind us
the golden haze; the Sun. The thin, blade-like profile of the doctor seemed to me suddenly
so dear, so beloved. Formerly I knew everything was revolving around the Sun. Now I knew
everything was revolving around me. Slowly, blissfully, with half-closed eyes. …
   At the gate of the Ancient House we found the same old woman. What a dear mouth, with
lips grown together and ray-like wrinkles around it! Probably those lips have remained
grown together all these days; but now they parted and smiled:
   “Ah! you mischievous girl, you! Work is too much for you? Well, all right, all right. If
anything happens I’ll run up and warn you.”
   A heavy, squeaky, opaque door. It closed behind us, and at once my heart opened
painfully, widely, still wider. … My lips … hers. … I drank and drank from them. I tore
myself away; in silence I looked into her widely open eyes, and then again. …
   The room in half dusk. … Blue and saffron-yellow lights, dark green morocco leather, the
golden smile of Buddha, a wide mahogany bed, a glimmer of mirrors. … And my dream of a
few days before became so comprehensible, so clear to me; everything seemed saturated
with the golden prime-juice of life, and it seemed that I was overflowing with it—one
second more and it would splash out. … Like iron-ore to a loadstone, in sweet submission
to the precise and unchangeable law, inevitably, I clung to her. … There was no pink check,
no counting, no United State; I myself was no more. Only, drawn together, the tenderly-
sharp teeth were there, only her golden, widely open eyes, and through them I saw deeper,
within. … And silence. … Only somewhere in a corner, thousands of miles away it seemed,
drops of water were dripping from the faucet of the washstand. I was the Universe!
   … And between drops whole epochs, eras, were elapsing. …
   I put on my unif and bent over I-330 to draw her into me with my eyes—for the last time.
   “I knew it. … I knew you,” said I-330 in a very low voice. She passed her hand over her
face as though brushing something away; then she arose brusquely, put on her unif and her
usual sharp, bite-like smile.
   “Well, my fallen angel … you perished just now, do you know that? No? You are not
afraid? Well, au revoir. You shall go home alone. Well?”
   She opened the mirror-door of the cupboard and looking at me over her shoulder, she
waited. I left the room obediently. Yet no sooner had I left the room than I felt it was urgent
that she touch me with her shoulder—only for one second with her shoulder, nothing
more. I ran back into the room, where (I presumed) she was standing before the mirror,
busy buttoning up her unif; I rushed in and stopped abruptly. I saw (I remember it clearly),
I saw the key in the keyhole of the closet and the ancient ring upon it was still swinging but
I-330 was not there. She could not have left the room as there was but one exit. … Yet I-
330 was not there! I looked around everywhere. I even opened the cupboard and felt of the
different ancient dresses; nobody. …
   I feel somewhat ridiculous, my dear planetary readers, relating to you this most
improbable adventure. But what else can I do since it all happened exactly as I relate it?
Was not the whole day from early morning, full of improbable adventures? Does it not all
resemble the ancient disease of dream-seeing? If this be so, what does it matter if I relate
one absurdity more, or one less? Moreover, I am convinced that sooner or later I shall be
able to include all these absurdities in some kind of a logical sequence. This thought
comforts me as I hope it will comfort you.
   … How overwhelmed I am! If only you knew how overwhelmed!
                                 RECORD FOURTEEN
I shall continue to relate my adventures of yesterday. I was busy during the personal hour
before retiring to bed, and thus I was unable to record everything last night. But everything
is graven in me; especially, for some reason, and apparently forever, I shall remember that
unbearably cold floor. …
   I was expecting O-90 last evening as it was her regular day. I went downstairs to the
controller on duty to get a permit for the lowering of my curtains.
   “What is the matter with you?” asked the controller. “You seem so peculiar tonight.”
   “I … I am sick.”
   Strictly speaking, I told her the truth. I certainly am sick. All this is an illness. Presently I
remembered; of course, my certificate! I touched it in my pocket. Yes, there it was, rustling.
Then all this did happen! It did actually happen!
   I held out the paper to the controller. As I did so, I felt the blood rushing to my cheeks.
Without looking directly at her, I noticed with what an expression of surprise she gazed at
me.
   Then at twenty-one-thirty o’clock. … In the room to the left the curtains were lowered,
and in the room to the right my neighbor was sitting over a book. His head is bald and
covered with bulging lumps. His forehead is enormous—a yellow parabola. I was walking
up and down the room—suffering. How could I meet her, after all that happened! O-90, I
mean. I felt plainly to my right, how the eyes of my neighbor were staring at me. I clearly
saw the wrinkles on his forehead like a row of yellow, illegible lines; and for some reason I
was certain that those lines dealt with me.
   A quarter of an hour before twenty-two, the cheerful, rosy whirlwind was in my room;
the firm ring of her rosy arms closed about my neck. Then I felt how that ring grew weaker
and weaker, and then it broke and her arms dropped. …
   “You are not the same, not the same man! You are no longer mine!”
   “What curious terminology: ‘mine.’ I never belonged—” I faltered. It suddenly occurred
to me: true, I belonged to no one before, but now—Is it not clear that now I do not live any
more in our rational world but in the ancient delirious world, in a world of square-root of
minus one?
   The curtains fell. There to my right my neighbor let his book drop at that moment from
the table to the floor. And through the last narrow space between the curtain and the floor I
saw a yellow hand pick up the book. Within I felt: “Only to seize that hand with all my
power.”
   “I thought … I wanted to meet you during the hour for the walk. I wanted … I must talk
to you about so many things, so many. …”
   Poor, dear, O-90. Her rosy mouth was a crescent with its horns downward. But I could
not tell her everything, could I, if for no other reason than that it would make her an
accomplice of my crimes? I knew that she would not have the courage to report me to the
Bureau of Guardians, consequently. …
   “My dear O-, I am sick, I am exhausted. I went again today to the Medical Bureau; but it is
nothing, it will pass. But let us not talk about it;—let us forget it.”
   O-90 was lying down. I kissed her gently. I kissed that childish, fluffy fold at her wrist.
Her blue eyes were closed. The pink crescent of her lips was slowly blooming, more and
more like a flower. I kissed her. …
   Suddenly I clearly realized how empty I was, how I had given away. … No, I could not—
impossible! I knew I must … but no—impossible! I ought … but no—impossible! My lips
cooled at once. The rosy crescent trembled, darkened, drew together. O-90 covered herself
with the bedspread, her face hidden in the pillow.
   I was sitting near the bed, on the floor. What a desperately cold floor! I sat there in
silence. The terrible cold from the floor rose higher and higher. There in the blue, silent
space among the planets, there probably it is as cold.
   “Please understand, dear; I did not mean …” I muttered, “With all my heart, I …”
   It was the truth. I, my real self did not mean.— … Yet how could I express it in words?
How could I explain to her that the piece of iron did not want to. … But that the law is
precise, inevitable!
   O-90 lifted her face from the pillow and without opening her eyes she said, “Go away.”
But because she was crying she pronounced it “Oo aaa-ay.” For some reason this absurd
detail will not leave my memory.
   Penetrated by the cold and torpid, I went out into the hall. I pressed my forehead against
the cold glass. Outside a thin, almost imperceptible film of haze was spread. “Towards
night,” I thought, “it will descend again and drown the world. How sad a night it will be!”
   O-90 passed swiftly by, going toward the elevator. The door slammed.
   “Wait a minute!” I screamed. I was frightened.
   But the elevator was already groaning, going down—down—down. …
   “She robbed me of R-, she robbed me of O-90, yet, yet … nevertheless. …”
                                  RECORD FIFTEEN
I was walking upon the dock where the Integral is being built, when the Second Builder
came to meet me. His face as usual was round and white—a porcelain plate. When he
speaks it seems as though he serves you a plate of something unbearably tasty.
   “You chose to be ill, and without the Chief we had an accident, as it were, yesterday.”
   “An accident?”
   “Yes, sir. We finished the bell and started to let it down, and imagine! the men caught a
male without a number. How he got in, I cannot make out. They took him to the Operation
Department. Oh, they’ll draw the mystery out of the fellow there; ‘why’ and ‘how,’ etc. …”
He smiled delightedly.
   Our best and most experienced physicians work in the Operation Department under the
direct supervision of the Well-Doer himself. They have all kinds of instruments, but the best
of all is the Gas Bell. The procedure is taken from an ancient experiment of elementary
physics: they used to put a rat under a gas bell and gradually pump out the air; the air
becomes more and more rarified, and … you know the rest.
   But our Gas Bell is certainly a more perfect apparatus and it is used in combination with
different gasses. Furthermore, we don’t torture a defenseless animal as the ancients did; we
use it for a higher purpose: to guard the security of the United State, in other words, the
happiness of millions. About five centuries ago when the work of the Operation
Department was only beginning, there were yet to be found some fools who compared our
Operation Department with the ancient Inquisition. But this is as absurd as to compare a
surgeon performing a tracheotomy with a highway cutthroat. Both use a knife, perhaps the
same kind of a knife, both do the same thing, viz., cut the throat of a living man, yet one is a
well-doer, the other is a murderer; one is marked plus, the other minus. … All this becomes
perfectly clear in one second, in one turn of our logical wheel, the teeth of which engage
that minus, turn it upward and thus change its aspect. That other matter is somewhat
different; the ring in the door was still oscillating, apparently the door had just closed, yet
she, I-330, had disappeared; she was not there! The logical wheel could not turn this fact. A
dream? But even now I feel still in my right shoulder that incomprehensible sweet pain of I-
330 near me in the fog, pressing herself against me. “Thou lovest fog?” Yes, I love the fog
too. I love everything and everything appears to me wonderful, new, tense; everything is so
good! …
   “So good,” I said aloud.
   “Good?” The porcelain eyes bulged out. “What good do you find in that? If that man
without a number contrived to sneak in, it means that there are others around here,
everywhere, all the time, here around the Integral, they—”
   “Whom do you mean by ‘they’?”
   “How do I know who? But I sense them, all the time.”
   “Have you heard about the new operation which has been invented? I mean the surgical
removal of fancy?” (There really were rumors of late about something of the sort.)
   “No, I haven’t. What has that to do with it?”
   “Merely this: if I were you, I should go and ask to have this operation performed upon
me.”
   The plate expressed distinctly something lemon-like, sour. Poor fellow! He took offence if
one even hinted that he might possess imagination. Well, a week ago I too should have
taken offence at such a hint. Not so now, for I know that I have imagination, that is what my
illness consists in, and more than that: I know that it is a wonderful illness—one does not
want to be cured, simply does not want to!
   We ascended the glass steps; the world spread itself below us like the palm of a hand.
   You, readers of these records, whoever you be, you have the sun above you. And if you
ever were ill, as I am now, then you know what kind of a sun there is or may be in the
morning; you know that pinkish, lucid, warm gold; the air itself looks a little pinkish;
everything seems permeated by the tender blood of the sun; everything is alive; the stones
seem soft and living; iron living and warm; people all full of life and smiles. It may be that in
a short while all this will disappear, that in an hour the pinkish blood of the sun will be
drained out, but in the meantime everything is alive. And I see how something flows and
pulsates in the sides of the Integral; I see the Integral think of its great and lofty future, of
the heavy load of inevitable happiness which it is to carry up there into the heights, to you,
unseen ones, to you who seek eternally and who never find. You shall find! You shall be
happy! You must be happy, and you have now not very long to wait!
   The body of the Integral is almost ready; it is an exquisite, oblong ellipsoid, made of our
glass, which is everlasting like gold and flexible like steel. I watched them within, fixing its
transverse ribs and its longitudinal stringers; in the stern they were erecting the base of the
gigantic motor. Every three seconds the powerful tail of the Integral will eject flame and
gasses into the universal space, and the Integral will soar forward and higher—like a
flaming Tamerlane of happiness! I watched how the workers, true to the Taylor system,
would bend down, then unbend and turn around swiftly and rhythmically like levers of an
enormous engine. In their hands they held glittering glass pipes which emitted bluish
streaks of flame; the glass walls were being cut into with flame; with flame there were
being welded the angles, the ribs, the bars. I watched the monstrous glass cranes easily
rolling over the glass rails; like the workers themselves they would obediently turn, bend
down and bring their loads inward into the bowels of the Integral. All seemed one,
humanized machine and mechanized humans. It was the most magnificent, the most
stirring beauty, harmony, music!
   Quick! Down! To them, and with them! And I descended and mingled with them, fused
with their mass, caught in the rhythm of steel and glass. Their movements were measured,
tense and round. Their cheeks were colored with health, their mirror-like foreheads not
clouded by the insanity of thinking. I was floating upon a mirror-like sea. I was reposing. …
Suddenly one of them turned toward me his carefree face.
   “Well, better today?”
   “What better?”
   “You were not here yesterday. And we thought something serious. …” His forehead was
shining; a childish and innocent smile.
   My blood rushed to my face. No, I could not lie, facing those eyes. I remained silent; I was
drowning. … Above, the shiny round white porcelain face appeared in the hatchway.
   “Eh! D-503! Come up here! Something is wrong with a frame and brackets here, and …”
   Not waiting until he had finished, I rushed to him, upstairs; I was shamefully saving
myself by flight. I had not the power to raise my eyes. I was dazed by the sparkling glass
steps under my feet, and with every step I made I felt more and more hopeless. I, a
corrupted man, a criminal, was out of place here. No, I shall probably never again be able to
fuse myself into this mechanical rhythm, nor to float over this mirror-like, untroubled sea. I
am to burn eternally from now on, running from place to place, seeking a nook where I may
hide my eyes, eternally, until I. … A spark cold as ice pierced me: “I myself, I matter little,
but is it necessary that she also … ? I must see that she …”
   I crawled through the hatchway to the deck and stood there; where was I to go now? I
did not know what I had come for! I looked aloft. The midday sun exhausted by its march,
was fuming dimly. Below was the Integral, a gray mass of glass—dead. The pink blood was
drained out! It was clear to me that all this was my imagination and that everything
remained as before, yet it was also clear to me that …
   “What is the matter with you, D-503? Are you deaf? I call you and call. … What is the
matter with you?” It was the Second Builder yelling directly into my ear; he must have been
yelling that way for quite a while.
   What was the matter with me? I had lost my rudder, the motor was groaning as before,
the aero was quivering and rushing on but it had no rudder. I did not even know where I
was rushing, down to the earth or up to the sun, to its flame. …
                                 RECORD SIXTEEN
I have not written for several days, for I don’t know how many. All my days are alike. All are
of one color—yellow like dry, overheated sand. Not a patch of shade, not a drop of water,
only an infinity of yellow sand. I cannot live without her, but she, since she disappeared
that day so mysteriously in the Ancient House. …
   Since that time I have seen her only once, during the hour for the Walk, two, three, four
days ago, I do not remember exactly. All my days are alike. She only passed swiftly by and
for a second filled up the yellow, empty world. With her, arm in arm, reaching not higher
than her shoulder, were the double-curved S- and the thin papery doctor, and a fourth
person whose fingers only I remember well; they streamed out, those fingers, from the
sleeve of the unif like a bundle of rays, uncommonly thin, white, long. I-330 raised her hand
and waved to me, then she bent toward the one with the ray-like fingers, over the head of
S-. I overheard the word Integral. All four turned around to look at me—and then they
disappeared in the bluish-gray sea and my road was once more dry and yellow.
   That same evening she had a pink check on me. I stood before the switchboard and with
hatred and tenderness I implored it to click and soon to show the number I-330. I would
jump out into the hall at every sound of the elevator. The door of the latter would open
heavily. Pale, tall, blonde and dark they would come out of the elevator, and here and there
curtains were falling. … But she was not there. She did not come. And it is quite possible
that now, at this minute, as I write these lines, at twenty-two o’clock exactly, with her eyes
closed, she is pressing her shoulder against somebody else in the same way and in the same
way she may be asking someone: “Do you love me?” Whom? Who is he? That one with ray-
like fingers or that thick-lipped, sprinkling R-? Or S-? S-! Why is it that I have heard his
steps splashing behind me as though in a ditch all these days? Why has he been following
me all these days like a shadow? Ahead of me, to my side, behind me, a grayish-blue, two-
dimensional shadow; people cross it, people step on it but it remains nearby, attached to
me by unseen ties. Perhaps that tie is I-330. I do not know. Or perhaps they, the Guardians I
mean, already know that I …
   If someone should tell you your shadow sees you, sees you all the time, would you
understand? All at once peculiar sensations arise in you; your arms seem to belong to
someone else, they are in the way. That is how I feel; very frequently now I notice how
absurdly I wave my hands without any rhythm. I have an irresistible desire to glance
behind me but I am unable to do so, my neck might as well be forged of iron. I flee, I run
faster and faster, and even with my back I feel that shadow following me as fast as I can
run, and there is no place to hide myself, no place!
   At length I reach my room. Alone at last! But here I find another thing, the telephone. I
pick up the receiver. “Yes, I-330 please.” And again I hear a light noise through the receiver;
someone’s step in the hall there, passing the door of her room, and—silence. … I drop the
receiver. I cannot, cannot bear it any longer, and I run to see her!
   This happened yesterday. I ran there and for a whole hour from sixteen to seventeen I
wandered near the house in which she lives. Numbers were passing by in rows. Thousands
of feet were beating the time like a behemoth with a million legs passing by. I was alone,
thrown out by a storm on an uninhabited island, and my eyes were seeking and seeking
among the grayish-blue waves. “There soon,” I thought, “will appear from somewhere the
sharp mocking angles of the brows lifted to the temples, and the dark window-eyes, and
there behind them a flaming fireplace and someone’s shadow. … And I will rush straight in
behind those windows and say to her, ‘Thou’ (yes, ‘thou’ without fail), ‘Thou knowest I
cannot live without thee any longer, then why— … ?’ ” But silence reigned.
   Suddenly I heard the silence; suddenly I heard the Musical Tower silenced, and I
understood! It was after seventeen already; everyone had already left. I was alone. It was
too late to return home. Around me—a desert made of glass and bathed with yellow
sunshine. I saw, as if in water, the reflection of the walls in the glass smoothness of the
street, sparkling walls, hanging upside down. Myself also upside down, hanging absurdly in
the glass.
   “I must go at once, this very second, to the Medical Bureau or else … or perhaps this
would be best: to remain here, to wait quietly until they see me and come and take me into
the Operation Department and put an end to everything at once, redeem everything. …” A
slight rustle! and the double-curved S- was before me. Without looking I felt his two gray
steel-drill eyes bore quickly into me. I plucked up all my strength to show a smile and to say
(I had to say something), “I, I must go to the Medical Bureau.”
   “Who is detaining you? What are you standing here for?”
   I was silent, absurdly hanging upside down.
   “Follow me,” said S- austerely.
   I followed obediently, waving my unnecessary, foreign arms. I could not raise my eyes. I
walked through a strange world turned upside down, where people had their feet pasted to
the ceilings, and where engines stood with their bases upward, and where, still lower, the
sky merged in the heavy glass of the pavement. I remember what pained me most was the
fact that looking at the world for the last time in my life, I should see it upside down rather
than in its natural state; but I could not raise my eyes.
   We stopped. Steps. One step … and I should see the figures of the doctors in their white
aprons and the enormous dumb Bell.
   With force, with some sort of an inner screw, at length I succeeded in tearing my eyes
away from the glass beneath my feet, and I noticed the golden letters, “Medical Bureau.”
Why did he bring me here rather than to the Operation Department? Why did he spare
me?—about this I did not even think at that moment. I made one jump over all the steps,
firmly closed the door behind me and took a very deep breath, as if I had not breathed since
morning and as if my heart had not beaten for the same length of time, as if only now I
started to breathe and only now there opened a sluice in my chest. …
   Inside there were two of them, one a short specimen with heavy legs, his eyes like the
horns of a bull tossing the patients up, the other extremely thin with lips like sparkling
scissors, a nose like a blade—it was the same man who … I ran to him as to a dear friend,
straight over close to the blade, and muttered something about insomnia, dreams, shadows,
yellow sand. The scissors-lips sparkled and smiled.
   “Yes, it is too bad. Apparently a soul has formed in you.”
   A soul?—that strange ancient word that was forgotten long ago. …
   “Is it … v-very dangerous?” I stuttered.
   “Incurable,” was the cut of the scissors.
   “But more specifically, what is it? Somehow I cannot imagine—”
   “You see … how shall I put it? Are you a mathematician?”
   “Yes.”
   “Then you see … imagine a plane, let us say this mirror. You and I are on its surface. You
see? there we are, squinting our eyes to protect ourselves from the sunlight, or here is the
bluish electric spark in that tube, there the shadow of that aero that just passed. All this is
on the surface, is momentary only. Now imagine this very same surface softened by a flame
so that nothing can any longer glide over it, so everything instead will penetrate into that
mirror world which excites such curiosity in children. I assure you, children are not so
foolish as we think they are! The surface becomes a volume, a body, a world; and inside the
mirror—within you, there is the sunshine, and the whirlwind caused by the aero propeller,
and your trembling lips and someone else’s lips also. You see, the cold mirror reflects,
throws out, while this one absorbs; it keeps forever a trace of everything that touches it.
Once you saw an imperceptible wrinkle on someone’s face, and this wrinkle is forever
preserved within you; you may happen to hear in the silence a drop of water falling—and
you will hear it forever!”
   “Yes, yes, that is it!” I grasped his hand. I could hear drops of water dripping in the
silence from the faucet of a washstand and at once I knew it was forever.
   “But tell me please, why suddenly … suddenly a soul? There was none, yet suddenly. …
Why is it that no one has it, yet I. …” I pressed the thin hand; I was afraid to loosen the
safety belt.
   “Why? Well, why don’t we grow feathers or wings, but only shoulder blades, bases for
wings? We have aeros; wings would only be in the way. Wings are needed in order to fly,
but we don’t need to fly anywhere. We have arrived at the terminus. We have found what
we wanted. Is that not so?”
   I nodded vaguely. He glanced at me and laughed a scalpel-like metallic laugh. The other
doctor overheard us and stamped out of his room on his heavy legs. He picked up the thin
doctor with his horn-eyes, then picked me up.
   “What is the matter, a soul? You say a soul? Oh, damn it! We may soon retrogress even to
the cholera epidemics. I told you,” he tossed the thin one on the horns, “I told you the only
thing to do is to operate on them all, wholesale! simply extirpate the centre for fancy. Only
surgery can help here, only surgery.” He put on a pair of enormous X-ray spectacles and
remained thus for a long while, looking into my skull, through the bones into my brain and
making notes.
   “Very, very curious! Listen.” He looked firmly into my eyes. “Would you not consent to
have me perform an extirpation on you? It would be invaluable to the United State; it might
help us to prevent an epidemic. If you have no special reasons, of course. …”
  Some time ago I should probably have said without hesitation, “I am willing,” but now—I
was silent. I caught the profile of the thin doctor; I implored him!
  “You see,” he said at last, “Number D-530 is building the Integral and I am sure the
operation would interfere. …”
  “Ah-h!” grumbled the other and stamped back into his room.
  We remained alone. The paper-like hand was put lightly and caressingly upon mine, the
profile-like face came nearer and he said in a very low voice: “I shall tell you a secret. You
are not the only one. My colleague is right when he speaks of an epidemic. Try to
remember, have you not noticed yourself, someone with something similar, very similar,
identical?”
  He looked at me closely. What was he alluding to? To whom? … Is it possible? …
  “Listen,” I jumped up from my seat. But he had already changed the subject. In a loud
metallic tone:
  “… As to the insomnia and for the dreams you complain of, I advise you to walk a great
deal. Tomorrow morning you must begin taking long walks … say as far as the Ancient
House.”
  Again he pierced me with his eyes and he smiled thinly. It seemed to me that I saw
enveloped in the tender tissue of that smile a word, a letter, a name, the only name. … Or
was it only my imagination? I waited impatiently while he wrote a certificate of illness for
today and tomorrow. Once more I gently and firmly pressed his hand, then I ran out.
  My heart now feels light and swift like an aero; it carries me higher and higher. … I know
joy will come tomorrow. What joy? …
                               RECORD SEVENTEEN
I am puzzled. Yesterday, at the very moment when I thought everything was untangled, and
that all the X’s were at last found, new unknowns appeared in my equation. The origin of
the coordinates of the whole story is of course the Ancient Home. From this centre the axes
of all the X’s, Y’s, and Z’s radiate, and recently they have entered into the formation of my
whole life.
    I walked along the X-axis (Avenue 59) towards the centre. The whirlwind of yesterday
still raged within me; houses and people upside down; my own hands torturingly foreign to
me; glimmering scissors; the sharp sound of drops dripping from the faucet;—all this
existed, all this existed once! All these things were revolving wildly, tearing my flesh,
rotating wildly beneath the molten surface, there where the “soul” is located.
    In order to follow the instructions of the doctor I chose the road which followed not the
hypotenuse but the two legs of a triangle. Soon I reached the road running along the Green
Wall. From beyond the Wall, from the infinite ocean of green there rose toward me an
immense wave of roots, branches, flowers, leaves. It rose higher and higher; it seemed as
though it would splash over me and that from a man, from the finest and most precise
mechanism which I am, I would be transformed into. … But fortunately there was the
Green Wall between me and that wild green sea. Oh, how great and divinely limiting is the
wisdom of walls and bars! This Green Wall is I think the greatest invention ever conceived.
Man ceased to be a wild animal the day he built the first wall; man ceased to be a wild man
only on the day when the Green Wall was completed, when by this wall we isolated our
machine-like, perfect world from the irrational, ugly world of trees, birds and beasts. …
    The blunt snout of some unknown beast was to be seen dimly through the glass of the
Wall; its yellow eyes kept repeating the same thought which remained incomprehensible to
me. We looked into each other’s eyes for a long while. Eyes are shafts which lead from the
superficial world into a world which is beneath the surface. A thought awoke in me: “what
if that yellow-eyed one, sitting there on that absurd dirty heap of leaves, is happier than I,
in his life which cannot be calculated in figures!” I waved my hand. The yellow eyes
twinkled, moved back and disappeared in the foliage. What a pitiful being! How absurd the
idea that he might be happier! Happier than I he may be, but I am an exception, am I not? I
am sick.
    I noticed that I was approaching the dark red walls of the Ancient House and I saw the
grown-together lips of the old woman. I ran to her with all speed.
    “Is she here?”
    The grown-together lips opened slowly:
   “Who is ‘she’?”
   “Who? I-330, of course. You remember we came together, she and I, in an aero the other
day.”
   “Oh, yes, yes, yes—yes.”
   Ray-wrinkles around the lips, artful rays radiating from the eyes. They were making their
way deeper and deeper into me.
   “Well, she is here, all right. Came in a while ago.”
   “Here!” I noticed at the feet of the old woman a bush of silver—bitter wormwood. (The
court of the Ancient House, being a part of the museum is carefully kept in its prehistoric
state.) A branch of the bush touched the old woman, she caressed that branch; upon her
knees lay stripes of sunshine. For a second I myself, the sun, the old woman, the
wormwood, those yellow eyes, all seemed to be one; we were firmly united by common
veins and one common blood, boisterous, magnificent blood, was running through those
veins.
   I am ashamed now to write down all this, but I promised to be frank to the end of these
records: yes, I bent over and kissed that soft, grown-together mouth of the old woman. She
wiped it with her hand and laughed.
   Running, I passed through familiar, half-dark, echoing rooms, and for some reason I ran
straight to the bedroom. When I had reached the door, a thought flashed: “And if she is
there … not alone?” I stopped and listened. But all I heard was the tick-tock of my heart,
not within me, but somewhere near, outside me.
   I entered. The large bed—untouched. A mirror … another mirror in the door of the
cupboard, and in the keyhole an ancient key upon an ancient ring. No one was there. I
called softly: “I-330, are you here?”—and then in a still lower voice with closed eyes,
holding my breath—in a voice as though I were kneeling before her, “I-, dear.” Silence. Only
the water was dripping fast into the white basin of the washstand. I cannot now explain
why, but I disliked that sound. I turned the faucet hard and went out. She was not there, so
much was clear. She must be in another “apartment.”
   I ran down a wide, sombre stairway, pulled one door, another, a third—locked. Every
room was locked save that of “our” apartment. And she was not there. I went back again to
the same apartment without knowing why. I walked slowly, with difficulty; my shoe-soles
suddenly became as heavy as cast-iron. I remember distinctly my thought, “It is a mistake
that the force of gravity is a constant; consequently all my formulae. …”
   Suddenly—an explosion! A door slammed down below; someone stamped quickly over
the flagstones. I again became lightfooted, extremely light! I dashed to the railing to bend
over, and in one word, one exclamation, expressed everything: “You!”
   I became cold. Below in the square shadow of the window-frame, flapping its pink wing-
ears, the head of S- passed by!
   Like lightning I saw only the naked conclusion. Without any premises (I don’t recall any
premises even now) the conclusion: he must not see me here! And on the tips of my toes,
pressing myself against the wall, I sneaked upstairs into the unlocked apartment.
   I stopped for a second at the door. He was stamping upward, here. If only the door. … I
prayed to the door but it was a wooden one—It squeaked, it squealed. Like a wind
something red passed my eyes, something green, and the yellow Buddha. In front of the
mirror-door of the cupboard, my pale face; my ears still following those steps, my lips. …
Now he was already passing the green and yellow, now he was passing Buddha, now at the
doorsill of the bedroom. …
   I grasped the key of the cupboard; the ring oscillated. This oscillation reminded me of
something. Again a conclusion, a naked conclusion without premises; a conclusion, or to be
more exact, a fragment of one: “Now I-330 is. …” I brusquely opened the cupboard and
when inside in the darkness shut the door firmly. One step! The floor shook under my feet.
Slowly and softly I floated somewhere downward; my eyes were dimmed—I died!
   Later when I sat down to describe all these adventures, I sought in my memory and
consulted some books; and now I understand, of course! I was in a state of temporary
death. This state was known to the ancients, but as far as I am informed it is unknown to us.
I have no conception of how long I was dead, probably not longer than five or ten seconds,
but after awhile I arose from the dead and opened my eyes. It was dark. But I felt I was
falling down—down—down. I stretched out my hand to attach myself to something but the
rough wall scratched my fingers; it was running away from me, upward. I felt blood on my
fingers. It was clear that all this was not merely a play of my sick imagination. But what was
it? What?
   I heard my own frequent, trembling breaths. (I am not ashamed to confess this, it was all
unexpected and incomprehensible.) A minute, two, three passed; I was still going down.
Then a soft bump. The thing that had been falling away from under my feet was motionless.
I found in the darkness a knob, and turned it; a door opened; there was a dim light. I now
noticed behind me a square platform, travelling upward. I tried to run back to it but it was
too late. “I am cut off here,” I thought. Where “here” might be, I did not know.
   A corridor. A heavy silence. The small lamps on the vaulted ceiling resembled an endless,
twinkling, dotted line. The corridor was similar to the “tube” of our underground railways
but it was much narrower, and made not of our glass but of some other, very ancient
material. For a moment I thought of the underground caves where they say many tried to
save themselves during the Two Hundred Years’ War. There was nothing to do but to walk
ahead.
   I walked, I think, for about twenty minutes. A turn to the right, the corridor became
wider, the small lamps brighter. There was a dim droning somewhere. … Was it a machine
or voices? I did not know. I stood before a heavy, opaque door, from behind which came the
noise. I knocked. Then I knocked again, louder. Now there was silence behind the door.
Something clanked; the door opened slowly and heavily.
   I don’t know which of us was the more dumbfounded; the thin blade-like doctor stood
before me!
   “You here!” his scissors opened and remained open.
   And I, as if I did not know a human word, stood silent, merely stared, without
comprehending that he was talking to me. He must have told me to leave, for with his thin
paper stomach he slowly pressed me to the side, to the more brightly lighted end of the
corridor and poked me in the back.
   “Beg your pardon … I wanted … I thought that she, I-330 … but behind me. …”
   “Stay where you are,” said the doctor brusquely, and he disappeared.
   At last! At last she was nearby, here, and what did it matter where “here” was? I saw the
familiar saffron-yellow silk, the smile-bite, the eyes with their curtains drawn. … My lips
quivered, so did my hands and knees, and I had a most stupid thought: “Vibrations make
sounds. Shivering must make a sound. Why then don’t I hear it?”
   Her eyes opened for me widely. I entered into them.
   “I could not … any longer! … Where have you been? … Why? …”
   I was unable to tear my eyes away from her for a second, and I talked as if in a delirium,
fast and incoherently, or perhaps I only thought without speaking out: “A shadow …
behind me. I died. And from the cupboard. … Because that doctor of yours … speaks with
his scissors. … I have a soul … incurable … and I must walk. …”
   “An incurable soul? My poor boy!” I-330 laughed. She covered me with the sparkles of
her laughter; my delirium left me. Everywhere around her little laughs were sparkling!
How good it was!
   The doctor reappeared from around the turn, the wonderful, magnificent, thinnest
doctor.
   “Well?” He was already beside her.
   “Oh, nothing, nothing. I shall tell you later. He got here by accident. Tell them that I shall
be back in about a quarter of an hour.”
   The doctor slid around the corner. She lingered. The door closed with a heavy thud. Then
slowly, very slowly, piercing my heart with a sharp sweet needle, I-330 pressed against me
with her shoulder and then with her arm, with her whole body, and we walked away as if
fused into one.
   I do not remember now where we turned into darkness; in the darkness we walked up
some endless stairway in silence. I did not see but I knew, I knew that she walked as I did,
with closed eyes, blind, her head thrown a little backward, biting her lips and listening to
the music, that is to say, to my almost audible tremor.
   I returned to consciousness in one of the innumerable nooks in the courtyard of the
Ancient House. There was a fence of earth with naked stone ribs and yellow teeth of walls
half fallen to pieces. She opened her eyes and said, “Day-after-tomorrow at sixteen.” She
was gone.
   Did all this really happen? I do not know. I shall learn day-after-tomorrow. One real sign
remains: on my right hand the skin has been rubbed from the tips of three fingers. But
today, on the Integral the Second Builder assured me that he saw me touch the polishing
wheel with those very same fingers. Perhaps I did. It is quite probable. I don’t know. I don’t
know anything.
                                 RECORD EIGHTEEN
Last night as soon as I had gone to bed, I fell momentarily to the bottom of the ocean of
sleep like an overloaded ship which has been wrecked. The heavy thicket of wavy green
water enveloped me. Then slowly I floated from the bottom upward, and somewhere in the
middle of that course, I opened my eyes—my room! The morning was still green and
motionless. A fragment of sunshine coming from the mirror on my closet door shone into
my eyes. This fragment does not permit me to sleep, being thus an obstacle in the way of
exactly fulfilling the rules of the Tables which prescribe so many hours of sleep. I should
have opened the closet but I felt as though I were in a spider web, and cobweb covered my
eyes; I had no power to sit up.
   Yet I got up and opened the closet door; suddenly, there behind that door, making her
way through the mass of garments which hung there, was I-330! I have become so
accustomed of late to most improbable things, that as far as I remember I was not even
surprised; I did not even ask a question. I jumped into the closet, slammed the mirror-door
behind me and breathlessly, brusquely, blindly, avidly I clung to her. I remember clearly
even now:—through the narrow crack of the door a sharp sun-ray like lightning broke into
the darkness and played on the floor and walls of the closet, and a little higher the cruel
ray-blade fell upon the naked neck of I-330, and this for some reason seemed to me so
terrible that I could not bear it, and I screamed;—and again I opened my eyes. My room!
   The morning was still green and motionless. On the door of my closet was a fragment of
the sunshine. I was in bed. A dream? Yet my heart was still wildly beating, quivering and
twitching; there was a dull pain in the tips of my fingers and in my knees. This undoubtedly
did happen! And now I am unable any more to distinguish what is dream from what is
actuality; irrational numbers grow through my solid, habitual, tri-dimensional life; and
instead of firm, polished surfaces—there is something shaggy and rough. …
   I waited long for the Bell to ring. I was lying thinking, untangling a very strange logical
chain. In our superficial life, every formula, every equation, corresponds to a curve or a
solid. We have never seen any curve or solid corresponding to my square-root of minus
one. The horrifying part of the situation is that there exist such curves or solids; unseen by
us they do exist, they must, inevitably; for in mathematics as on a screen, strange sharp
shadows appear before us. One must remember that mathematics like death, never makes
mistakes, never plays tricks. If we are unable to see those irrational curves or solids, it only
means that they inevitably possess a whole immense world somewhere beneath the
surface of our life. …
   I jumped up without waiting for the waking Bell and began to pace up and down the
room. My mathematics, the only firm and immovable island of my shaken life, this too was
torn from its anchor and was floating, whirling. Then it means that that absurd thing, the
“soul,” is as real as my unif, as my boots, although I do not see them since they are behind
the door of the closet. If boots are not a sickness, why should the “soul” be one? I sought,
but I could not find, a way out of the logical confusion. It looked to me like that strange and
sad debris beyond the Green Wall; my logical debris too, is filled with extraordinary,
incomprehensible, wordless but speaking beings. It occurred to me for a moment that
through some strange, thick glass I saw it; I saw it at once infinitely large and infinitely
small, scorpion-like with hidden but ever perceptible sting; I saw the square-root of minus
one. Perhaps it was nothing else but my “soul,” which like the legendary scorpion of the
ancients, was voluntarily stinging itself with. …
   The Bell! The day began. All I saw and felt neither died, nor disappeared, it merely
became covered with daylight, as our visible world does not die or disappear at the end of
the day but merely becomes covered with the darkness of night. My head was filled by a
light, thin haze. Through that haze I perceived the long glass tables and the globe-like heads
busy chewing, slowly, silently, in unison. At a distance, through the haze, the metronome
was slowly beating its tick-tock, and to the accompaniment of this customary and caressing
music I joined with the others in counting automatically to fifty: fifty is the number of
chewing movements required by the law of the State for every piece of food. And
automatically then, keeping time, I went downstairs and put my name down in the book for
the outgoing Numbers—as everyone did. But I felt I lived separately from everybody; I lived
by myself separated by a soft wall which absorbs noises; beyond that wall there was my
world.
   Here a thought occurred to me. If that world is only my own, why should I tell about it in
these records? Why should I recount all these absurd “dreams” about closets, endless
corridors? With great sorrow I notice that instead of a correct and strictly mathematical
poem in honor of the United State, I am writing a fantastic novel. Oh! if only it were a novel
and not my actual life, full of X’s, square-roots of minus one and down-fallings! Yet all may
be for the best. Probably you, my unknown readers, are children still as compared with us.
We are brought up by the United State; consequently we have reached the highest summits
attainable by man. And you, being children, may swallow without crying all the bitter
things I am to give you only if they be coated with the syrup of adventures.
The infinitesimal of the third order—From under the forehead—Over the railing.
There in the strange corridor lighted by the dotted line of dim little electric lamps … or no,
no, later, when we had already reached one of the nooks in the courtyard of the Ancient
House, she said, “Day-after-tomorrow.” That “day-after-tomorrow” is today. And everything
seems to have wings and to fly; the day flies; and our Integral too already has wings. We
finished placing the motor and tried it out today, without switching it in. What magnificent,
powerful salvos! Each of them sounded for me like a salute in honor of her, the only one—
in honor of today!
   At the time of the first explosion about a dozen loafing Numbers from the docks stood
near the main tube—and nothing was left of them save a few crumbs and a little soot. With
pride I write down now that this occurrence did not disturb the rhythm of our work even
for a second. Not a man shrank. We and our lathes continued our rectilinear or curved
motions with the same sparkling and polished precision as before, as if nothing had
happened. As a matter of fact, what did happen? A dozen Numbers represent hardly one
hundred millionth part of the United State. For practical consideration, that is but an
infinitesimal of the third order. That pity, a result of arithmetical ignorance, was known to
the ancients; to us it seems absurd.
   It seems droll to me also, that yesterday I was thinking, even relating in these pages
about a gray blot! All that was only the “softening of the surface” which is normally as hard
as diamond, like our walls. (There is an ancient saying: “Shooting beans at a stone wall—”)
   Sixteen o’clock. I did not go for the supplementary walk; who knows, she might come
now, when the sun is so noisily bright.
   I am almost the only one in his room. Through the walls full of sunshine I see for a
distance to the right and to the left and below strings of other rooms, repeating each other
as if in a mirror, hanging in the air and empty. Only on the bluish stairway, striped by the
golden ink of the sun, is seen rising a thin, gray shadow. Already I hear steps, and I see
through the door and I feel a smile pasted to my face like a plaster. But it passed to another
stairway and down. The click of the switchboard! I threw myself to that little white slit
and … an unfamiliar male Number! (A consonant means a male Number.)
   The elevator groaned and stopped. A big, slovenly, slanting forehead stood before me,
and the eyes … They impressed me strangely; it seemed as if the man talked with his eyes
which were deep under the forehead.
   “Here is a letter from her, for you.” (From under the awning of that forehead.) “She asked
that everything … as requested in the letter … without fail.” This too, from under the
forehead, from under the awning, and he turned, looked about.
    “No, there is nobody, nobody. Quickly! the letter!”
    He put the letter in my hand and went out without a word.
    A pink check fell out of the envelope. It was hers, her check! Her tender perfume! I felt
like running to catch up with that wonderful under-the-forehead one. A tiny note followed
the check from the envelope; three lines: “The check … Lower the curtains without fail, as
if I were actually with you. It is necessary that they should think that I … I am very, very
sorry.”
    I tore the note into small bits. A glance at the mirror revealed my distorted, broken
eyebrows. I took the check and was ready to do with it as I had done with the note. “She
asked that everything … as requested in the letter … without fail.” My arms weakened and
the hands loosened. The check was back on the table. She is stronger than I, stronger than I.
It seemed as though I were going to act as she wished. Besides … however, it is a long time
before evening.
    The check remained on the table. In the mirror—my distorted, broken eyebrows. Oh,
why did I not have a doctor’s certificate for today? I should like to go and walk, walk
without end around the Green Wall and then to fall on my bed … to the bottom of. … Yet I
had to go to Auditorium No. 13, and I should have to grip myself, so as to bear up for two
hours! Two hours without motion, at a time when I wanted to scream and stamp my feet!
    The lecture was on. It was very strange to hear from the sparkling tube of the phono-
lecturer not the usual metallic voice but a soft, velvety, mossy one. It was a woman’s voice
and I seemed to have a vision of the woman: a little hook-like old woman, like the one of the
Ancient House.
    The Ancient House! Suddenly from within me a powerful fountain of. … I had to use all
my strength to control myself, so as not to fill the auditorium with screams. The soft mossy
words were piercing me, yet only empty words about children and child-production
reached my ear. I was like a photographic plate: everything was making its imprint with a
strange, senseless precision on me; the golden scythe which was nothing more than the
reflection of light from the megaphone of the lecture apparatus, under the megaphone a
child, a living illustration. It was leaning toward the megaphone, the angle of its
infinitesimal unif in its mouth, its little fist clenched firmly, its thumb squeezed into the fist,
a light fluffy pleat of skin at the wrist. Like a photographic plate I was taking the impression
of all this. Now I saw how its naked leg hung over the edge of the platform, the pink fan of
its finger waved in the air. … One minute more, one second and the child would be on the
floor!
    A female’s scream, a wave of translucent wings, her unif on the platform! She caught the
child, her lips clung to the fluffy pleat of the baby’s wrist; she moved the child to the middle
of the table and left the platform. The imprints were registering in me: a pink crescent of a
mouth, the horns downward! Eyes like small blue saucers filled with liquid! It was O-90.
And as if reading a consequential formula, I suddenly felt the necessity, the naturalness of
that insignificant occurrence.
    She sat down behind me, somewhat to my left. I looked back. She quietly removed her
gaze from the table and the child and looked straight into me. Within again: She, I, the table
on the platform—three points: and through those three points lines were drawn, a
projection of some as yet unforeseen events!
   Then I went home through the green dusky street which seemed many-eyed because of
the electric lights. I heard myself tick-tocking like a clock. And the hands of that clock
seemed to be about to pass a figure: I was going to do something, something that would cut
off every way of retreat. She wants somebody, whom I do not know, to think she is with me.
I want her; what do I care what she wants? I do not want to be alone behind the curtains
and that is all there is to it!
   From behind came sounds of a familiar gait, like splashing in a ditch. I did not need to
look back, I knew it was S-. He would follow me to the very door, probably. Then he would
stay below on the sidewalk, and he would try to drill upward into my room with his boring
eyes, until the curtains would fall, concealing something criminal.
   Was he my Guardian-Angel? No! My decision was made.
   When I came into my room and turned on the light, I could not believe my eyes! O-90
stood at my table, or to be more exact, she was hanging like a creased empty dress. She
seemed to have no tensity, no spring beneath the dress; her arms and legs were springless,
her voice was hanging and springless.
   “About my letter, did you receive it? Yes? I must know your answer, I must—today.”
   I shrugged my shoulders. I enjoyed looking into her blue eyes which were filled with
tears as if she were the guilty one. I lingered over my answer. With pleasure I pricked her:
   “Answer? Well. … You are right. Undoubtedly. In everything.”
   “Then …” (She tried to cover the minute tremor with a smile but it did not escape me.)
“Well, all right. I shall … I shall leave you at once.”
   Yet she remained drooping over the table. Drooping eyelids, drooping arms and legs. The
pink check of the other was still on the table. I quickly opened this manuscript, We, and
with its pages I covered the check, trying to hide it from myself, rather than from O-.
   “See, here, I am still busy writing. Already 101 pages! Something quite unexpected comes
out in this writing.”
   In a voice, in a shadow of a voice, “And do you remember … how the other day I … on
the seventh page … and it dropped. …”
   The tiny blue saucers filled to the borders; silently and rapidly the tears ran down her
cheeks. And suddenly, like the dropping of the tears—rushing forth—words:
   “I cannot … I shall leave you in a moment. I shall never again … and I don’t care. … Only
I want, I must have a child! From you! Give me a child and I will leave. I will!”
   I saw she was trembling all over beneath her unif, and I felt … I too, would soon …
would. … I put my hands behind my back and smiled.
   “What? You desire to go under the Machine of the Well-Doer?”
   Like a stream her words ran over the dam.
   “I don’t care. I shall feel it for a while within me. I want to see, to see only once the little
fold of skin here at the wrist, like that one on the table in the Auditorium. Only for one day!”
   Three points: she, I and a little fist with a fluffy fold of skin there on the table!
   I remember how once when I was a child they took me up on the Accumulating Tower. At
the very top I bent over the glass railing of an opening in the Tower. Below people seemed
like dots; my heart contracted sweetly. “What if. …” On that occasion I only clenched my
hands around the railing; now I jumped over.
   “So you desire … being perfectly aware that …”
   Her eyes were closed as if the sun were beating straight into her face. A wet, shining
smile!
   “Yes, yes! I want it!”
   Quickly I took out the pink check of the other from under the manuscript and down I
went to the controller on duty. O-90 caught my hand, screamed out something, but what it
was I understood only later, when I returned.
   She was sitting on the edge of the bed, hands firmly clasped about the knees.
   “Is it, is it her check?”
   “What does it matter? Well, it is hers, yes.”
   Something cracked. It must have been the springs of the bed, for O-90 made a slight
motion only. She remained sitting, her hands upon her knees.
   “Well, quick. …” I roughly pressed her hand. A red spot was left on her wrist (tomorrow
it would become purple), where the fluffy, infantile fold. … It was the last. … I turned the
switch, my thoughts went out with the light. Darkness, a spark! and I had jumped over the
railing, down. …
                                  RECORD TWENTY
Discharge is the best word for it. Now I see that it was actually like an electric discharge.
The pulse of my last few days had been becoming dryer and dryer, more and more
frequent, more intense. The opposite poles had been drawing nearer and nearer and
already I could hear the dry crackling; one millimeter more, and—an explosion! Then
silence.
   Within me there is quiet now and emptiness like that of a house after everybody has left,
when one lies ill, all alone and hears so clearly the distinct, metallic, tick-tock of thoughts.
   Perhaps that “discharge” cured me at last of my torturing “soul.” Again I am like all of us.
At least at this moment as I write, I can see as it were, without any pain in my mental eye,
how O-90 is brought to the steps of the Cube; or I see her in the Gas Bell. And if there in the
Operation Department she should give my name—I do not care. Piously and gratefully I
should kiss the punishing hand of the Well-Doer at the last moment. I have this right in
regard to the United State: to receive my punishment. And I shall not give up this right. No
Number ought, or dares, to refuse this only personal, and therefore, most precious,
privilege.
   … Quickly, metallically, distinctly, do the thoughts rap in the head. An invisible aero
carries me into the blue height of my beloved abstractions. And I see how there in the
height, in the purest rarified air, my judgment about the only “right” bursts with a crack,
like a pneumatic tire. I see clearly that only an atavism, the absurd superstition of the
ancients, gives me this idea of “right.”
   There are ideas of clay and ideas moulded of gold, or of our precious glass. In order to
know the material of which an idea is made, one needs only to let fall upon it a drop of
strong acid. One of these acids was known to the ancients under the name of reductio ad
absurdum. This was the name of it, I think. But they were afraid of this poison; they
preferred to believe that they saw heaven, even though it was a toy made of clay, rather
than confess to themselves that it was only a blue nothing. We on the other hand (Glory to
the Well-Doer!), we are adults and we have no need of toys. Now if we put a drop of acid on
the idea of “right.” … Even the ancients (the most mature of them) knew that the source of
right was—might! Right is a function of might. Here we have our scale: on the one side an
ounce, on the other a ton. On one side “I,” on the other “we,” the United State. Is it not clear?
To assume that I may have any “right” as far as the State is concerned, is like assuming that
an ounce may equilibrate a ton in a scale! Hence the natural distribution: tons—rights,
grams—duties. And the natural road from nothingness to greatness, is to forget that one is
a gram and to feel that one is one-millionth of a ton!
   You ripe-bodied, bright Venerians; you sooty, blacksmith-like Uranians, I almost hear
your protests in this silence. But only think, everything that is great is simple. Remember,
only the four rules of arithmetic are unshakeable and eternal! And only that mortality will
be unshakeable and eternal which is built upon those four rules. This is the superior
wisdom, this is the summit of that pyramid around which people red with sweat, fought
and battled for centuries trying to crawl up!
   Looking from this summit down to the bottom, where something is still left swarming
like worms, from this summit all that is left over in us from the ancients seems alike. Alike
are the unlawful coming motherhood of O-90, a murder, and the insanity of that Number
who dared to throw verses into the face of the United State; and alike is the judgment for
them—premature death. This is that divine justice of which those stone-housed ancients
dreamed, lit by the naive pink rays of the dawn of history. Their “God” punished sacrilege
as a capital crime.
   You Uranians, morose and as black as the ancient Spaniards, who were wise in knowing
so well how to burn at the stake, you are silent; I think you agree with me. But I hear you,
pink Venerians, saying something about “tortures, executions, return to barbarism.” My
dear Venerians, I pity you! You are incapable of philosophical, mathematical thinking.
Human history moves upward in circles, like an aero. The circles are at times golden,
sometimes they are bloody, but all have 360 degrees. They go from 0° to 10°, 20°, 200°,
360°—and then again 0°. Yes, we have returned to zero. But for a mathematically working
mind it is clear that this zero is different; it is a perfectly new zero. We started from zero to
the right and came to zero on the left. Hence instead of plus zero, we are at minus zero. Do
you understand?
   This zero appears to me now as a silent, immense, narrow rock, sharp as a blade. In cruel
darkness, holding our breath, we set sail from the black night-side of the zero rock. For
centuries we, Columbuses, floated and floated; we made the circuit of the whole world and
at last! Hurrah! Salute! We climbed up the masts; before us now was a new side of the zero
rock, hitherto unknown, bathed in the Polar light of the United State; a blue mass covered
with rainbow sparkles! Suns!—a hundred suns! A million rainbows! What does it matter if
we are separated from the other, black side of the zero rock only by the thickness of a
blade? A knife is the most solid, the most immortal, the most inspired invention of man. The
knife served on the guillotine. The knife is the universal tool for cutting knots. The way of
paradoxes follows its sharp edge, the only way becoming to a fearless mind. …
                             RECORD TWENTY-ONE
Yesterday was her day and again she did not come. Again there came her incoherent note,
explaining nothing. But I am tranquil, perfectly tranquil. If I do act as I am told to in the
note, if I do go to the controller on duty, produce the pink check and then, having lowered
the curtains if I do sit alone in my room, I do all this of course not because I have no power
to act contrary to her desire. It seems funny? Decidedly not! It is quite simple: separated
from all curative, plaster-like smiles I am enabled quietly to write these very lines. This
first. And second: I am afraid to lose in her, in I-330, perhaps the only clue I shall ever have
to the understanding of all the unknowns, like the story of the cupboard, or my temporary
death, for instance. To understand, to discover these unknowns as the author of these
records, I feel it simply my duty. Moreover, the unknown is naturally the enemy of man.
And Homo Sapiens only then becomes Man in the complete sense of the word, when his
punctuation includes no question marks, only exclamation points, commas and periods.
   Thus, guided by what seems to me simply my duty as an author, I took an aero today at
sixteen o’clock and went to the Ancient House. A strong wind was blowing against me. The
aero advanced with difficulty through the thicket of air, its transparent branches whistling
and whipping. The city below seemed a heap of blue blocks of ice. Suddenly—a cloud, a
swift, oblique shadow. The ice became leaden; it swelled. As in springtime when you
happen to stand at the shore and wait; in one more minute everything will move and pull
and crack! But the minute passes and the ice remains motionless; you feel as though you
yourself are swelling, your heart beats more restlessly, more frequently. … But why do I
write about all this? And whence all these strange sensations? For is there such an iceberg
as could ever break the most lucid, solid crystal of our life?
   At the entrance of the Ancient House I found no one. I went around it and found the old
janitress near the Green Wall. She held her hand above her eyes, looking upward. Beyond
the Wall, sharp black triangles of some birds; they would rush, cawing, in onslaught on the
invisible fence of electric waves, and as they felt the electricity against their breasts, they
would recoil and soar once more beyond the Wall.
   I noticed oblique, swift shadows on the dark, wrinkled face, a quick glance at me.
   “Nobody here, nobody, nobody! No! And no use coming here. …”
   In what respect is it “no use” and what a strange idea, to consider me somebody’s
shadow. Perhaps all of you are only my shadows. Did I not populate these pages which only
recently were white quadrangular deserts, with you? Without me would they whom I shall
guide over the narrow paths of my lines, could they ever see you?
   Of course I did not say all this to the old woman. From experience I know that the most
torturing thing is to inoculate someone with a doubt as to the fact that he or she is a three-
dimensional reality and not some other reality. I remarked only, quite drily, that her
business was to open the gate, and she let me into the courtyard.
   It was empty. Quiet. The wind remained beyond the walls, distant as on that day, when
shoulder to shoulder, two like one, we came out from beneath, from the corridors—if it
ever really happened. I walked under stone arches, my steps resounded against the damp
vaults and fell behind me, sounding as though someone were continually following me. The
yellow walls with patches of red brick were watching me through their square spectacles,
windows—watching me open the squeaky doors of a barn, look into corners, nooks and
hidden places. … A gate in the fence and a lonely spot. The monument of the Two Hundred
Years’ War. From the ground naked, stone ribs were sticking out. The yellow jaws of the
wall. An ancient oven with a chimney like a ship petrified forever among redbrick waves.
   It seemed to me that I had seen those yellow teeth once before. I saw them still dimly in
my mind, as at the bottom of a barrel, through water. And I began to search. I fell into caves
occasionally; I stumbled over stones; rusty jaws caught my unif a few times; salt drops of
sweat ran from my forehead into my eyes.
   Nowhere! I could find that exit from below, from the corridors, nowhere! There was
none. Well, perhaps it was better that it happened so. Probably that all was only one of my
absurd “dreams.”
   Tired out, covered with cobweb and dust, I opened the gate to return to the main yard,
when suddenly … a rustle behind me, splashing steps, and there before me were the pink
winglike ears and the double-curved smile of S-. Half closing his eyes, he bored his little
drills into me and asked:
   “Taking a walk?”
   I was silent. My arms were heavy.
   “Well, do you feel better now?”
   “Yes, thank you. I think I am getting normal again.”
   He let me go. He lifted his eyes, looked upward, and I noticed his Adam’s apple for the
first time; it resembles a broken spring, sticking out from beneath the upholstery of a divan.
   Above us, not very high (about 50 meters) aeros were buzzing. By their low, slow flight
and by the observation tubes which hung down, I recognized them. They were the aeros of
the Guardians. But there were not two or three, as usual, there were about ten or twelve (I
regret to have to confine myself to an approximate figure).
   “Why are there so many today?” I dared to ask S-.
   “Why? Hm. … A real physician begins to treat a patient when he is still well but on the
way to becoming sick tomorrow, day-after-tomorrow or within a week. Prophylaxis! Yes!”
   He nodded and went splashing over the stones of the yard. Then he turned his head and
said over his shoulder, “Be careful!”
   Again I was alone. Silence. Emptiness. Far beyond the Green Wall the birds and the wind.
What did he mean? My aero ran very fast with the wind. Light and heavy shadows from the
clouds. Below blue cupolas, cubes of glass-ice were becoming leaden and swelling. …
                                         The Same Evening
I took up my pen just now in order to write upon these pages a few thoughts which, it
seems to me, will prove useful for you, my readers. These thoughts are concerned with the
great Day of Unanimity which is now not far away. But as I sat down, I discovered that I
cannot write at present; instead I sit and listen to the wind beating the glass with its dark
wings; all the while I am busy looking about and I am waiting, expecting. … What? I do not
know. So I was very glad when I saw the brownish-pink gills enter my room, heartily glad I
may say. She sat down and innocently smoothed a fold of her unif that fell between her
knees, and very soon she pasted upon me, all over me, a host of smiles—a bit of a smile on
each crack of my face and this gave me pleasant sensations, as if I were tightly bound like
an infant of the ancients in a swaddling-cloth.
   “Imagine! Today, when I entered the classroom” (she works in the Child-Educational
Refinery), “I suddenly noticed a caricature upon the blackboard. Indeed! I assure you! They
had pictured me in the form of a fish! Perhaps I really—”
   “No, no! Why do you say that?” I hastily exclaimed. When one was near her, it was clear
indeed that she had nothing resembling gills. No. When I referred to gills in these pages I
was certainly irreverent.
   “Oh, after all it does not matter. But the act as such, think of it! Of course I called the
Guardians at once. I love children very much and I think that the most difficult and the most
exalted love is—cruelty. You understand me, of course.”
   “Certainly!” Her sentence so closely resembled my thoughts! I could not refrain from
reading to her a passage from my Record No. 20, beginning “Quietly, metallically, distinctly,
do the thoughts” … etc. I felt her brownish-pink cheeks twitching and coming closer and
closer to me. Suddenly I felt in my hands her firm, dry, even slightly prickling fingers.
   “Give, give this to me please. I shall have it phonographed and make the children learn it
by heart. Not only your Venerians need all this, but we ourselves right now, tomorrow, day-
after-tomorrow.”
   She glanced around and said in a very low voice:
   “Have you heard, they say that on the Day of Unanimity—”
   I sprang to my feet.
   “What? What do they say? What—on the Day of Unanimity?”
   The coziness of my room, its very walls, seemed to have vanished. I felt myself thrown
outside, where the tremendous, shaggy wind was tossing about and where the slanting
clouds of dusk were descending lower and lower. …
   U- boldly and firmly grasped me by the shoulders. I even noticed how her fingers,
responding to my emotion, trembled slightly.
   “Sit down, dear, and don’t be upset. They say many things; must we believe them all?
Moreover, if only you need me, I shall be near you on that day. I shall leave the
schoolchildren with someone else and I shall stay with you, for you, dear, you too are a
child and you need. …”
   “No, no!” (I raised my hands in protest). “Not for anything! You really think then that I am
a child and that I cannot do without a. … Oh, no! Not for anything in the world.” (I must
confess I had other plans for that day!)
   She smiled. The wording of that smile apparently was: “Oh, what a stubborn, what a
stubborn boy!” She sat down, eyelids lowered. Her hands modestly busied themselves with
fixing the fold of the unif which fell again between her knees, and suddenly, about
something entirely different, she said:
   “I think I must decide … for your sake. … But I implore you, do not hurry me. I must
think it over.”
   I did not hurry her, although I realized that I ought to have been delighted, as there is no
greater honor than to crown someone’s evening years.
   … All night strange wings were about. I walked and protected my head with my hands
from those wings. And a chair, not like ours, but an ancient chair, came in with a horse-like
gait: first the right fore- and left hind-leg, then the left fore- and right hind-leg. It rushed to
my bed and crawled into it, and I liked that wooden chair, although it made me
uncomfortable and caused me some pain.
   It is very strange; is it really impossible to find any cure for this dream-sickness, or to
make it rational, perhaps even useful?
                            RECORD TWENTY-TWO
Please imagine that you stand at the seashore. The waves go rhythmically up, down, up. …
Suddenly when they have risen they remain in that position, benumbed, torpid! It was just
as weird and unnatural when everything became confused and our regular walk which is
prescribed by the Tables, suddenly came to an end. The last time such a thing happened
was 119 years ago, when according to our historians a meteorite fell hissing and fuming
into the very midst of the marchers. We were walking yesterday as usual, that is like
warriors on the Assyrian monuments, a thousand heads and two composite, integrated legs
and two swinging integrated arms. At the end of the avenue where the Accumulating Tower
was formidably resounding, a quadrangle appeared: on the sides, in front and behind—
guards; in the centre three Numbers. Their unifs were already stripped of the golden State
badges; everything was painfully clear. The enormous dial on the top of the Tower looked
like a face; it bent down from the clouds and spitting down its seconds, it waited with
indifference. It showed six minutes past thirteen exactly. There was some confusion in the
quadrangle. I was very close and I saw the most minute details. I clearly remember a thin,
long neck and on the temple a confused net of small blue veins like rivers on the map of a
small unfamiliar world, and that unknown world was apparently still a very young man. He
evidently noticed someone in our ranks; he stopped, rose upon his tiptoes and stretched
his neck. One of the guards snapped his back with the bluish spark of the electric whip—he
squealed in a thin voice like a puppy. The distinct snaps followed each other at intervals of
approximately two seconds; a snap and a squeal, a snap and a squeal. … We continued to
walk as usual, rhythmically, in our Assyrian manner. I watched the graceful zigzags of the
electric sparks and thought: “Human society is constantly improving, as it should. How ugly
a tool was the ancient whip and how much beauty there is—”
   At that moment, like a nut flying from a wheel revolving at full speed, a female Number,
thin, flexible and tense, tore herself from our rows, and with a cry, “Enough! Don’t you
dare!” she threw herself straight into the quadrangle. It was like the meteorite of 119 years
ago; our march came to a standstill and our rows appeared like the gray crests of waves
frozen by sudden cold. For a second I looked at that woman’s figure with the eye of a
stranger as all the others did. She was no Number any longer; she was only a human being
and she existed for us only as a substantiation of the insult which she cast upon the United
State. But a motion of hers, her bending while twisting to the left upon her hips, revealed to
me clearly who she was. I knew, I knew that body, flexible as a whip! My eyes, my lips, my
hands knew it; at that moment I was absolutely certain. … Two of the guards dashed to
catch her. One more moment and that limpid mirror-like point on the pavement would
have become the point of meeting of their trajectories, and she would have been caught! My
heart fell, stopped. Without thinking whether it was permissible or not, whether it was
reasonable or absurd, I threw myself straight to that point.
   I felt thousands of eyes bulging with horror fixed upon me but that only added a sort of
desperately joyful power to that wild being with hairy paws which arose in me and ran
faster and faster. Two more steps—she turned around—
   I saw a quivering face covered with freckles, red eyebrows. … It was not she! Not I-330!
   A rabid, quivering joy took hold of me. I wanted to shout something like: “Catch her! Get
her, that—” But I heard only my whisper. A heavy hand was already upon my shoulder; I
was caught and led away. I tried to explain to them:
   “But listen, you must understand that I thought that. …”
   But could I explain even to myself all the sickness which I have described in these pages?
My light went out; I waited obediently. As a leaf that is torn from its branch by a sudden
gust of wind falls humbly, but on its way down turns and tries to catch every little branch,
every fork, every knot; so I tried to catch every one of the silent, globe-like heads, or the
transparent ice of the walls, or the blue needle of the Accumulating Tower which seemed to
pierce the clouds.
   At that moment, when a heavy curtain was about to separate from me this beautiful
world, I noticed not far away a familiar, enormous head gliding over the mirror surface of
the pavement and wagging its winglike ears. I heard a familiar, flat voice:
   “I deem it my duty to testify that Number D-503 is ill and is unable to regulate his
emotions. Moreover, I am sure that he was led by natural indignation—”
   “Yes! Yes!” I exclaimed, “I even shouted ‘catch her!’ ”
   From behind me: “You did not shout anything.”
   “No, but I wanted to. I swear by the Well-Doer, I wanted to!”
   For a second I was bored through by the gray, cold, drill-eyes. I don’t know whether he
believed that what I said was the truth (almost!), or whether he had some secret reason for
sparing me for a while, but he wrote a short note, handed it to one of those who had held
me and again I was free. That is, I was again included in the orderly, endless, Assyrian rows
of Numbers.
   The quadrangle, the freckled face and the temple with the map of blue veinlets
disappeared forever around the corner. We walked again—a million-headed body; and in
each one of us resided that humble joyfulness with which in all probability molecules,
atoms and phagocytes live.
   In the ancient days the Christians understood this feeling; they are our only (though very
imperfect) direct forerunners. The greatness of the “Church of the United Flock” was
known to them. They knew that resignation is virtue, and pride—a vice; that “We” is from
God, “I” from the devil.
   I was walking, keeping step with the others yet separated from them. I was still
trembling from the emotion just felt, like a bridge over which a thundering ancient steel
train has passed a moment before. I felt myself. To feel one’s self, to be conscious of one’s
personality, is the lot of an eye inflamed by a cinder, or an infected finger, or a bad tooth. A
healthy eye, or finger, or tooth is not felt; it is nonexistent as it were. Is it not clear then,
that consciousness of oneself is a sickness?
   Apparently I am no longer a phagocyte which quietly, in a businesslike way devours
microbes (microbes with freckled faces and blue temples); apparently I am myself a
microbe, and she too, I-330, is a microbe, a wonderful, diabolic microbe! It is quite possible
that there are already thousands of such microbes among us, still pretending to be
phagocytes, as I pretend. What if today’s accident, although in itself not important, is only a
beginning, only the first meteorite of a shower of burning and thundering stones which the
infinite may have poured out upon our glass paradise?
                           RECORD TWENTY-THREE
They say there are flowers that bloom only once in a hundred years. Why not suppose the
existence of flowers that bloom only once a thousand years? We may have known nothing
about them until now only because today is the “once in a thousand years”?
   Happy and dizzy I walked downstairs to the controller on duty and quickly under my
gaze all around me and silently the thousand-year-old buds burst, and everything was
blooming: armchairs, shoes, golden badges, electric bulbs, someone’s dark heavy eyes, the
polished columns of the banisters, the handkerchief which someone lost on the stairs, the
small, inkblotted desk of the controller and the tender brown, somewhat freckled cheeks of
U-. Everything seemed not ordinary, new, tender, rosy, moist. U- took the pink stub from
me while the blue, aromatic moon, hanging from an unseen branch, shone through the glass
of the wall and over the head of U-. With a solemn gesture I pointed my finger and said:
   “The moon. You see?”
   U- glanced at me, then at the number of the stub and again made that familiar,
charmingly innocent movement with which she fixes the fold of the unif between her
knees.
   “You look abnormal and ill, dear. Abnormality and illness are the same thing. You are
killing yourself. And no one would tell you that, no one!”
   That “No one” was certainly equivalent to the number on the stub—I-330. This thought
was confirmed by an inkblot which fell close to the figure 330. Dear, wonderful U-! You are
right, of course. I am not reasonable. I am sick. I have a soul. I am a microbe. But is
blooming—not a sickness? Is it not painful when the buds are bursting? And don’t you
think that spermatozoa are the most terrible of all microbes?
   Back upstairs to my room. In the widely open cup of the armchair was I-330. I, on the
floor, embracing her limbs, my head on her lap. We were silent. Everything was silent. Only
the pulse was audible. Like a crystal I was dissolving in her, in I-330. I felt most distinctly
how the polished facets which limited me in space were slowly thawing, melting away. I
was dissolving in her lap, in her, and I became at once smaller and larger and larger,
unembraceable. For she was not she but the whole universe. For a second I and that
armchair near the bed, transfixed with joy, we were one. And the wonderfully smiling old
woman at the gate of the Ancient House, and the wild debris beyond the Green Wall, and
some strange silver wreckage on a black background, dozing like the old woman and the
slam of a door in the distance—all this was within me, was listening to my pulse and
soaring through the happiest of seconds.
   In absurd, confused, overflowing words I attempted to tell her that I was a crystal and
that there was a door in me, and that I felt how happy the armchair was. But something
nonsensical came out of the attempt and I stopped. I was ashamed. And suddenly:
   “Dear I-! Forgive me! I understand nothing. I talk so foolishly!”
   “And why should you think that foolishness is not fine? If we had taken pains to educate
human foolishness through centuries, as we have done with our intelligence, it might
perhaps have been transformed into something very precious.”
   Yes, I think she is right! How could she be wrong at that moment?
   “… And for this foolishness of yours and for what you did yesterday during the walk, I
love you the more, much more.”
   “Then why did you torture me? Why would you not come? Why did you send me the pink
check and make me—?”
   “Perhaps I wanted to test you. Perhaps I must be sure that you will do anything I wish,
that you are completely mine.”
   “Yes, completely.”
   She took my face, my whole self, between her palms, lifted my head:
   “And how about ‘It is the duty of every honest Number’? Eh?”
   Sweet, sharp, white teeth—a smile. In the open cup of the armchair she was like a bee—
sting and honey combined.
   Yes, duty. … I turned over in my mind the pages of my records; indeed there is not a
thought about the fact that strictly speaking I should. …
   I was silent. Exaltedly (and probably stupidly) I smiled, looking into the pupils of her
eyes. I followed first one eye and then the other and in each of them I saw myself, a
millimetric self imprisoned in those tiny rainbow cells. Then again the lips and the sweet
pain of blooming.
   In each Number of the United State there is an unseen metronome which tick-tocks
silently; without looking at the clock we know exactly the time of day within five minutes.
But now my metronome had stopped and I did not know how much time had passed. In
fright I grasped my badge with its clock from under the pillow. Glory be to the Well-Doer! I
had twenty minutes more! But those minutes were such tiny, short ones! They ran! And I
wanted to tell her so many things. I wanted to tell her all about myself; about the letter
from O- and about that terrible evening when I gave her a child; and for some reason also
about my childhood, about our mathematician Plappa and about the square-root of minus
one; and how, when I attended the glorification on the Day of Unanimity for the first time in
my life, I wept bitterly because there was an ink-stain on my unif—on such a holy day!
   I-330 lifted her head. She leaned on her elbow. In the corners of her lips two long, sharp
lines and the dark angle of lifted eyebrows—a cross.
   “Perhaps on that day …” her brow grew darker; she took my hand and pressed it hard.
“Tell me, will you ever forget me? Will you always remember me?”
   “But why such talk? What is it, I-, dear?”
   She was silent. And her eyes were already sliding past me, through me, away into the
distance. I suddenly heard the wind beating the glass with its enormous wings. Of course it
had been blowing all the while but I had not noticed it until then. And for some reason
those cawing birds over the Green Wall came to my mind.
  I-330 shook her head with a gesture of throwing something off. Once more she touched
me for a second with her whole body, as an aero before landing touches the ground for a
second with all the tension of a recoiling spring.
  “Well, give me my stockings, quick!”
  The stockings were on the desk, on the open manuscript, on page 124. Being in haste I
caught some of the pages and they were scattered over the floor so that it was hard to put
them back in the proper order. Moreover, even if I put them in that order there will be no
real order; there are obstacles to that anyway, some undiscoverable unknowns.
  “I can’t bear it,” I said, “You are here, near me, yet you seem to be behind an opaque
ancient wall; through that wall I hear a rustle and voices; I cannot make out the words, I
don’t know what is there. I cannot bear it. You seem always to withhold something from
me; you have never told me what kind of a place it was where I found myself that day
beneath the Ancient House. Where did those corridors lead? Why was the doctor there—or
perhaps all that never happened?”
  I-330 put her hands on my shoulders and slowly entered deeply into my eyes.
  “You want to know all?”
  “Yes, I do.”
  “And you would not be afraid to follow me anywhere? Wherever I should lead you?”
  “Anywhere!”
  “All right then. I promise you, after the holiday, if only. … Oh yes, there is your Integral. I
always forget to ask; will it soon be completed?”
  “No. ‘If only’ what? Again! ‘If only’ what?”
  She, already at the door: “You shall see.”
  I was again alone. All that she left behind her was a barely perceptible scent, similar to
that of a sweet, dry, yellow dust of flowers from behind the Green Wall; also, sunk deeply
within me, question marks like small hooks similar to those the ancients used for fishing
(vide the Prehistoric Museum).
  … Why did she suddenly ask about the Integral?
                             RECORD TWENTY-FOUR
I am like a motor set in motion at a speed of too many revolutions per second, the bearings
have become too hot and in one more minute the molten metal will begin to drip and
everything will go to the devil. Cold water! Quick! Some logic! I pour pailfuls of it, but my
logic merely sizzles on the hot metal and disappears in the air in the form of vapor.
   Of course it is clear that in order to establish the true meaning of a function, one must
establish its limit. It is also clear that yesterday’s “dissolution in the universe” taken to its
limit is death. For death is exactly the most complete dissolution of the self in the universe.
Hence: L = f (D), love is the function of death.
   Yes, exactly, exactly! That is why I am afraid of I-330; I struggle against her, I don’t
want. … But why is it that within me “I don’t want to” and “I want to” stand side by side?
That is the chief horror of the matter; I continue to long for that happy death of yesterday.
The horror of it is that even now, when I have integrated the logical function, when it
becomes evident that the latter contains death hidden in it, nevertheless I long for it with
my lips, arms, breast, with every millimeter. …
   Tomorrow is the Day of Unanimity. She will certainly be there and I shall see her, though
from a distance. That distance will be painful to me, for I must be, I am inevitably drawn,
close to her, so that her hands, her shoulder, her hair. … I long for even that pain. … Let it
come. … Great Well-Doer! How absurd to desire pain! Who is ignorant of the simple fact
that pains are negative items which reduce that sum total we call happiness? Consequently
… Well, no “consequently” … Emptiness. … Nakedness!
                                          The Same Evening.
Through the glass wall of the house I see a disquieting, windy, feverishly pink, sunset. I
move my armchair to avoid that pinkness and turn over these pages, and I find I am
forgetting that I write this not for myself but for you unknown people whom I love and pity,
for you who still lag centuries behind, below. Let me tell you about the Day of Unanimity,
about that Great Day. I think that day for us is what Easter was for the ancients. I remember
I used to prepare an hour-calendar the eve of that day; solemnly I would cross out every
time the figure of the hour elapsed; nearer by one hour! one hour less to wait! … If I were
certain that nobody would discover it, I assure you I should now too, make out such a
calendar and carry it with me, and I should watch how many hours remain until tomorrow,
when I shall see, at least from a distance. …
   (I was interrupted. They brought me a new unif from the shop. As is customary, new
unifs are given to us for tomorrow’s celebration. Steps in the hall, exclamations of joy,
noises.)
   I shall continue; tomorrow I shall see the same spectacle which we see year after year
and which always awakes in us fresh emotions, as though we saw it for the first time: an
impressive throng of piously lifted arms. Tomorrow is the day of the yearly election of the
Well-Doer. Tomorrow we shall again hand over to our Well-Doer the keys to the
impregnable fortress of our happiness. Certainly this in no way resembles the disorderly,
unorganized election-days of the ancients, on which (it seems so funny!) they did not even
know in advance the result of the election. To build a state on some non-discountable
contingencies, to build blindly—what could be more nonsensical? Yet centuries were
required to pass before this was understood!
   Needless to say, we in this respect as in all others have no place for contingencies;
nothing unexpected can happen. The elections themselves have rather a symbolic meaning.
They remind us that we are a united, powerful organism of millions of cells, that—, to use
the language of the “gospel” of the ancients, we are a united church. The history of the
United State knows not a single case in which upon this solemn day even a solitary voice
has dared to violate the magnificent unison.
   They say that the ancients used to conduct their elections secretly, stealthily like thieves.
Some of our historians assert even that they would come to the electoral celebrations
completely masked. Imagine the weird, fantastic spectacle! Night. A plaza. Along the walls
the stealthily creeping figures covered with mantles. The red flame of torches dancing in
the wind. … Why was such secrecy necessary? It has never been satisfactorily explained.
Probably it resulted from the fact that elections were associated with some mystic and
superstitious, perhaps even criminal ceremonies. We have nothing to conceal or to be
ashamed of; we celebrate our election openly, honestly, in daylight. I see them all vote for
the Well-Doer and everybody sees me vote for the Well-Doer. How could it be otherwise,
since “all” and “I” are one “we”? How ennobling, sincere, lofty, is this compared with the
cowardly, thievish “secrecy” of the ancients! Moreover, how much more expedient! For
even admitting for a moment the impossible, that is the outbreak of some dissonance in our
customary unity, in that case our unseen Guardians are always right there among us, are
they not, to register the Numbers who would fall into error and save them from any further
false steps? The United State is theirs, the Numbers’! And besides. …
   Through the wall to my left a she-number before the mirror-door of the closet; she is
hastily unbuttoning her unif. For a second, swiftly—eyes, lips, two sharp, pink … the
curtains fell. Within me instantly awoke all that happened yesterday and now I no longer
know what I meant to say by “besides. …” I no longer wish to;—I cannot. I want one thing. I
want I-330. I want her every minute, every second, to be with me, with no one else. All that
I wrote about Unanimity is of no value; it is not what I want; I have a desire to cross it out,
to tear it to pieces and throw it away. For I know (be it a sacrilege, yet it is the truth), that a
glorious Day is possible only with her and only then when we are side by side, shoulder to
shoulder. Without her the Sun of tomorrow will appear to me only as a little circle cut out
of a tin sheet, and the sky a sheet of tin painted blue, and I myself … I snatched the
telephone receiver.
   “I-330, are you there?”
   “Yes, it is I. Why so late?”
   “Perhaps not too late yet. I want to ask you … I want you to be with me tomorrow—
dear!”
   “Dear” I said in a very low voice. And for some reason a thing I saw this morning at the
docks flashed through my mind: just for fun someone put a watch under the hundred-ton
sledgehammer. … A swing, a breath of wind in the face and the silent hundred-ton, knife-
like weight on the breakable watch. …
   A silence. I thought I heard someone’s whisper in I-330’s room. Then her voice:
   “No, I cannot. Of course you understand that I myself. … No, I cannot. ‘Why?’ You shall
see tomorrow.”
   Night.
                             RECORD TWENTY-FIVE
The descent from heaven—The greatest catastrophe in history—The known ——— is ended.
At the beginning all arose, and the hymn, like a solemn mantle, slowly waved above our
heads. Hundreds of tubes of the Musical Tower and millions of human voices. For a second I
forgot everything; I forgot that alarming something at which I-330 hinted in connection
with today’s celebration; I think I even forgot about her. At that moment I was the very
same little boy who once wept because of a tiny ink-stain on his unif, which no one else
could see. Even if it be so, if nobody sees that I am covered with black, ineffaceable stains, I
know it, do I not? I know that there should be no place for a criminal like me among these
frank open faces. What if I should rush forward and shout out all at once everything about
myself! The end might follow. Let it! At least for a second I would feel myself clear and
clean and senseless like that innocent blue sky. …
   All eyes were directed upward; in the pure morning blue, still moist with the tears of
night, a small dark spot appeared. Now it was dark, now bathed in the rays of the sun. It
was He, descending to us from the sky, He—the new Jehovah—in an aero, He, as wise and
as lovingly cruel as the Jehovah of the ancients. Nearer and nearer, and higher toward him
were drawn millions of hearts. Already he saw us. And in my mind with Him I looked over
everything from the heights: concentric circles of stands marked with dotted blue lines of
unifs—like circles of a spiderweb strewn with microscopic suns (the shining of the badges).
And in the centre there soon the wise white spider would occupy his place—the Well-Doer
clad in white, the Well-Doer who wisely tangled our hands and feet in the salutary net of
happiness.
   His magnificent descent from the sky was accomplished. The brassy Hymn came to
silence; all sat down. At once I perceived that everything was really a very thin spiderweb,
the threads of which were stretched tense and trembling, and it seemed that in a moment
those threads might break and something improbable. …
   I half rose and looked around, and I met many lovingly-worried eyes which passed from
one face to another. I saw someone lifting his hand and almost imperceptibly waving his
fingers—he was making signs to another. The latter replied with a similar finger-sign. And
a third. … I understood; they were the Guardians. I understood; they were alarmed by
something—the spiderweb was stretched and trembling. And within me as if tuned to the
same wavelength of a radio, within me there was a corresponding quiver.
   On the platform a poet was reciting his pre-electoral ode. I could not hear a single word; I
only felt the rhythmic swing of the hexametric pendulum, and with its every motion I felt
how nearer and nearer there was approaching some hour set for. … I continued to turn
over face after face like pages but I could not find the one, the only one, I was seeking, the
one I needed to find at once, as soon as possible, for one more swing of the pendulum
and. …
   It was he, certainly it was he! Below, past the main platform, gliding over the sparkling
glass, the ear-wings flapped by, the running body gave a reflection of a double-curved S-,
like a noose which was rolling toward some of the intricate passages among the stands. S-,
I-330—there is some thread between them. I have always felt some thread between them. I
don’t know yet what that thread is but some day I shall untangle it. I planted my gaze on
him; he was rushing farther away, behind him that invisible thread. … There he stopped …
there. … I was pierced, twisted together into a knot as if by a lightning-like, many-volted
electric discharge; in my row, not more than 40° from me, S- stopped and bowed. I saw I-
330 and beside her the smiling, repellent, negro-lipped R-13.
   My first thought was to rush to her and cry, “Why with him? Why did you not want … ?”
But the salutary invisible spiderweb bound fast my hands and feet; so, gritting my teeth
together I sat stiff as iron, my gaze fixed upon them. A sharp physical pain at my heart. I
remember my thought: “if nonphysical causes effect physical pain, then it is clear that. …”
   I regret that I did not come to any conclusion. I remember only that something about
“soul” flashed through my mind, a purely nonsensical ancient expression, “His soul fell into
his boots” passed through my head. My heart sank. The hexameter came to an end. It was
about to start. What “It”?
   The five minute pre-election recess established by custom. The custom-established pre-
electional silence. But now it was not that pious, really prayer-like silence that it usually
was. Now it was as in the ancient days when there were no Accumulating Towers, when the
sky, still untamed in those days, would roar from time to time with its “storms.” It was like
the “lull before the storm” of the ancient days. The air seemed to be made of transparent,
vaporized cast-iron. One wanted to breathe with one’s mouth wide open. My hearing,
intense to painfulness, registered from behind a mouse-like, gnawing, worried whisper.
Without lifting my eyes I saw those two, I-330 and R-13, side by side, shoulder to
shoulder—and on my knees my trembling, foreign, hateful, hairy hands. …
   Everybody was holding a badge with a clock in his hands. One. … Two. … Three. … Five
minutes. From the main platform a cast-iron, slow voice:
   “Those in favor shall lift their hands.”
   If only I dared to look straight into his eyes as formerly! Straight and devotedly, and
think: “Here I am, my whole self! Take me!” But now I did not dare. I had to make an effort
to raise my hand, as if my joints were rusty.
   A whisper of millions of hands. Someone’s subdued “Ah!” and I felt something was
coming, falling heavily, but I could not understand what it was, and I did not have the
strength or courage to take a look. …
   “Those opposed?” …
   This was always the most magnificent moment of our celebration: all would remain
sitting motionless, joyfully bowing their heads under the salutary yoke of that Number of
Numbers. But now, to my horror again I heard a rustle; light as a sigh, yet it was more
distinct even than the brass tube of the Hymn. Thus the last sigh in a man’s life, around him
people with their faces pale and with drops of cold sweat upon their foreheads. … I lifted
my eyes and. …
   It took one hundredth of a second only; I saw thousands of hands arise “opposed” and
fall back. I saw the pale cross-marked face of I-330 and her lifted hand. Darkness came
upon my eyes.
   Another hundredth of a second, silence. Quiet. The pulse. Then, as if at the sign of some
mad conductor, from all the stands rattling, shouting, a whirlwind of unifs lifted by the
rush, the perplexed figures of the Guardians running to and fro. Someone’s heels in the air
near my eyes and close to those heels someone’s wide-open mouth tearing itself by an
inaudible scream. For some reason this picture remains particularly distinct in my
memory: thousands of mouths noiselessly yelling as if on the screen of a monstrous
cinema. Also as if on a screen, somewhere below at a distance, for a second—O-90, pressed
against the wall in a passage, her lips white, defending her abdomen with her crossed arms.
She disappeared as if washed away by a wave, or else I simply forgot her because. …
   This not on the screen any more but within me, within my compressed heart, within the
rapidly pulsating temples; over my head, somewhat to the left, R-13 suddenly jumped upon
a bench, all sprinkling, red, rabid. In his arms was I-330, pale, her unif torn from shoulder
to breast, red blood on white. She firmly held him round the neck, and he with huge leaps
from bench to bench, repellent and agile, like a gorilla, was carrying her away upward.
   As if it were in a fire of ancient days, everything became red around me. Only one thing in
my head: to jump after them, to catch them. At this moment I cannot explain to myself the
source of that strength within me, but like a battering-ram I broke through the crowd, over
somebody’s shoulders, over a bench and I was there in a moment and caught R-13 by the
collar:
   “Don’t you dare! Don’t you dare, I say! Immediately—”
   Fortunately no one could hear my voice, as everyone was shouting and running.
   “Who is it? What is the matter? What—” R-13 turned around; his sprinkling lips were
trembling. He apparently thought it was one of the Guardians.
   “What? I do not want—I won’t allow—Put her down at once!”
   But he only sprinkled angrily with his lips, shook his head and ran on. Then I … I am
terribly ashamed to write all this down but I believe I must, so that you, my unknown
readers, may make a complete study of my disease. … Then I hit him over the head with all
my might. You understand? I hit him. This I remember distinctly. I remember also a feeling
of liberation that followed my action, a feeling of lightness in my whole body.
   I-330 slid quickly out of his arms.
   “Go away!” she shouted to R-, “Don’t you see that he—? Go!”
   R-13 showed his white negro teeth, sprinkled into my face some word, dived down and
disappeared. And I picked up I-330, pressed her firmly to myself and carried her away.
   My heart was beating forcibly. It seemed enormous. And with every beat it would splash
out such a thundering, such a hot, such a joyful wave! A flash: “Let them, below there, let
them toss and rush and yell and fall; what matter if something has fallen, if something has
been shattered to dust?—Little matter! Only to remain this way and carry her, carry and
carry. …”
                               The Same Evening, Twenty-Two O’Clock.
I hold my pen with great difficulty. Such an extraordinary fatigue after all the dizzying
events of this morning. Is it possible that the strong, salutary, centuries-old walls of the
United State have fallen? Is it possible that we are again without a roof over our heads, back
in the wild state of freedom like our remote ancestors? Is it possible that we have lost our
Well-Doer? “Opposed!” On the Day of Unanimity—opposed! I am ashamed of them,
painfully, fearfully ashamed. … But who are “they”? And who am I? “They,” “We” … ? Do I
know?
    I shall continue.
    She was sitting where I had brought her on the uppermost glass bench which was hot
from the sun. Her right shoulder and the beginning of the wonderful and incalculable curve
were uncovered—an exceedingly thin serpent of blood. She seemed not to be aware of the
blood, or that her breast was uncovered. No, I will say rather: she seemed to see all that and
seemed to feel that it was essential to her, that if her unif were buttoned she would have
torn it, she would have. …
    “And tomorrow!” She breathed the words through sparkling white clenched teeth,
“Tomorrow, nobody knows what … do you understand? Neither I nor anyone else knows;
it is unknown! Do you realize what a joy it is? Do you realize that all that was certain has
come to an end? Now … things will be new, improbable, unforeseen!”
    Below the human waves were still foaming, tossing, roaring, but they seemed to be very
far away, and to be growing more and more distant. For she was looking at me. She slowly
drew me into herself through the narrow, golden windows of her pupils. We thus remained
silent for a long while. And for some reason I recalled how once I watched some queer
yellow pupils through the Green Wall, while above the Wall birds were soaring (or was this
another time?).
    “Listen, if nothing particular happens tomorrow, I shall take you there; do you
understand?”
    No, I did not understand but I nodded in silence. I was dissolved, I became infinitesimal, a
geometrical point. …
    After all, there is some logic—a peculiar logic of today, in this state of being a point. A
point has more unknowns than any other entity. If a point should start to move, it might
become thousands of curves, or hundreds of solids.
    I was afraid to budge. What might I have become if I had moved? It seemed to me that
everybody like myself was afraid now of even the most minute of motions.
    At this moment, for instance, as I sit and write, everyone is sitting hidden in his glass cell,
expecting something. I do not hear the buzzing of the elevators, usual at this hour, or
laughter or steps, from time to time Numbers pass in couples through the hall, whispering,
on tiptoe. …
    What will happen tomorrow? What will become of me tomorrow?
                              RECORD TWENTY-SIX
Morning. Through the ceiling the sky is as usual firm, round, red-cheeked. I think I should
have been less surprised had I found above some extraordinary quadrangular sun, or
people clad in many-colored dresses made of the skins of animals, or opaque walls of stone.
Then the world, our world, does still exist? Or is it only inertia? Is the generator already
switched out, while the armature is still roaring and revolving;—two more revolutions, or
three, and at the fourth will it die away?
   Are you familiar with that strange state in which you wake up in the middle of the night,
open your eyes into the darkness and then suddenly feel you are lost in the dark; you
quickly, quickly begin to feel around, to seek something familiar and solid, a wall, a lamp, a
chair? In exactly the same way I felt around, seeking in the Journal of the United State;
quickly, quickly—I found this:
“The celebration of the Day of Unanimity, long awaited by all, took place yesterday. The
same Well-Doer who so often proved his unshakeable wisdom, was unanimously reelected
for the forty-eighth time. The celebration was clouded by a little confusion, created by the
enemies of happiness, who by their action naturally lost the right to be the bricks for the
foundation of the renovated United State. It is clear to everybody that to take into
consideration their votes would mean to consider as a part of a magnificent, heroic
symphony the accidental cough of a sick person who happened to be in a concert hall.”
   Oh, great Sage! Is it really true that despite everything we are saved? What objection
indeed can one find to this most crystalline syllogism? And further on a few more lines:
“Today at twelve o’clock a joint meeting of the Administrative Bureau, Medical Bureau, and
Bureau of Guardians will take place. An important State decree is to be expected shortly.”
   No, the Walls still stand erect. Here they are! I can feel them. And that strange feeling of
being lost somewhere, of not knowing where I am—that feeling is gone. I am not surprised
any longer to see the sky blue and the sun round and all the Numbers going to work as
usual. …
   I walked along the avenue with a particularly firm resounding step. It seemed to me that
everyone else walked exactly like me. But at the crossing, on turning the corner, I noticed
people strangely shying away, going around the corner of a building sidewise, as if a pipe
had burst in the wall, as if cold water were spurting like a fountain on the sidewalk and it
was impossible to cross it.
   Another five or ten steps and I too felt a spurt of cold water that struck me and threw me
from the sidewalk; at a height of approximately two meters a quadrangular piece of paper
was pasted to the wall and on that sheet of paper—unintelligible, poisonously green
letters:
MEPHI
   And under the paper—an S-like curved back and wing-ears shaking with anger or
emotion. His right arm lifted as high as possible, his left arm hopelessly stretched out
backward like a hurt wing, he was trying to jump high enough to reach the paper and tear it
off but he was unable to do so. He was a fraction of an inch too short.
   Probably every one of the passersby had the same thought: “If I go to help him, I, only
one of the many, will he not think that I am guilty of something and that I am therefore
anxious to. …”
   I must confess, I had that thought. But remembering how many times he had proved my
real Guardian-angel and how often he had saved me, I stepped towards him and with
courage and warm assurance I stretched out my hand and tore off the sheet. S- turned
around. The little drills sank quickly into me to the bottom and found something there.
Then he lifted his left brow, winked toward the wall where “Mephi” had been hanging a
minute ago. The tail of his little smile twinkled even with a certain pleasure which greatly
surprised me. But why should I be surprised? A doctor always prefers a temperature of 40°
C and a rash to the slow, languid rise of the temperature during the period of incubation of
a disease; it enables him to determine the character of the disease. Mephi broke out today
on the walls like a rash. I understood his smile.
   In the passage to the underground railway, under our feet on the clean glass of the steps
again a white sheet: Mephi. And also on the walls of the tunnel and on the benches and on
the mirror of the car. (Apparently pasted on in haste as some were hanging on a slant.)
Everywhere the same white gruesome rash.
   I must confess that the exact meaning of that smile became clear to me only after many
days which were overfilled with the strangest and most unexpected events.
   The roaring of the wheels, distinct in the general silence, seemed to be the noise of
infected streams of blood. Some Number was inadvertently touched on the shoulder and he
started so that a package of papers fell out of his hands. To my left another Number was
reading a paper, his eyes fixed always on the same line; the paper perceptibly trembled in
his hands. I felt that everywhere, in the wheels, in the hands, in the newspapers, even in the
eyelashes, the pulse was becoming more and more rapid and I thought it probable that
today when I-330 and I should find ourselves there, the temperature would rise to 39°, 40°,
perhaps 41° and. …
   At the docks—the same silence filled with the buzzing of an invisible propeller. The
lathes were silent as if brooding. Only the cranes were moving almost inaudibly as if on
tiptoe, gliding, bending over, picking up with their tentacles the lumps of frozen air and
loading the tanks of the Integral. We are already preparing the Integral for a trial flight.
   “Well, shall we have her up in a week?” This was my question addressed to the Second
Builder. His face is like porcelain, painted with sweet blue and tender pink little flowers
(eyes and lips), but today those little flowers looked faded and washed-out. We were
counting aloud when suddenly I broke off in the midst of a word and stopped, my mouth
wide open; above the cupola, above the blue lump lifted by the crane, there was a scarcely
noticeable small white square. I felt my whole body trembling—perhaps with laughter. Yes!
I myself heard my own laughter. (Did you ever hear your own laughter?)
  “No, listen,” I said. “Imagine you are in an ancient aeroplane. The altimeter shows 5,000
meters. A wing breaks; you are dashing down like. … And on the way you calculate:
‘Tomorrow from twelve to two … from two to six … and dinner at five!’ Would it not be
absurd?”
  The little blue flowers began to move and bulge out. What if I were made of glass and he
could have seen what was going on within me at that moment? If he knew that some three
or four hours later. …
                           RECORD TWENTY-SEVEN
No headings. It is impossible!
I was alone in the endless corridors. In those same corridors. … A mute, concrete sky. Water
was dripping somewhere upon a stone. The familiar heavy opaque door—and the subdued
noise from behind it.
   She said she would come out at sixteen sharp. It was already five minutes, then ten, then
fifteen past sixteen. No one appeared. For a second I was my former self, horrified at the
thought that the door might open.
   “Five minutes more, and if she does not come out. …”
   Water was dripping somewhere upon a stone. No one about. With melancholy pleasure I
felt: “saved,” and slowly I turned and walked back along the corridor. The trembling dots of
the small lamps on the ceiling became dimmer and dimmer. Suddenly a quick rattle of a
door behind me. Quick steps, softly echoing from the ceiling and the walls. It was she, light
as a bird, panting somewhat from running.
   “I knew you would be here, you would come! I knew you—you. …”
   The spears of her eyelashes moved apart to let me in and … how can I describe what
effect that ancient, absurd and wonderful rite has upon me when her lips touch mine? Can I
find a formula to express that whirlwind which sweeps out of my soul everything,
everything save her? Yes, yes from my soul. You may laugh at me if you will.
   She made an effort to raise her eyelids and her slow words too came with an effort:
   “No. Now we must go.”
   The door opened. Old, worn steps. An unbearably multicolored noise, whistling and light.
…
Twenty-four hours have passed since then and everything seems to have settled in me, yet
it is most difficult for me to find words for even an approximate description. … It is as
though a bomb had exploded in my head. … Open mouths, wings, shouts, leaves, words,
stones, all these one after another in a heap. …
    I remember my first thought was: “Fast—back!” For it was clear to me that while I was
waiting there in the corridors, they somehow had blasted and destroyed the Green Wall,
and from behind it everything rushed in and splashed over our city which until then had
been kept clean of that lower world. I must have said something of this sort to I-330. She
laughed.
    “No, we have simply come out beyond the Green Wall.”
   Then I opened my eyes, and close to me, actually, I saw those very things which until
then not a single living Number had ever seen otherwise than depreciated a thousand
times, dimmed and hazy through the cloudy glass of the Wall.
   The Sun—it was no longer our light, evenly diffused over the mirror surface of the
pavements; it seemed an accumulation of living fragments, of incessantly oscillating, dizzy
spots which blinded the eyes. And the trees! Like candles rising into the very sky, or like
spiders which squatted upon the earth, supported by their clumsy paws, or like mute green
fountains. And all this was moving, jumping, rustling. Under my feet some strange little ball
was crawling. … I stood as though rooted to the ground. I was unable to take a step
because under my foot there was not an even plane, but (imagine!), something disgustingly
soft, yielding, living, springy, green! …
   I was dazed; I was strangled—yes, strangled; it is the best word to express my state. I
stood holding fast with both hands to a swinging branch.
   “It is nothing. It is all right. It is natural—for the first time. It will pass. Courage!”
   At I-330’s side bouncing dizzily on a green net—someone’s thinnest profile, cut out of
paper. No, not “someone’s.” I recognized him. I remembered. It was the doctor. I
understood everything very clearly. I realized that they both caught me beneath the arms
and laughingly dragged me forward. My legs twisted and glided. … Terrible noise, cawing,
stumps, yelling, branches, tree-trunks, wings, leaves, whistling. …
   The trees ran apart. A bright clearing. In the clearing, people, or perhaps to be more
exact, beings. Now comes the most difficult part to describe for this was beyond any bounds
of probability. It is clear to me now why I-330 was stubbornly silent about it before; I
should not have believed it, should not have believed even her. It is even possible that
tomorrow I shall not believe myself, shall not believe my own description in these pages.
   In the clearing, around a naked, skull-like rock—a noisy crowd of three or four
hundred … people. Well, let’s call them people. I find it difficult to coin new words. Just as
on the stands you recognize in the general accumulation of faces only those which are
familiar to you, so at first I recognized only our grayish-blue unifs. But one second later and
I saw distinctly and clearly among the unifs dark, red, golden, black, brown and white
humans—apparently they were humans. None of them had any clothes on, and their bodies
were covered with short, glistening hair, like that which may be seen on the stuffed horse
in the Prehistoric Museum. But their females had faces exactly, yes exactly, like the faces of
our women: tender, rosy and not overgrown with hair. Also their breasts were free of hair,
firm breasts of wonderful geometrical form. As to the males, only a part of their faces were
free from hair, like our ancestors’, and the organs of reproduction, similar to ours.
   All this was so unbelievable, so unexpected, that I stood there quietly (I assert positively
that I stood quietly), and looked around. Like a scale: overload one side sufficiently and
then you may gently put on the other as much as you will; the arrow will not move.
   Suddenly I felt alone. I-330 was no longer with me. I don’t know how nor where she
disappeared. Around me were only those, with their hair glistening like silk in the sunlight.
I caught someone’s warm, strong, dark shoulder.
   “Listen, please, in the name of the Well-Doer, could you tell me where she went? A while,
a minute ago she. …”
   Long-haired, austere eyebrows turned to me.
   “Sh … sh … silence!” He made a sign with his head towards the centre where there stood
the yellow, skull-like stone.
   There above the heads of all I saw her. The sun beat straight into my eyes, and because of
that she seemed coal-black, standing out on the blue cloth of the sky—a coal-black
silhouette on a blue background. A little higher the clouds were floating. And it seemed that
not the clouds but the rock itself, and she herself upon that rock, and the crowd and the
clearing—all were silently floating like a ship, and the earth was light and glided away from
under the feet. …
   “Brothers!” (It was she.) “Brothers, you all know that there inside the Wall, in the City,
they are building the Integral. And you know also that the day has come for us to destroy
that Wall and all other walls, so that the green wind may blow all over the earth, from end
to end. But the Integral is going to take these walls up into the heights to the thousands of
other worlds which every evening whisper to us with their lights through the black leaves
of night. …”
   Waves and foam and wind were beating the rock:
   “Down with the Integral! Down!”
   “No, brothers, not ‘down.’ The Integral must be ours. And it shall be ours. On the day
when it first sets sail into the sky, we shall be on board. For the Builder of the Integral is
with us. He left the walls, he came with me here in order to be with us. Long live the
Builder!”
   A second—and I was somewhere above everything. Under me: heads, heads, heads, wide
open yelling mouths, arms rising and falling. … There was something strange and
intoxicating in it all. I felt myself above everybody; I was—I—a separate world; I ceased to
be the usual item; I became unity. …
   Again I was below, near the rock, my body happy, shaken and rumpled, as after an
embrace of love. Sunlight, voices, and from above—the smile of I-330. A golden-haired
woman, her whole body silky-golden and diffusing an odor of different herbs, was near by.
She held a cup, apparently made of wood. She drank a little from it with her red lips and
then offered the cup to me. I closed my eyes and with avidity I drank the sweet cold prickly
sparks, pouring them down on the fire which burned within me.
   Soon afterward my blood and the whole world began to circulate a thousand times
faster; the earth seemed to be flying, light as down. And within me everything was simple,
light and clear. Only then I noticed on the rock the familiar, enormous letters: M E P H I, and
for some reason the inscription seemed to me necessary. It seemed to be a simple thread
binding everything together. A rather rough picture hewn in the rock; this too, seemed
comprehensible; it represented a youth with wings and with a transparent body, and in the
place ordinarily occupied by the heart—a blinding, red, blazing coal. Again, I understood
that coal, or no, I felt it as I felt without hearing every word of I-330 (she continued to speak
from above, from the rock), and I felt that all of them breathed one breath and that they
were all ready to fly somewhere like the birds over the Wall.
   From behind, from the confusion of breathing bodies—a loud voice:
   “But this is folly!”
   It seems to me it was I, yes, I am certain it was I, who then jumped on the rock; from
there I saw the sun, heads, a green sea on a blue background, and I cried:
   “Yes, yes, precisely. All must become insane; we must become insane as soon as possible!
We must; I know it.”
   I-330 was at my side. Her smile—two dark lines from the angles of her mouth directed
upward. … And within me a blazing coal. It was momentary, light, a little painful, beautiful.
… And later—only stray fragments that remained sticking in me. …
   … Very low and slowly a bird was moving. I saw it was living, like me. It was turning its
head now to the right and then to the left like a human being, and its round black eyes
screwed themselves into me. …
   … Then: a human back glistening with fur the color of ancient ivory;—a mosquito
crawling on that back, a mosquito with tiny transparent wings. The back twitched to chase
the mosquito away; it twitched again. …
   … And yet another thing: a shadow from the leaves, a woven, net-like shadow. Some lay
in that shadow, chewing something, something similar to the legendary food of the
ancients, a long yellow fruit and a piece of something dark. They put some of it in my hand,
and it seemed droll to me for I did not know whether I might eat it or not. …
   … And again: a crowd, heads, legs, arms, mouths, faces appearing for a second and
disappearing like bursting bubbles. For a second appeared (or perhaps it was only an
hallucination?) the transparent, flying wing-ears. …
   With all my might I pressed the hand of I-330. She turned to me.
   “What is the matter?”
   “He is here! I thought, I—”
   “Who?”
   “S-, a second ago, in the crowd.”
   The ends of the thin coal-black, brows moved to the temples—a smile like a sharp
triangle. I could not see clearly why she smiled. How could she smile?
   “But you understand, I-330, don’t you, you understand what it means if he, or one of
them is here?”
   “You are funny! How could it ever enter the heads of those within the Wall that we are
here? Remember; take yourself. Did you ever think it was possible? They are busy hunting
us there—let them! You are delirious!”
   Her smile was light and cheerful and I too, was smiling; the earth was drunken, cheerful,
light, floating. …
                            RECORD TWENTY-EIGHT
If your world is similar to the world of the ancients, then you may easily imagine that one
day you suddenly come upon a sixth or a seventh continent, upon some Atlantis, and you
find there unheard of cities, labyrinths, people flying through the air without the aid of
wings or aeros, stones lifted into the air by the power of a gaze—in brief, imagine that you
see things that cannot come to your mind even if you suffer from dream-sickness. That is
how I feel now. For you must understand that no one has ever gone beyond the Green Wall
since the Two Hundred Years’ War, as I already have told you.
   I know that it is my duty to you, my unknown friends, to give more details about that
unsuspected strange world which opened to me yesterday. But for the time being I am
unable to return to that subject. Everything is so novel, so novel it is like a rainstorm, and I
am not big enough to collect it all. I spread out the folds of my unif, my palms—and yet
pailfuls splash past me and only drops can reach these pages. …
   At first I heard behind me, behind the door, a loud voice. I recognized her voice, the voice
of I-330, tense, metallic—and another one, almost inflexible, like a wooden ruler, the voice
of U-. Then the door came open with a crack and both of them shot into the room. Shot is
the right word.
   I-330 put her hand on the back of my armchair and smiled over her shoulder but only
with her teeth, at U-. I should not care to stand before such a smile.
   “Listen,” she said to me, “this woman seems to have made it her business to guard you
from me like a little child. Is it with your permission?”
   “But he is a child. Yes! That is why he does not notice that you … that it is only in
order. … That all this is only a foul game! Yes! And it is my duty. …”
   For a second (in the mirror) the broken, trembling line of brows. I leaped, controlling
with difficulty the other self within me, the one with the hairy fists; with difficulty, pushing
every word through my teeth, I cried straight into her face, into her very gills:
   “Get out of here at once! Out! At once!”
   The gills swelled at first into brick-red lumps, then fell and became gray. She opened her
mouth to say something but without a word she slammed it shut and went out.
   I threw myself towards I-330.
   “Never, never will I forgive myself! She dared! You … but you don’t think, do you, that
you, that she. … This is all because she wants to register on me but I. …”
   “Fortunately she will not have time for that now. Besides, even a thousand like her. … I
don’t care. … I know you will not believe that thousand but only me. For after all that
happened yesterday, I am all yours, all, to the very end, as you wanted it. I am in your
hands; you can now at any moment. …”
   “What, ‘at any moment?’ ” (But at once I understood what. My blood rushed to my ears
and cheeks.) “Don’t speak about that, you must never speak about that! The other I, my
former self … but now. …”
   “How do I know? Man is like a novel: up to the last page one does not know what the end
will be. It would not be worth reading otherwise.”
   She was stroking my head. I could not see her face but I could tell by her voice that she
was looking somewhere very far into the distance; she hooked herself to that cloud which
was floating silently, slowly, no one knows where to.
   Suddenly she pushed me away with her hand, firmly but tenderly.
   “Listen. I came to tell you that perhaps we are now … our last days. … You know, don’t
you, that all Auditoriums are to be closed after tonight?”
   “Closed?”
   “Yes. I passed by and saw that in all Auditoriums preparations are going on: tables;
medics all in white. …”
   “But what does it all mean?”
   “I don’t know. Nobody knows as yet. That is the worst of it. I only feel the current is on,
the spark is jumping, and if not today, then tomorrow. … Yet perhaps they will not have
time. …”
   For a long while I have ceased to understand who are they and who we. I do not
understand what I want; do I want them to have or not to have enough time? One thing is
clear to me: I-330 is now on the very edge, on the very edge, and in one second more. …
   “But it is folly,” I said. “You, versus the United State! It is the same as if you should cover
the muzzle of a gun with your hands and expect that way to prevent the shot. … It is
absolute folly!”
   A smile.
   “ ‘We must all go insane—as soon as possible go insane.’ It was yesterday, do you
remember?”
   Yes, she was right; I had even written it down. Consequently it really took place. In
silence I looked into her face. At that moment the dark cross was especially distinct.
   “I-, dear, before it is too late. … If you want … I’ll leave everything, I’ll forget everything,
and we’ll go there beyond the Wall, to them. … I do not even know who they are. …”
   She shook her head. Through the dark windows of her eyes I saw within her a flaming
oven, sparks, tongues of flame and above them a heap of dry, tarry wood. It was clear to me
that it was too late, my words could be of no avail.
   She stood up. She would soon leave. Perhaps these were the last days, or the last
minutes. … I grasped her hand.
   “No, stay a little while longer … for the sake … for the sake. …”
   She slowly lifted my hand towards the light, my hairy paw which I detest. I wanted to
withdraw it but she held it tightly.
   “Your hand. … You undoubtedly don’t know and very few do know, that women from
here occasionally used to fall in love with them. Probably there are in you a few drops of
that blood of the sun and the woods. Perhaps that is why I. …”
   Silence. It was so strange that because of that silence, because of an emptiness, of
nothing, my heart should beat so wildly. I cried.
   “Ah, you shall not go yet! You shall not go until you tell me about them … for you love …
them, and I do not know even who they are, nor where they come from.”
   “Who are they? The half we have lost. H2 and O, two halves; but in order to get water, H2O,
creeks, seas, waterfalls, storms, it is necessary that those two halves be united.”
   I distinctly remember every movement of hers. I remember she picked up a glass triangle
from my table and while talking she pressed its sharp edge against her cheek; a white scar
would appear; then it would fill again and become pink and disappear. And it is strange
that I cannot remember her words, especially the beginning of the story. I remember only
different images and colors. At first, I remember, she told me about the Two Hundred
Years’ War. Red color. … On the green of the grass, on the dark clay, on the pale blue of the
snow—everywhere red ditches that would not become dry. Then yellow; yellow grass
burned by the sun, yellow naked wild-men and wild dogs side by side near swollen
cadavers of dogs or perhaps of men. All this, certainly beyond the Walls, for the City was
already the victor and it possessed already our present-day petroleum food. And at night …
down from the sky … heavy black folds. The folds would swing over the woods, the
villages—blackish-red slow columns of smoke. A dull moaning; endless strings of people
driven into the City to be saved by force and to be whipped into happiness.
   “… You knew almost all this.”
   “Yes, almost.”
   “But you did not know and only a few did, that a small part of them remained together
and stayed to live beyond the Wall. Being naked, they went into the woods. They learned
there from the trees, beasts, birds, flowers and sun. Hair soon grew over their bodies, but
under that hair they preserved their warm red blood. With you it was worse; numbers
covered your bodies; numbers crawled over you like lice. One ought to strip you of
everything, and naked you ought to be driven into the woods. You ought to learn how to
tremble with fear, with joy, with wild anger, with cold; you should pray to fire! And we
Mephi, we want. …”
   “Oh, wait a minute! ‘Mephi,’ what does it mean!”
   “Mephi? It is from Mephisto. You remember, there on the rock, the figure of the youth?
Or, no. I shall explain it to you in your own language and you will understand better: there
are two forces in the world, entropy and energy. One leads into blessed quietude, to happy
equilibrium, the other to the destruction of equilibrium, to torturingly perpetual motion.
Our, or rather your ancestors, the Christians, worshipped entropy like a God. But we are
not Christians, we. …”
   At that moment a slight whisper was suddenly heard, a knock at the door, and in rushed
that flattened man with the forehead low over his eyes, who several times had brought me
notes from I-330. He ran straight to us, stopped, panting like an air-pump, and could say
not a word, as he must have been running at top speed.
   “But tell me! What has happened?” I-330 grasped him by the hand.
   “They are coming here—” panted the air-pump, “with guards. … And with them that
what’s-his-name, the hunchback. …”
   “S-?”
   “Yes. They are in the house by this time. They’ll soon be here. Quick, quick!”
   “Nonsense, we have time!” I-330 was laughing, cheerful sparks in her eyes. It was either
absurd, senseless courage, or else there was something I did not yet understand.
   “I-, dear, for the sake of the Well-Doer! You must understand that this. …”
   “For the sake of the Well-Doer!” The sharp, triangle-smile.
   “Well … well, for my sake, I implore you!”
   “Oh, yes, I wanted to talk to you about some other matters. … Well, never mind. … We’ll
talk about them tomorrow.”
   And cheerfully (yes cheerfully) she nodded to me; the other came out for a second from
under his forehead’s awning and nodded also. I was alone.
   Quick! To my desk! I opened this manuscript, took the pen so that they should find me at
this work which is for the benefit of the United State. Suddenly I felt every hair on my head
living, separated, moving: “What if they should read, even one page of these most recently
written?”
   Motionless I sat at the table but everything around me seemed to be moving, as if the less
than microscopic movements of the atoms suddenly were magnified millions of times, and I
saw the walls trembling, my pen trembling and the letters swinging and fusing together.
“To hide them! But where?” Glass all around. “To burn them?” But they would notice the
fire through the corridor and in the neighboring room. Besides I felt unable, I felt too weak,
to destroy this torturing and perhaps dearest piece of my own self. …
   Voices from a distance (from the corridor) and steps. I had only time to snatch a handful
of pages and put them under me, and then as if soldered to the armchair, every atom of
which was quivering, I remained sitting, while the floor under my feet rolled like the deck
of a ship, up and down. …
   All shrunk together and hidden under the awning of my own forehead like that
messenger, I watched them stealthily; they were going from room to room, beginning at the
right end of the corridor. Nearer … nearer. … I saw that some sat in their rooms, torpid
like me; others would jump up and open their doors wide—lucky ones! If only I too,
could. …
   “The Well-Doer is the most perfect fumigation humanity needs, consequently no
peristalsis in the organism of the United State could. …” I was writing this nonsense,
pressing my trembling pen hard, and lower and lower my head bent over the table, and
within me some sort of crazy forge. … With my back I was listening … and I heard the click
of the doorknob. … A current of fresh air. … My armchair was dancing a mad dance. …
Only then, and even then with difficulty, I tore myself away from the page, turned my head
in the direction of the newcomers (how difficult it is to play a foul game!). In front of all was
S-, morose, silent, swiftly drilling with his eyes deep shafts within me, within my armchair
and within the pages which were twitching in my hands. Then for a second—familiar,
everyday faces at the door; one of them separated itself from the rest with its bulging,
pinkish-brown gills. …
   At once I recalled everything that happened in the same room half an hour ago and it was
clear to me that they would presently. …
   All my being was shriveling and pulsating in that fortunately opaque part of my body
with which I was covering the manuscript. U- came up to S-, gently plucked his sleeve and
said in a low voice:
   “This is D-503, the builder of the Integral. You have probably heard of him. He is always
like that, at his desk; does not spare himself at all!”
   … And I thought! … What a dear, wonderful woman! …
   S- slid up to me, bent over my shoulder toward the table. I covered the lines I had written
with my elbow but he shouted severely:
   “Show us at once what you have there, please!”
   Dying with shame, I held out the sheet of paper. He read it over, and I noticed a tiny smile
jump out of his eyes, jump down his face and slightly wagging its tail, perch upon the right
angle of his mouth. …
   “Somewhat ambiguous, yet. … Well, you may continue; we shall not disturb you any
more.”
   He went splashing towards the door as if in a ditch of water. And with every step of his I
felt coming back to me my legs, my arms, my fingers—my soul again distributed itself
evenly over my whole body; I breathed. …
   The last thing: U- lingered in my room to come back to me and say in my very ear in a
whisper: “It is lucky for you that I. …”
   I did not understand. What did she mean by that? The same evening I learned that they
led away three Numbers, although nobody speaks out loud about that, or about anything
that happened. This ostensible silence is due to the educational influence of the Guardians
who are ever present among us. Conversations deal chiefly with the quick fall of the
barometer and the forthcoming change in the weather.
                             RECORD TWENTY-NINE
It is strange: the barometer continues to fall yet there is no wind. There is quiet. Above, the
storm which we do not yet hear has begun. The clouds are rushing with a terrific speed.
There are few of them as yet; separate fragments; it is as if there above us an unknown city
were being destroyed and pieces of walls and towers were rushing down, coming nearer
and nearer with terrific speed, but it will take some days of rushing through the blue
infinite before they reach the bottom, that is us, below. And below there is silence.
    There are thin, incomprehensible, almost invisible threads in the air; every autumn they
are brought here from beyond the Wall. They float slowly, and suddenly you feel something
foreign and invisible on your face; you want to brush it off, but no, you cannot rid yourself
of it. You feel it especially near the Green Wall, where I was this morning. I-330 made an
appointment with me to meet her in the Ancient House in that “Apartment” of ours.
    I was not far from the rust-red, opaque mass of the Ancient House, when I heard behind
me short hasty steps and rapid breathing. I turned around and saw O-90 trying to catch up
to me. She seemed strangely and perfectly rounded. Her arms and breast, her whole body,
so familiar to me, was rounded out, stretching her unif. It seemed as though it would soon
tear the thin cloth and come out into the sun, into the light. I think that there in the green
debris, in springtime, the unseen sprouts try thus to tear their way through the ground in
order to emit their branches and leaves and to bloom.
    For a few seconds she shone into my face with her blue eyes in silence.
    “I saw you on the Day of Unanimity.”
    “I saw you, too.” I at once remembered; below, in a narrow passage she had stood,
pressing herself to the wall, protecting her abdomen with her arms, and automatically I
glanced now at her abdomen which rounded the unif. She must have noticed, for she
became pink, and with a rosy smile:
    “I am so happy … so happy! I am so full of … you understand, I am … I walk and I hear
nothing around me. … And all the while I listen within, within me. …”
    I was silent. Something foreign was shadowing my face and I was unable to rid myself of
it. Suddenly, all shining, light blue, she caught my hand; I felt her lips upon it. … It was for
the first time in my life. … It was some ancient caress as yet unknown to me. … And I was
so ashamed and it pained me so much that I swiftly, I think even roughly, pulled my hand
away.
    “Listen, you are crazy, it seems. … And anyway you … what are you happy about? Is it
possible that you forget what is ahead of you? If not now, then within a month or two. …”
   Her light went out, her roundness sagged and shrank. And in my heart an unpleasant,
even a painful compression, mixed with pity. Our heart is nothing else than an ideal pump:
a compression, i.e., a shrinking at the moment of pumping, is a technical absurdity. Hence it
is clear how essentially absurd, unnatural and pathological are all these “loves” and “pities,”
etc., etc., which create that compression. …
   Silence. To the left the cloudy green glass of the Wall. And just ahead the dark red mass.
Those two colors combined, gave me as a resultant what I thought was a splendid idea.
   “Wait! I know how to save you! I shall save you from. … To see one’s own child for a few
moments only and then be sent to death! No! You shall be able to bring it up! You shall
watch it and see it grow in your arms, and ripen like a fruit. …”
   Her body quivered and she seemed to have chained herself to me.
   “Do you remember that woman, I-330? That … of … of long ago? … Who during that
walk? … Well, she is now right here, in the Ancient House. Let us go to her and I assure you
that I shall arrange matters at once.”
   I already pictured us, I-330 and I, leading O-90 through the corridors … then how she
would be brought amidst flowers, grass, and leaves. … But O-90 stepped back, the little
horns of her rosy crescent trembling and bending downward.
   “Is she that same one?” she asked.
   “That is. …” I was confused for some reason. “Yes, of course … that very same. …”
   “And you want me to go to her, to ask her … to. … Don’t you ever dare to say another
word about it!”
   Leaning over, she walked away. … Then as if she remembered something, she turned
around and cried:
   “I shall die; be it so! And it is none of your business … what do you care?”
   Silence. From above pieces of blue towers and walls were falling downward with terrific
speed … they will have perhaps hours or days to fly through the infinite. … Unseen
threads were slowly floating through the air, planting themselves upon my face, and it was
impossible to brush them off, impossible to rid myself of them.
   I walked slowly toward the Ancient House and in my heart I felt that absurd, tormenting
compression. …
                                  RECORD THIRTY
Here is my conversation with I-330, which took place in the Ancient House yesterday in the
midst of loud noise, among colors which stifled the logical course of my thoughts, red,
green, bronze, saffron-yellow, orange colors. … And all the while under the motionless
marble smile of that snub-nosed ancient poet.
   I shall reproduce the conversation word by word, for it seems to me that it may have an
enormous and decisive importance for the fate of the United State—more than that, for the
fate of the universe. Besides, reading it, you my unknown readers, may find some
justification for me. I-330, without preliminaries, at once threw everything upon my head:
   “I know that the day after tomorrow the first trial trip of the Integral is to take place. On
that day we shall take possession of it.”
   “What! Day after tomorrow?”
   “Yes. Sit down and don’t be upset. We cannot afford to lose a minute. Among the
hundreds who were arrested yesterday there are twenty Mephis. To let pass two or three
days means that they will perish.”
   I was silent.
   “As observers on the trial trip they will send electricians, mechanicians, physicians,
meteorologists, etc. … At twelve sharp, you must remember this, when the bell rings for
dinner we shall remain in the passage, lock them all up in the dining hall, and the Integral
will be ours. You realize that it is most necessary, happen what may! The Integral in our
hands will be a tool that will help to put an end to everything at once without pain. … Their
aeros? … Bah! They would be insignificant mosquitos against a buzzard. And then, if it
proves inevitable, we may direct the tubes of the motors downward and by their work
alone. …”
   I jumped up.
   “It is inconceivable! It is absurd! Is it not clear to you that what you are contriving is a
revolution?”
   “Yes, a revolution. Why is it absurd?”
   “Absurd? because a revolution is impossible! Because our (I speak for myself and for
you), our revolution was the last one. No other revolutions may occur. Everybody knows
that.”
   A mocking, sharp triangle of brows.
   “My dear, you are a mathematician, are you not? More than that, a philosopher-
mathematician? Well then, name the last number!”
   “What is … I … I cannot understand, which last?”
   “The last one, the highest, the largest.”
   “But I-330, it is absurd! Since the number of numbers is infinite, how can there be a last
one?”
   “And why then do you think there is a last revolution? There is no last revolution, their
number is infinite. … The ‘last one’ is a children’s story. Children are afraid of the infinite,
and it is necessary that children should not be frightened, so that they may sleep through
the night.”
   “But what is the use, what is the use of it all? For the sake of the Well-Doer! What is the
use since all are happy already?”
   “All right! Even suppose that is so. What further?”
   “How funny! A purely childish question. You tell something to children, come to the very
end, yet they will invariably ask you, ‘what further?’ and ‘what for?’ ”
   “Children are the only courageous philosophers. And courageous philosophers are
invariably children. One ought always to ask like children, ‘what further’?”
   “Nothing further! Period. In the whole world evenly, everywhere, there is
distributed. …”
   “Ah, ‘evenly!’ ‘Everywhere!’ That is the point, entropy! Psychological entropy. Don’t you
as a mathematician know that only differences (only differences!), in temperature, only
thermic contrasts make for life? And if all over the world there are evenly warm or evenly
cold bodies, they must be pushed off! … in order to get flame, explosions! And we shall
push! …”
   “But I-330, please realize that our ancestors during the Two Hundred Years’ War did
exactly that!”
   “Oh, they were right! A thousand times right! They did one wrong thing, however; later
they began to believe that they were the last number, a number that does not exist in
nature. Their mistake was the mistake of Galileo; he was right in that the earth revolves
about the sun but he did not know that our whole solar system revolves about some other
centre, he did not know that the real (not relative) orbit of the earth is not a naive circle.”
   “And you, the Mephi?”
   “We? For the time being we know that there is no last number. We may forget that some
day. Of course, we shall certainly forget it when we grow old, as everything inevitably
grows old. Then we shall inevitably fall like autumn leaves from the trees, like you the day-
after-tomorrow. … No, no dear, not you personally. You are with us, are you not? You are
with us?”
   Flaming, stormy, sparkling! I never before had seen her in such a state. She embraced me
with her whole self; I disappeared.
   Her last word, looking steadily, deeply into my eyes:
   “Then, do not forget: at twelve o’clock sharp.”
   And I answered:
   “Yes, I remember.”
   She left. I was alone amidst a rebellious, multi-voiced commotion of blue, red, green,
saffron-yellow and orange. …
   Yes, at twelve! … Suddenly a feeling of something foreign on my face, of something
implanted, that could not be brushed off. Suddenly, yesterday morning, and U- and all she
shouted into the face of I-330! Why, how absurd!
   I hastened to get out of the house and home, home! Somewhere behind me I heard the
chattering of birds beyond the Wall. And ahead of me in the setting sun the balls of cupolas
made of red, crystallized fire, enormous flaming cubes—houses, and the sharp point of the
Accumulating Tower high in the sky like a paralyzed streak of lightning. And all this, all this
impeccable, most geometric beauty, shall I, I myself, with my hands … ? Is there no way
out? No path? No trail?
   I passed by an auditorium (I do not recall its number). Inside, the benches were stacked
along the walls. In the middle, tables covered with snow-white glass sheets, with pink
stains of sunny blood on the white. … There was foreshadowed in all that some unknown
and therefore alarming tomorrow. It is unnatural for a thinking and seeing human being to
live among irregularities, unknowns, X’s. If suddenly your eyes were covered with a
bandage and you were let go to feel around, to stumble, ever aware that somewhere very
close to you there is the borderline, one step only and nothing but a compressed,
smothered piece of flesh will be left of you. … I now feel somewhat like that.
   … And what if without waiting for anything I should … just head down. … Would it not
be the only right thing to do? To disentangle everything at once?
                              RECORD THIRTY-ONE
Saved! At the very last moment, when it seemed that there was nothing to hold to, that it
was the end! …
   It was as if you already ascended the steps towards the threatening machine of the Well-
Doer, or as if the great glass Bell with a heavy thud already covered you, and for the last
time in life you looked at the blue sky to swallow it with your eyes … when suddenly, it
was only a dream! The sun is pink and cheerful and the wall … what happiness to be able
to touch the cold wall! And the pillow! To delight endlessly in the little cavity formed by
your own head in the white pillow! … This is approximately what I felt, when I read the
State Journal this morning. It has been all a terrible dream and this dream is over. And I was
so feeble, so unfaithful, that I thought of selfish, voluntary death! I am ashamed now to
reread the last lines of yesterday. But let them remain as a memory of that incredible
might-have-happened, which will not happen! On the front page of the State Journal the
following gleamed:
                                          “REJOICE!
                           “For from now on we are perfect!
  “Before today your own creation, engines, were more perfect than you.
                                            “WHY?
   “For every spark from a dynamo—is a spark of pure reason; each motion of a piston—a
pure syllogism. Is it not true that the same faultless reason is within you?
   “The philosophy of the cranes, presses, and pumps is finished and clear like a circle. But
is your philosophy less circular? The beauty of a mechanism lies in its immutable, precise
rhythm, like that of a pendulum. But have you not become as precise as a pendulum, you
who are brought up on the system of Taylor?
                                “Yes, but there is one difference:
                                 “MECHANISMS HAVE NO FANCY
  “Did you ever notice a pump cylinder during its work show upon its face a wide, distant,
sensuously-dreaming smile? Did you ever hear cranes restlessly toss about and sigh at
night, during the hours designed for rest?
                                             “NO!
 “Yet on your faces (you may well blush with shame!), the Guardians have seen more and
more frequently those smiles and they have heard your sighs. And (you should hide your
eyes for shame!) the historians of the United State all tendered their resignations so as to
be relieved from having to record such shameful occurrences.
  “It is not your fault; you are ill. And the name of your illness is
                                             “FANCY
   “It is a worm that gnaws black wrinkles on one’s forehead. It is a fever that drives one to
run farther and farther, albeit ‘farther’ may begin where happiness ends. It is the last
barricade on our road to happiness.
   “Rejoice! This Barricade Has Been Blasted at Last! The Road is Open!
   “The latest discovery of our State science is that there is a centre for fancy—a miserable
little nervous knot in the lower region of the frontal lobe of the brain. A triple treatment of
this knot with X-rays will cure you of fancy—
                                            “Forever!
   “You are perfect; you are mechanized; the road to hundred percent happiness is open!
Hasten then all of you, young and old, hasten to undergo the great Operation! Hasten to the
auditoriums where the great Operation is being performed! Long live the Great Operation!
Long live the United State! Long live the Well-Doer.”
   You, had you read all this not in my records which look like an ancient strange novel, had
you like me held in your trembling hands the newspaper, smelling of typographic ink … if
you knew as I do, that all this is most certain reality, if not the reality of today, then that of
tomorrow—would you not feel the very things I feel? Would not your head whirl as mine
does? Would there not run over your back and arms those strange, sweet, icy needles?
Would you not feel that you were a giant, an Atlas?—that if only you stood up and
straightened out you would reach the ceiling with your head?
   I snatched the telephone receiver.
   “I-330. Yes. … Yes. Yes … 330!” And then, swallowing my own words I shouted, “Are you
at home? Yes? Have you read? You are reading now? Is it not, is it not stupendous?”
   “Yes. …” A long, dark silence. The wires buzzed almost imperceptibly. She was thinking.
   “I must see you today without fail. Yes, in my room, after sixteen, without fail!”
   Dear … she is such a dear! … “Without fail!” I was smiling and I could not stop, I felt I
should carry that smile with me into the street like a light above my head.
   Outside the wind ran over me, whirling, whistling, whipping, but I felt even more
cheerful. “All right, go on, go on moaning and groaning! The Walls cannot be torn down.”
Flying leaden clouds broke over my head … well let them! They could not eclipse the sun!
We chained it to the zenith like so many Joshuas, sons of Nuns!
   At the corner a group of Joshuas, sons of Nuns, were standing with their foreheads
pasted to the glass of the wall. Inside, on a dazzling white table already a Number lay. One
could see two naked soles diverging from under the sheet in a yellow angle. … White
medics bent over his head—a white hand, a stretched-out hand holding a syringe filled
with something. …
   “And you, what are you waiting for?” I asked nobody in particular, or rather all of them.
   “And you?” Someone’s round head turned to me.
   “I? Oh, afterward! I must first. …” Somewhat confused, I left the place. I really had to see
I-330 first. But why first? I could not explain to myself. …
   The docks. The Integral, bluish like ice, was glistening and sparkling. The engine was
caressingly grumbling, repeating some one word, as if it were my word, a familiar one. I
bent down and stroked the long, cold tube of the motor. “Dear! What a dear tube!
Tomorrow it will come to life, tomorrow for the first time it will tremble with burning,
flaming streams in its bowels.”
   With what eyes would I have looked at the glass monster had everything remained as it
was yesterday? If I knew that tomorrow at twelve I should betray it, yes, betray. …
Someone behind cautiously touched my elbow. I turned around. The plate-like, flat face of
the Second Builder.
   “Do you know already?” he asked.
   “What? About the Operation? Yes. How everything, everything … suddenly. …”
   “No, not that. The trial flight is put off until day-after-tomorrow—on account of that
Operation. They rushed us for nothing; we hurried. …”
   “On account of that Operation!” Funny, limited man. He could see no farther than his own
platter! If only he knew that but for the Operation tomorrow at twelve he would be locked-
up in a glass cage, would be tossing about, trying to climb the walls!
   At twelve-thirty when I came into my room I saw U-. She was sitting at my table, firm,
straight, bone-like, resting her right cheek on her hand. She must have waited for a long
while because when she brusquely rose to meet me there remained on her cheek five white
imprints of her fingers.
   For a second that terrible morning came back to me; she beside I-330, indignant. But for
a second only. All was at once washed off by the sun of today, as it happens sometimes
when you enter your room on a bright day and absentmindedly turn on the light, the bulb
shines but it is out of place, droll, unnecessary.
   Without hesitation I held out my hand to her; I forgave her everything. She firmly
grasped both my hands and pressed them till they hurt. Her cheeks quivering and hanging
down like ancient precious ornaments, she said with emotion:
   “I was waiting. … I want only one moment. … I only wanted to say … how happy, how
joyous I am for you! You realize of course, that tomorrow or day-after-tomorrow you will
be healthy again, as if born anew.”
   I noticed my papers on the table; the last two pages of my record of yesterday; they were
in the place where I left them the night before. If only she knew what I wrote there!
Although I did not care after all. Now it was only history; it was the ridiculously far off
distance like an image through a reversed opera-glass.
   “Yes,” I said, “a while ago, while passing through the avenue, I saw a man walking ahead
of me. His shadow stretched along the pavement and think of it! his shadow was luminous!
I think, more than that, I am absolutely certain that tomorrow all shadows will disappear.
Not a shadow from any person or anything! The sun will be shining through everything.”
   She, gently and earnestly:
   “You are a dreamer! I should not allow my children in school to talk that way.”
   She told me something about the children; that they were all led in one herd to the
Operation; that it was necessary to bind them afterward with ropes; and that one must love
pitilessly, “yes, pitilessly,” and that she thought she might finally decide to. …
   She smoothed out the grayish-blue fold of the unif that fell between her knees, swiftly
pasted her smiles all over me and went out.
   Fortunately the sun did not stop today. The sun was running. It was already sixteen
o’clock. … I was knocking at the door, my heart was knocking. …
   “Come in!”
   I threw myself upon the floor near her chair, to embrace her limbs, to lift my head
upward and look into her eyes, first into one then into the other, and in each of them to see
the reflection of myself in wonderful captivity. …
   There beyond the wall it looked stormy, there the clouds were leaden—let them be! My
head was overcrowded with impetuous words, and I was speaking aloud, and flying with
the sun I knew not where. … No, now we know where we are flying; planets were
following me, planets sparkling with flame and populated with fiery, singing flowers and
mute planets, blue ones where rational stones were unified into one organized society, and
planets which like our own earth had reached already the apex of one hundred percent
happiness.
   Suddenly from above:
   “And don’t you think that at the apex are, precisely, stones unified into an organized
society?” The triangle grew sharper and sharper, darker and darker.
   “Happiness … well? … Desires are tortures, are they not? It is clear therefore, that
happiness is where there are no longer any desires, not a single desire any more. What an
error, what an absurd prejudice it was, that formerly we would mark happiness with the
sign ‘plus’! No, absolute happiness must be marked ‘minus,’—divine minus!”
   I remember I stammered unintelligibly:
   “Absolute zero!—minus 273° C.”
   “Minus 273°—exactly! A somewhat cool temperature. But does it not prove that we are
at the summit?”
   As before she seemed somehow to speak for me and through me, developing to the end
my own thoughts. But there was something so morbid in her tone that I could not
refrain … with an effort I drew out a “No.”
   “No,” I said, “You, you are mocking. …”
   She burst out laughing loudly, too loudly. Swiftly, in a second, she laughed herself to
some unseen edge, stumbled and fell over. … Silence.
   She stood up, put her hands upon my shoulders and looked into me for a long while.
Then she pulled me toward her and everything seemed to have disappeared save her
sharp, hot lips. …
   “Goodbye.”
   The words came from afar, from above, and reached me not at once, only after a minute,
perhaps two minutes later.
   “Why … why ‘goodbye’?”
   “You have been ill, have you not? Because of me you have committed crimes. Has not all
this tormented you? And now you have the Operation to look forward to. You will be cured
of me. And that means—goodbye.”
   “No!” I cried.
   A pitilessly sharp black triangle on a white background.
   “What? Do you mean that you don’t want happiness?”
   My head was breaking into pieces; two logical trains collided and crawled upon each
other, rattling and smothering. …
  “Well, I am waiting. You must choose; the Operation and hundred percent happiness,
or. …”
  “I cannot … without you. … I must not … without you. …” I said, or perhaps I only
thought, I am not sure which, but I-330 heard.
  “Yes, I know,” she said. Then, her hands still on my shoulders and her eyes not letting my
eyes go, “Then … until tomorrow. Tomorrow at twelve. You remember?”
  “No, it was postponed for a day. Day-after-tomorrow!”
  “So much the better for us. At twelve, day-after-tomorrow!”
  I walked alone in the dusky street. The wind was whirling, carrying, driving me like a
piece of paper; fragments of the leaden sky were soaring, soaring—they had to soar
through the infinite for another day or two. …
  Unifs of Numbers were brushing my sides—yet I was walking alone. It was clear to me
that all were saved but that there was no salvation for me. For I do not want salvation. …
                              RECORD THIRTY-TWO
Do you believe that you will die? Oh, yes, “Man is mortal. I am a man, consequently. …” No,
not that; I know that; you know it. But I ask: has it ever happened that you actually believed
it? Believed definitely, believed not with your reason but with your body, that you actually
felt that some day those fingers which now hold this page, will become yellow, icy? …
   No, of course you cannot believe this. That is why you have not jumped from the tenth
floor to the pavement before now, that is why you eat, turn over these pages, shave, smile,
write.
   This very thing, yes, exactly this is alive in me today. I know that that small black hand on
the clock will slide down here towards midnight, then again it will start to ascend, and it
will cross some last border and the improbable tomorrow will have arrived. I know it, but
somehow I do not believe it, or perhaps I think that twenty-four hours are twenty-four
years. Therefore I am still able to act, to hurry, to answer questions, to climb the rope-
ladder to the Integral. I am still able to feel how the latter is shaking the surface of the
water, and I still understand that I must grasp the railing, and I am still able to feel the cold
glass in my hand. I see the transparent, living cranes, bending their long necks, carefully
feeding the Integral with the terrible explosive food which the motors need. I still see
below on the river the blue veins and knots of water swollen by the wind. … Yet all this
seems very distant from me, foreign, flat—like a draught on a sheet of paper. And it seems
to me strange, when the flat, draught-like face of the Second Builder, suddenly asks:
   “Well, then. How much fuel for the motors shall we load on? If we count on three, or say
three and a half hours. …”
   I see before me, over a draught, my hand with the counter and the logarithmic dial at the
figure 15.
   “Fifteen tons. But you’d better take … yes, better take a thousand.”
   I said that because I know that tomorrow. … I noticed that my hands and the dial began
to tremble.
   “A thousand! What do you need such a lot for? That would last a week! No, more than a
week!”
   “Well, nobody knows. …”
   I do know. …
   The wind whistled, the air seemed to be stuffed to the limit with something invisible. I
had difficulty in breathing, difficulty in walking, and with difficulty, slowly but without
stopping for a second the hand of the Accumulating Tower was crawling, at the end of the
avenue. The peak of the Tower reached into the very clouds;—dull, blue, groaning in a
subdued way, sucking electricity from the clouds. The tubes of the Musical Tower
resounded.
   As always—four abreast. But the rows did not seem as firm as usual; they were swinging,
bending more and more, perhaps because of the wind. There! They seemed to have
stumbled upon something at the corner, and they drew back and stopped, congealed, a
close mass, a clot, breathing rapidly; at once all had stretched their necks like geese.
   “Look! No look, look—there, quick!”
   “They? Are those they?”
   “Ah, never! Never! I’d rather put my head straight into the Machine. …”
   “Silence! Are you crazy?”
   On the corner the doors of the auditorium were ajar, a heavy column of about fifty
people—. The word “people” is not the right one. These were heavy-wheeled automatons
bound in iron and moved by an invisible mechanism. Not people but a sort of human-like
tractor. Over their heads, floating in the air—a white banner with a golden sun
embroidered on it, and the rays of the sun: “We are the first! We have already been
operated upon! Follow us, all of you!”
   They slowly, unhesitatingly mowed through the crowd, and it was clear that if they had
had in their way a wall, a tree, a house, they would have moved on with no more hesitation
through wall, tree or house. In the middle of the avenue they fused and stretched out into a
chain, arm in arm, their faces turned towards us. And we, a human clot, tense, the hair
pricking our heads, we waited. Our necks were stretched out goose-fashion. Clouds. The
wind whistled. Suddenly the wings of the chain from right and left bent quickly around us,
and faster, faster, like a heavy engine descending a hill, they closed the ring and pulled us
toward the yawning doors and inside. …
   Somebody’s piercing cry: “They are driving us in! Run!”
   All ran. Close to the wall there still was an open living gate of human beings. Everybody
dashed through it, heads forward. Their heads became sharp wedges, so with their ribs,
shoulders, hips. … Like a stream of water compressed in a firehose they spurted out in the
form of a fan—and all around me stamping feet, raised arms, unifs. … The double-curved S-
with his transparent wing-ears appeared for a moment close before my eyes; he
disappeared as suddenly; I was alone among arms and legs appearing for a second and
disappearing. I was running. …
   I dashed to the entrance of a house to stop for a breath, my back close to the door—and
immediately, like a splinter borne by the wind, a human being was thrown towards me.
   “All the while I … I have been following you. I do not want … do you see? I do not
want … I am ready to. …”
   Small round hands on my sleeves, round dark blue eyes—it was O-90. She just slipped
along my body like a unif which, its hanger broken, slips along the wall to fall upon the
floor. Like a little bundle she crumpled below me on the cold doorstep, and I stood over
her, stroking her head, her face—my hands were wet. I felt as if I were very big and she
very small, a small part of myself. I felt something quite different from what I feel towards
I-330. I think that the ancients must have had similar feelings towards their private
children.
   Below, passing through her hands with which she was covering her face, a voice came to
me:
   “Every night I … I cannot! If they cure me. … Every night I sit in the darkness alone and
think of him, and of what he will look like when I. … If cured I should have nothing to live
with—do you understand me? You must … you must. …”
   An absurd feeling yet it was there; I really must! Absurd, because this “duty” of mine was
nothing but another crime. Absurd, because white and black cannot be one, duty and crime
cannot coincide. Or perhaps there is no black and white in life, but everything depends
upon the first logical premise? If the premise is that I unlawfully gave her a child. …
   “It is all right, but don’t, only don’t …” I said. “Of course I understand. … I must take you
to I-330, as I once offered to, so that she. …”
   “Yes.” (This in a low voice, without uncovering her face.)
   I helped her rise. Silently we went along the darkening street, each busy with his own
thoughts, or perhaps with the same thought. … We walked between silent leaden houses,
through the tense, whipping branches of the wind. …
   Through the whistling of the wind all at once I heard, as if splashing through ditches, the
familiar footsteps coming from some unseen point. At the corner I turned around, and
among the clouds, flying upside-down reflected in the dim glass of the pavement I saw S-.
Instantly my arms became foreign, swinging out of time, and I began to tell O-90 in a low
voice that tomorrow, yes tomorrow, was the day of the first flight of the Integral, and that it
was to be something that never happened before in all history, great, miraculous.
   “Think of it! For the first time in life to find myself outside the limits of our city and see—
who knows what is beyond the Green Wall?”
   O-90 looked at me extremely surprised, her blue eyes trying to penetrate mine; she
looked at my senselessly swinging arms. But I did not let her say a word—I kept talking,
talking. … And within me, apart from what I was saying and audible only to myself a
thought was feverishly buzzing and knocking. “Impossible! You must somehow … you
must not lead him to I-330!”
   Instead of turning to the right I turned to the left. The bridge submissively bent its back
in a slavish way to all three of us, to me, to O-, to him behind. Lights were falling from the
houses across the water, falling and breaking into thousands of sparks which danced
feverishly, sprayed with the mad white foam of the water. The wind was moaning like a
tensely stretched string of a double-basso somewhere not far away. Through this basso,
behind, all the while. …
   The house where I live. At the entrance O- stopped and began:
   “No! You promised, did you not, that. …”
   I did not let her finish. Hastily I pushed her through the entrance and we found ourselves
in the lobby. At the controller’s desk—the familiar, hanging, excitedly quivering cheeks, a
group of Numbers around. They were quarreling about something, heads bending over the
banisters on the second floor; they were running downstairs one by one. But about that
later. I at once drew O-90 into the opposite, unoccupied corner and sat down with my back
to the wall. I saw a dark large-headed shadow gliding back and forth over the sidewalk. I
took out my notebook. O-90 in her chair was slowly sinking as if she were evaporating from
under her unif, as if her body were thawing, as if only her empty unif were left, and empty
eyes taking one into the blue emptiness. In a tired voice:
   “Why did you bring me here? You lied to me?”
   “No, not so loud! Look here! Do you see? Through the wall?”
   “Yes, I see a shadow.”
   “He is always following me. … I cannot. … Do you understand? I cannot therefore … I
am going to write a few words to I-330. You take the note and go alone. I know he will
remain here.”
   Her body began again to take form and to move beneath the unif; on her face a faint
sunrise, dawn. I put the note between her cold fingers, pressed her hand firmly and for the
last time looked into her blue eyes.
   “Goodbye. Perhaps some day. …” She freed her hand. Slightly bending over she slowly
moved away, made two steps, turned around quickly and again we were side by side. Her
lips were moving; with her lips and with her eyes she repeated some inaudible word. What
an unbearable smile! What suffering!
   Then the bent-over human splinter went to the door; a bent-over little shadow beyond
the wall; without turning around she went on faster, still faster. …
   I went to U-’s desk. With emotion filling up her indignant gills she said to me:
   “They have all gone crazy! He, for instance, is trying to assure me that he himself saw a
naked man covered with hair near the Ancient House. …”
   A voice from the group of empty raised heads;
   “Yes. I repeat it, yes.”
   “Well, what do you think of that? Oh, what a delirium!” The word “delirium” came out of
her mouth so full of conviction, so unbending, that I asked myself: “Perhaps it really was
nothing but delirium, all that has been going on around me of late?” I glanced at my hairy
hand and I remembered: “There are, undoubtedly, some drops of that blood of the sun and
woods in you. That is why perhaps you. …” No, fortunately it was not delirium; or no,
unfortunately it was not delirium.
                            RECORD THIRTY-THREE
The day.
   Quick, to the newspaper! perhaps there. … I read the paper with my eyes (exactly; my
eyes now are like a pen, or like a counting machine which you hold and feel in your hands
like a tool, something foreign, an instrument). In the newspaper on the first page, in large
print:
“THE ENEMIES OF HAPPINESS ARE AWAKE! HOLD TO YOUR HAPPINESS WITH BOTH HANDS. TOMORROW
ALL WORK WILL STOP AND ALL THE NUMBERS ARE TO COME TO BE OPERATED UPON. THOSE WHO FAIL TO
COME WILL BE SUBMITTED TO THE MACHINE OF THE WELL-DOER.”
   Tomorrow! How can there be, how can there be any tomorrow?
   Following my daily habit, I stretched out my arm (instrument!) to the bookshelf to put
today’s paper with the rest in a cover ornamented with gold. While doing this: “What for?
What does it matter? Never again shall I. … In this cover, never. …” And out of my hands,
down to the floor it fell.
   I stood looking all around, over all my room; hastily I was taking away, feverishly putting
into some unseen valise everything I regretted leaving here: my desk, my books, my chair.
Upon that chair sat I-330 that day; I was below on the floor. … My bed. … Then for a
minute or two I stood and waited for some miracle to happen; perhaps the telephone
would ring, perhaps she would say that. … But no, no miracle. …
   I am leaving, going into the unknown. These are my last lines. Farewell you, my unknown
beloved ones, with whom I have lived through so many pages, before whom I have bared
my diseased soul, my whole self to the last broken little screw, to the last cracked spring. …
I am going. …
                             RECORD THIRTY-FOUR
Oh, if only I actually had broken myself to pieces! If only I actually had found myself with
her in some place beyond the Wall, among beasts showing their yellow tusks; if only I
actually had never returned here! It would be a thousand, a million times easier! But now—
what? Now to go and choke that—! But would it help? No, no, no! Take yourself in hand, D-
503! Set into yourself the firm logical hub; at least for a short while weigh heavily with all
your might on the lever, and like the ancient slave, turn the millstones of syllogisms until
you have written down and understood everything that happened. …
   When I boarded the Integral, everybody was already there and everybody occupied his
place; all the cells of the gigantic hive were filled. Through the glass of the decks—tiny, ant-
like people below, at the telegraph, dynamo, transformers, altimeters, ventilators,
indicators, motor, pumps, tubes. … In the saloon people sitting over tables and
instruments, probably those commissioned by the Scientific Bureau. Near them the Second
Builder and his two aides. All three had their heads down between their shoulders like
turtles, their faces gray, autumnal, rayless.
   “Well?” I asked.
   “Well, somewhat uncanny,” replied one of them smiling a gray rayless smile, “Perhaps we
shall have to land in some unknown place. And, generally speaking, nobody knows. …”
   I hardly could bear to look at them, when in an hour or so I was to throw them out with
my own hands, to cast them out from the cozy figures of our Tables of Hours, forever to
tear them away from the mother’s breast of the United State. They reminded me of the
tragic figures of “The Three Forgiven Ones”—a story known to all of our schoolchildren. It
tells about three Numbers, who by way of experiment were exempted for a whole month
from any work.3 “Go wherever you will, do what you will,” they were told. The unhappy
three wandered the whole time about the place of their usual work and gazed within with
hungry eyes. They would stop on the plazas and for hours busy themselves repeating the
motions which they were used to making during certain hours of the day; it became a
bodily necessity for them to do so. They would saw and plane the air; with unseen
sledgehammers they would bang upon unseen stakes. Finally, on the tenth day they could
bear it no longer; they took one another by the hand, entered the river, and to the
accompaniment of the March they waded deeper and deeper until the water forever ended
their sufferings.
   I repeat, it was hard for me to look at them, and I was anxious to leave them.
   “I just want to take a glance into the engine-room, and then off!” I said.
   They were asking me questions: What voltage should be used for the initial spark, how
much ballast water was needed in the tank aft. As if a phonograph were somewhere within
me, I was giving quick and precise answers but I, my inner self, was busy with its own
thoughts.
   In the narrow passage gray unifs were passing, gray faces and for a second, one face with
its hair low over the forehead, eyes gazing from deep beneath it—it was that same man. I
understood: they had come and there was no escape from it for me; only minutes remained,
a few dozens of minutes. … An infinitesimal, molecular quiver of my whole body. This did
not cease to the very end—it was as if an enormous motor were placed under the very
foundation of my body which was so light that the walls, partitions, cables, beams, lights—
everything was quivering. …
   I did not yet know whether she was there. But I had no time. … They were calling me:
quick! To the commander’s bridge; time to go … where?
   Gray, rayless faces. Below in the water—tense blue veins. Heavy, cast-iron patches of sky.
It was so difficult to lift my cast-iron hand and take up the receiver of the commander’s
telephone! … “Up! Forty-five degrees!”
   A heavy explosion—a jerk—a rabid greenish-white mountain of water aft—the deck
beneath my feet began to move, soft as rubber; and everything below, the whole life,
forever. … For a second, falling deeper and deeper into a sort of funnel, becoming more
and more compressed—the icy-blue relief-map of the City, the round bubbles of cupolas,
the lonely leaden finger of the Accumulating Tower. … Then instantaneously a cotton
curtain of cloud. … We pierced it, and there was the sun and the blue sky! Seconds,
minutes, miles—the blue was hardening, fast filling with darkness; like drops of cold silver
sweat appeared the stars. …
   A sad, unbearably bright, black, starry, sunny night. … As if one had become deaf, one
still saw that the pipes were roaring, but one only saw, dead silence all about. The sun was
mute. It was natural, of course. One might have expected it; we were beyond the terrestrial
atmosphere. The transition was so quick, so sudden that everyone became timid and silent.
Yet I … I thought I felt even easier under that fantastic, mute sun. I had bounded over the
inevitable border, having left my body somewhere there below, and I was soaring bodiless
to a new world, where everything was to be different, upside down.
   “Keep the same course!” I shouted into the engine-room, or perhaps it was not I but a
phonograph in me, and the same machine with a mechanical, hinge-like movement handed
the commander’s trumpet to the Second Builder. All permeated by that most delicate,
molecular quiver known only to me, I ran down the companionway, to seek. …
   The door of the saloon. … An hour later it was to latch and lock itself. … At the door
stood an unfamiliar Number. He was small, with a face like a hundred or a thousand others
which are usually lost in a crowd, but his arms were exceptionally long—they reached
down to the knees as though by mistake they had been taken from another set of human
organs and fastened to his shoulders.
   The long arm stretched out and barred the way.
   “Where do you want to go?”
   It was clear that he was not aware I knew everything. All right! Perhaps it was necessary
that it should be so. From above him, in a deliberately significant tone I said:
   “I am the Builder of the Integral and I am directing the test flight. Do you understand?”
   The arm drew away.
   The saloon. Heads covered with bristles, gray iron bristles, and yellow heads, and bald,
ripe heads were bent over the instruments and maps. Swiftly, with a glance, I gathered
them in with my eyes, off I ran, back along the long passage, then through the hatch into the
engine-room. There it was hot from the red tubes, overheated by the explosions; a constant
roar—the levers were dancing their desperate drunken dance, quivering ceaselessly with a
barely noticeable quiver; the arrows on the dials. … There! At last! Near the tachometer, a
notebook in his hand, was that man with the low forehead.
   “Listen,” I shouted straight into his ear (because of the roar), “Is she here? Where is she?”
   “She? There at the radio.”
   I dashed over there. There were three of them, all with receiving helmets on. And she
seemed a head taller than usual, wingy, sparkling, flying like an ancient walkyrie, and those
bluish sparks from the radio seemed to emanate from her—from her also that ethereal,
lightning-like odor of ozone.
   “Someone—well, you for instance,” I said to her, panting from having run, “I must send a
message down to earth, to the docks. Come, I shall dictate it to you.”
   Close to the apparatus there was a small boxlike cabin. We sat at the table side by side. I
found her hand and pressed it hard.
   “Well, what is going to happen?”
   “I don’t know. Do you realize how wonderful it is? To fly without knowing where … no
matter where? It will soon be twelve o’clock and nobody knows what. … And when
night. … Where shall you and I be tonight? Perhaps somewhere on the grass, on dry leaves.
…”
   Blue sparks emanated from her and the odor of lightning, and the vibration became more
and more frequent within me.
   “Write down,” I said loudly, panting (from having run), “Time: eleven-twenty; speed
5800. …”
   “Last night she came to me with your note. I know … I know everything; don’t talk. …
But the child is yours. I sent her over; she is already beyond the Wall. She will live. …”
   I was back on the commander’s bridge, back in the delirious night with its black, starry
sky and its dazzling sun. The hands of the clock on the table were slowly moving from
minute to minute. Everything was permeated by a thin, hardly perceptible quivering (only I
noticed it). For some reason a thought passed through my head: it would be better if all this
took place not here but somewhere below, nearer to earth.
   “Stop!” I commanded.
   We kept moving by inertia, but more and more slowly. Now the Integral was caught for a
second by an imperceptible little hair—for a second it hung motionless, then the little hair
broke and the Integral like a stone dashed downward with increasing speed. That way in
silence, minutes, tens of minutes passed. My pulse was audible; the hand of the clock before
my eyes came closer and closer to twelve. It was clear to me I was a stone; I-330 the earth;
and the stone was under irresistible compulsion to fall downward, to strike the earth and
break into small particles. What if … ? Already the hard blue smoke of the clouds appeared
below. … What if … ? But the phonograph within me with a hinge-like motion and
precision took the telephone and commanded: “Low speed!” The stone ceased falling. Only
the four lower tubes were growling, two ahead and two aft, only enough to hold the
Integral motionless, and the Integral, only slightly trembling, stopped in the air as if
anchored, about one kilometer from the earth.
   Everybody came out on deck, (it was shortly before twelve, before the sounding of the
dinner-gong) and leaned over the glass railing; hastily, in huge gulps, they swallowed the
unknown world which lay below, beyond the Green Wall. Amber, blue, green, the autumnal
woods, prairies, a lake. At the edge of a little blue saucer, some lone yellow debris, a
threatening, dried-out yellow finger—it must have been the tower of an ancient “church”
saved by a miracle. …
   “Look, there! Look! There to the right!”
   There (over the green desert) a brown blot was rapidly moving. I held a telescope in my
hands and automatically I brought it to my eyes: the grass reaching their chests, a herd of
brown horses was galloping, and on their back—they, black, white, and dark. …
   Behind me:
   “I assure you, I saw a face!”
   “Go away! Tell it to someone else!”
   “Well, look for yourself! Here is the telescope.”
   They had already disappeared. Endless green desert, and in that desert, dominating it
completely and dominating me, and everybody—the piercing vibrations of the gong; dinner
time, one minute to twelve.
   For a second the little world around me became incoherent, dispersed. Someone’s brass
badge fell to the floor. It mattered little. Soon it was under my heel. A voice: “And I tell you,
it was a face!” A black square, the open door of the main saloon. White teeth pressed
together, smiling. … And at that moment, when the clock began slowly, holding its breath
between beats, to strike, and when the front rows began to move towards the dining
saloon, the rectangle of the door was suddenly crossed by the two familiar, unnaturally
long arms:
   “STOP!”
   Someone’s fingers sank piercing into my palm. It was I-330. She was beside me.
   “Who is it, do you know him?”
   “Is he not … is he not? …”
   He was already lifted upon somebody’s shoulders. Above a hundred other faces, his face
like hundreds, like thousands of other faces yet unique among the rest. …
   “In the name of the Guardians! You, to whom I talk, they hear me, every one of them
hears me—I talk to you: we know! We don’t know your numbers yet but we know
everything else. The Integral shall not be yours! The test flight will be carried out to the end
and you yourselves, you will not dare to make another move! You with your own hands will
help to go on with the test and afterward … well, I have finished!”
   Silence. The glass plates under my feet seemed soft, cotton-like. My feet too—soft,
cotton-like. Beside me—she with a dead-white smile, angry blue sparks. Through her teeth
to me:
   “Ah! It is your work! You did your ‘duty’! Well. …” She tore her hand from mine; the
walkyrie helmet with indignant wings was soon to be seen some distance in front of me. I
was alone, torpid, silent. Like everyone else I followed into the dining saloon.
   But it was not I, not I! I told nobody, save these white, mute pages. … I cried this to her
within me, inaudibly, desperately, loudly. She was across the table, directly opposite me
and not once did she even touch me with her gaze. Beside her, someone’s ripe, yellow, bald
head. I heard (it was I-330’s voice):
   “ ‘Nobility’ of character! But my dear professor, even a superficial etymological analysis
of the word shows that it is a superstition, a remnant of the ancient feudal epoch. We. …”
   I felt I was growing pale—and that they would soon notice it. But the phonograph within
me performed the prescribed fifty chewing movements for every bite. I locked myself into
myself as though into an opaque house; I threw up a heap of rocks before my door and
lowered the window-blinds. …
   Afterward, again the telephone of the commander was in my hands and again we made
the flight with icy, supreme anxiety through the clouds into the icy, starry, sunny night.
Minutes, hours passed. … Apparently all that time the logical motor within me was
working feverishly at full speed. For suddenly somewhere at a distant point of the dark
blue space I saw my desk, and the gill-like cheeks of U- over it and the forgotten pages of
my records! It became clear to me; nobody but she … everything was clear to me!
   If only I could reach the radio-room soon … winglike helmets, the odor of blue lightnings
… I remember telling her something in a low voice and I remember how she looked
through me and how her voice seemed to come from a distance:
   “I am busy. I am receiving a message from below. You may dictate yours to her.”
   The small, boxlike little cabin. … I thought for a second and then dictated in a firm voice:
   “Time 14:40. Going down. Motors stopped. The end of all.”
   The commander’s bridge. The machine-heart of the Integral stopped; we were falling; my
heart could not catch up and would remain behind and rise higher and higher into my
throat. … Clouds. … And then a distant green spot—everything green, more and more
distinct, running like a storm towards us. “Soon the end.”
   The porcelain-like white distorted face of the Second Builder! It was he who struck me
with all his strength; I hurt my head on something; and through the approaching darkness
while falling I heard:
   “Full speed—aft!”
   A brusque jolt upward. …
                             RECORD THIRTY-FIVE
I did not sleep all night. The whole night but one thought. … As a result of yesterday’s
mishap my head is tightly bandaged—it seems to me not a bandage but a ring, a pitiless
ring of glass-iron, riveted about my head. And I am busy with the same thought, always the
same thought in my riveted circle: to kill U-. To kill U- and then go to her and say: “Now do
you believe?” What is most disquieting is that to kill is dirty, primitive. To break her head
with something—the thought of it gives me a peculiar sensation of something disgustingly
sweet in my mouth, and I am unable to swallow my saliva; I am always spitting into my
handkerchief, yet my mouth feels dry.
   I had in my closet a heavy piston-rod which cracked during the casting and which I
brought home in order to find out the cause of the cracking with a microscope. I made my
manuscript into a tube (let her read me to the last letter!), pushed the broken piston into
that tube and went downstairs. The stairway seemed endless, the steps disgustingly
slippery, liquid. I had to wipe off moisture from my mouth very frequently. Downstairs …
my heart dropped. I took out the piston and went to the controller’s table, but she was not
there; instead an empty, icy desk with inkblots. I remembered that today all work was
stopped; everybody was to go to be operated upon. Hence there was no need for her to stay
here. There was nobody to be registered. …
   The street. It was windy. The sky seemed to be composed of soaring panels of cast-iron.
And exactly as it seemed for one moment yesterday, the whole world was broken up into
separate, sharp, independent fragments, and each of these fragments was falling at full
speed; each would stop for a second, hang before me in the air and disappear without trace.
It was as if the black, precise letters on this page should suddenly move apart and begin to
jump hither and thither in fright, so that there was not a word on the page, only nonsensical
“ap,” “jum,” “wor.” The crowd seemed just as nonsensical, dispersed (not in rows), going
forward, backward, diagonally, transversely. …
   Then nobody. For a second while I was dashing at full speed, suddenly stopping, I saw on
the second floor in the glass cage hanging in the air—a man and a woman—a kiss; she
standing with her whole body bent backward brokenly: “This is for the last time,
forever. …”
   At a corner a thorny, moving bush of heads. Above the heads, separate, floating in the air,
a banner: “Down with the machines! Down with the Operation!” And (distinct from my own
self) I thought: “Is it possible that each one of us bears such a pain, that it can be removed
only with his heart. … That something must be done to each one, before he. …” For a
second everything disappeared for me from the world, except my beast-like hand with the
heavy cast-iron package it held. …
   A boy appeared. He was running, a shadow under his lower lip. The lower lip turned out
like the cuff of a rolled-up sleeve. His face was distorted; he wept loudly; he was running
away from somebody. Stamping of feet was heard behind him. …
   The boy reminded me: “U- must be in school. I must hurry!” I ran to the nearest opening
of the Underground Railway. At the entrance someone passed me and said, “Not running.
No trains today … there!” I descended. A sort of general delirium was reigning. The glitter
of cut-crystal suns; the platform packed closely with heads. An empty, torpid train.
   In the silence—a voice. I could not see her but I knew, I knew that intense, living, flexible,
whip-like, flogging voice! I felt there that sharp triangle of brows drawn to the temples. …
   “Let me! Let me reach her! I must! …”
   Someone’s tentacles caught my arm, my shoulders. I was nailed. In the silence I heard:
   “No. Go up to them. There they will cure you; there they will overfeed you with that
leavened happiness. Satiated, you will slumber peacefully, organized, keeping time and
snoring sweetly. Is it possible that you do not yet hear that great symphony of snoring?
Foolish people! Don’t you realize that they want to liberate you from these gnawing, worm-
like, torturing question marks? And you remain standing here and listening to me? Quick!
Up! To the Great Operation! What is your concern, if I remain here alone? What does it
matter to you if I want to struggle, hopelessly struggle? So much the better! What does it
matter to you that I do not want others to desire for me? I want to desire for myself. If I
desire the impossible. …”
   Another voice, slow, heavy:
   “Ah, the impossible! Which means to run after your stupid fancies; those fancies would
whirl from under your very noses like a tail. No, we shall catch that tail, and then. …”
   “And then—swallow it and fall snoring; a new tail will become necessary. They say the
ancients had a certain animal which they called ‘Ass.’ In order to make it go forward they
would attach a carrot to a bow held in front of its nose, so that it could not reach it. … If it
had caught and swallowed it. …”
   The tentacles suddenly let me go; I threw myself towards the place she was speaking
from; but at that very moment everything was brought to confusion. Shouts from behind:
“They are coming here! Coming here!” The lights twinkled and went out—someone cut the
cable—and everything was like a lava of cries, groaning, heads, fingers. …
   I do not know how long we were rolled about that way in the underground tube. I only
remember that steps were felt, dusk appeared, becoming brighter and brighter, and again
we were in the street, dispersing fan-wise in different directions.
   Again I was alone. Wind. Gray, low twilight crawling over my head. In the damp glass of
the sidewalk, somewhere very deep, there were light topsy-turvy walls and figures moving
along, feet upward. And that terribly heavy package in my hands pulled me down into that
depth to the bottom.
   At the desk again. U- was not yet there; her room was dark and empty. I went up to my
room and turned on the light. My temples tightly bound by the iron ring were pulsating. I
paced and paced, always in the same circle: my table, the white package on the table, the
bed, my table, the white package on the table. … In the room to my left the curtains were
lowered. To my right: the knotty bald head over a book, the enormous parabolic forehead.
Wrinkles on the forehead like a series of yellow, illegible lines. At times our eyes met and
then I felt that those lines were about me.
   … It happened at twenty-one o’clock exactly. U- came in on her own initiative. I
remember that my breathing was so loud that I could hear it and that I wanted to breathe
less noisily but was unable to.
   She sat down and arranged the fold of her unif on her knees. The pinkish-brown gills
were waving.
   “Oh, dear, is it true that you are wounded? I just learned about it, and at once I ran. …”
   The piston was before me on the table. I jumped up, breathing even louder. She heard,
and stopped halfway through a word and rose. Already I had located the place on her head;
something disgustingly sweet was in my mouth. … My handkerchief! I could not find it. I
spat on the floor.
   The fellow with the yellow fixed wrinkles which think of me! It was necessary that he
should not see. It would be even more disgusting if he could. … I pressed the button. (I had
no right to do that, but who cared about rights then?) The curtains fell.
   Evidently she felt and understood what was coming for she rushed to the door. But I was
quicker than she and I locked the door with the key, breathing loudly and not taking my
eyes for a second away from that place on her head. …
   “You … you are mad! How dare you. …” She moved backward towards the bed, put her
trembling hands between her knees. … Like a tense spring, holding her firmly with my
gaze, I slowly stretched out my arm towards the table (only one arm could move), and I
snatched the piston.
   “I implore you! One day—only one day! Tomorrow I shall go and attend to the
formalities. …”
   What was she talking about? I swung my arm. … And I consider I killed her. Yes, you my
unknown readers, you have the right to call me murderer. I know that I should have dealt
the blow on her head had she not screamed:
   “For … for the sake … I agree. … I … one moment. …” With trembling hands she tore
off her unif;—a large, yellow, drooping body, she fell upon the bed. …
   Then I understood; she thought that I pulled the curtains … in order to … that I wanted.
…
   This was so unexpected and so stupid that I burst out laughing. Immediately the tense
spring within me broke and my hand weakened and the piston fell to the floor.
   Here I learned from personal experience that laughter is the most terrible of weapons;
you can kill anything with laughter, even murder. I sat at my table and laughed desperately;
I saw no way out of that absurd situation. I don’t know what would have been the end if
things had run their natural course, for suddenly a new factor in the arithmetical chain: the
telephone rang.
   I hurried, grasped the receiver. Perhaps she … I heard an unfamiliar voice:
   “Wait a minute.”
   Annoying, infinite buzzing. Heavy steps from afar, nearer and louder like cast-iron,
and. …
   “D-503? The Well-Doer speaking. Come at once to me.”
   Ding! He hung up the receiver. Ding! like a key in a keyhole.
   U- was still in bed, eyes closed, gills apart in the form of a smile. I picked up her clothes,
threw them on her and said through clenched teeth:
   “Well. Quick! Quick!”
   She raised her body on her elbow, her breasts hanging down to one side, eyes round. She
became a figure of wax.
   “What?”
   “Get dressed, that is what!”
   Face distorted, she firmly snatched her clothes and said in a flat voice, “Turn away. …”
   I turned away, pressed my forehead against the glass. Light, figures, sparks, were
trembling in the black, wet mirror. … No, all this was I, myself—within me. … What did he
call me for? Is it possible that he knows already about her, about me, about everything?
   U-, already dressed, was at the door. I made a step toward her and pressed her hand as
hard as though I hoped to squeeze out of it drop by drop what I needed.
   “Listen. … Her name, you know whom I am talking of—did you report her name? No?
Tell the truth, I must. … I care not what happens, but tell the truth!”
   “No.”
   “No? But why not, since you. …”
   Her lower lip turned out like the lip of that boy and her face … tears were running down
her cheeks.
   “Because I … I was afraid that if I did you might … you would stop lov—Oh, I cannot, I
could not!”
   I understood. It was the truth. Absurd, ridiculous, human truth. I opened the door.
                               RECORD THIRTY-SIX
It is very strange that a kind of empty white page should be left in my head. How I walked
there, how I waited (I remember I had to wait), I know nothing about it; I remember not a
sound, not a face, not a gesture, as if all communicating wires between me and the world
were cut.
   When I came to, I found myself standing before Him; I feared to raise my eyes—I saw
only His enormous cast-iron hands upon His knees. Those hands weighed upon Him,
bending His knees with their weight. He was slowly moving His fingers. His face was
somewhere above as if in fog. And, only because His voice came to my ear from such a
height, it did not roar like thunder, it did not deafen me but appeared to be an ordinary
human voice.
   “Then you too, you the Builder of the Integral! You, whose lot it was to become the
greatest of all conquistadores! You whose name was to have been at the head of a glorious,
new chapter of the history of the United State! You. …”
   Blood ran to my head, to my cheeks—and here again a white page; only the pulsation in
my temples and the heavy voice from above; but I remember not a word. Only when He
became silent I came to and noticed how His hand moved heavily like a thousand pounds,
and crawled slowly—a finger threatened me.
   “Well! Why are you silent? Is it true, or not? Executioner? So!”
   “So,” I repeated submissively. And then I clearly heard every word of His.
   “Well then? Do you think I am afraid of the word! Did you ever try to take off its shell and
look into its inner meaning? I shall tell you. … Remember a blue hill, a crowd, a cross?
Some up on the hill, sprinkled with blood, are busy nailing a body to the cross; others
below, sprinkled with tears, are gazing upward. Does it not seem to you that the part which
those above must play is the more difficult, the most important part? If it were not for
them, how could that magnificent tragedy ever have been staged? True, they were hissed
by the dark crowd but for that the author of the tragedy, God, should have remunerated
them the more liberally, should he not? And the Christian, most clement God himself, who
burnt on a slow fire all the infidels, is he not an executioner? Was the number of those
burned by the Christians less than the number of burned Christians? Yet (you must
understand this!), yet this God was for centuries glorified as the God of love! Absurd? Oh,
no. Just the contrary. It is rather a patent for the imperishable wisdom of man, written in
blood. Even at the time when he still was wild and hairy man knew that real, algebraic love
for humanity must inevitably be inhuman, and that the inevitable mark of truth is cruelty,
just as the inevitable mark of fire is its property of causing the sensation of burning. Could
you show me a fire that would not hurt? Well, prove now your point! Proceed! Argue!”
   How could I argue? How could I argue when those thoughts were once mine, though I
was never able to dress them in such a splendid, tempered armor. I remained silent.
   “If your silence is intended to mean that you agree with me, then let us talk as adults do
after the children have gone to bed; let us talk to the logical end. I ask: what was it that man
from his diaper age dreamed of, tormented himself for, prayed for? He longed for that day
when someone would tell him what happiness is and then would chain him to it. What else
are we doing now? The ancient dream about a paradise. … Remember: there in paradise
they know no desires any more, no pity, no love; there they are all—blessed. An operation
has been performed upon their centre of fancy; that is why they are blessed, angels,
servants of God. … And now, at the very moment when we have caught up with that dream,
when we hold it like this”: (He clenched his hand so, that if he had held a stone in it sap
would have run out!) “At the moment when all that was left for us was to adorn our prize
and distribute it amongst all in equal pieces, at that very moment you, you. …”
   The cast-iron roar was suddenly broken off. I was as red as a piece of iron on an anvil,
under the moulding sledgehammer. This seemed to have stopped for a second, hanging in
air, and I waited, waited … until suddenly:
   “How old are you?”
   “Thirty-two.”
   “Just double the age, and as simple as at sixteen! Listen. Is it possible that it really never
occurred to you that they (we do not yet know their names but I am certain you will
disclose them to us), that they were interested in you only as the Builder of the Integral?
only in order to be able through the use of you—”
   “Don’t! Don’t!” I cried. But it was like protecting yourself with your hands and crying to a
bullet: you may still be hearing your own “don’t” but the bullet meanwhile has burned you
through, and writhing with pain, you are prostrated on the ground.
   Yes, yes; the Builder of the Integral. … Yes, yes. … At once there came back to me the
angry face of U- with twitching, brick-red gills, on that morning when both of them. …
   I remember now, clearly, how I raised my eyes and laughed. A Socrates-like, bald-headed
man was sitting before me; and small drops of sweat dotted the bald surface of his cranium.
   How simple, how magnificently trivial everything was! How simple! Almost to the point
of being ridiculous. Laughter was choking me and bursting forth in puffs; I covered my
mouth with my hand and rushed wildly out. …
   Steps. Wind. Damp, leaping fragments of lights and faces. … And while running: “No!
Only to see her! To see her once more!”
   Here again, an empty white page. All I remember is feet; not people, just feet; hundreds
of feet, confusedly stamping feet, falling from somewhere on the pavement; a heavy rain of
feet. … And some cheerful, daring voice, and a shout that was probably for me: “Hey, hey!
Come here! Come along with us!”
   Afterward—a deserted square heavily overloaded with tense wind. In the middle of the
square a dim, heavy threatening mass—the Machine of the Well-Doer; and a seemingly
unexpected image arose within me in response to the sight of the Machine: a snow-white
pillow and on the pillow a head thrown back, and half-closed eyes and a sharp, sweet line of
teeth. … All this seemed so absurdly, so terribly connected with the Machine. I know how
this connection has come about but I do not yet want to see it nor to say it aloud—I don’t
want to! I do not!
   I closed my eyes, sat down on the steps which lead upwards to the Machine. I must have
been running for my face was wet. From somewhere very far away cries were coming. But
nobody heard them; nobody heard me crying: “Save me from it—save me!”
   If only I had a mother as the ancients had—my mother, mine, for whom I should be not
the Builder of the Integral and not D-530, not a molecule of the United State but merely a
living human piece, a piece of herself, a trampled, smothered, a cast-off piece. … And
though I were driving the nails into the cross or being nailed to it (perhaps it is the same),
she would hear what no one else could hear; her old grown-together wrinkled lips. …
                            RECORD THIRTY-SEVEN
Infusorian—Doomsday—Her room.
I don’t know what title—Perhaps the whole synopsis may be called a cast-off cigarette-butt.
I awoke. A bright glare painful to look at. I half closed my eyes. My head seemed filled with
some caustic blue smoke. Everything was enveloped in fog and through the fog:
   “But I did not turn on the light … then how is it. …”
   I jumped up. At the table, leaning her chin on her hand and smiling, was I-330, looking at
me.
   She was at the very table at which I am now writing. Those ten or fifteen minutes are
already behind me, cruelly twisted into a very firm spring. Yet it seems to me that the door
closed after her only a second ago and that I could still overtake her and grasp her hand—
and that she might laugh out and say. …
   I-330 was at the table. I rushed towards her.
   “You? You! I have been. … I saw your room. … I thought you. …” But midway I hurt
myself upon the sharp, motionless spears of her eyelashes and I stopped. I remembered:
she looked at me in the same way before—in the Integral. It was urgent to tell her
everything in one second and in such a way that she should believe—or she would
never. …
   “Listen, I-330, I must. … I must … everything! No, no, one moment—let me have a glass
of water first.”
   My mouth was as dry as though it were lined with blotting paper. I poured a glass of
water but I could not. … I put the glass back upon the table, and with both hands firmly
grasped the carafe.
   Now I noticed that the blue smoke was from a cigarette. She brought the cigarette to her
lips and with avidity she drew in and swallowed the smoke as I did water; then she said:
   “Don’t. Be silent. Don’t you see it matters little? I came anyway. They are waiting for me
below. … Do you want these minutes which are our last … ?”
   Abruptly she threw the cigarette on the floor and bent backwards over the side of the
chair to reach the button in the wall (it was quite difficult to do so), and I remember how
the chair swayed slightly, how two of its legs were lifted. Then the curtains fell.
   She came close to me and embraced me. Her knees, through her dress, were like a slow,
gentle, warm, enveloping and permeating poison. …
   Suddenly (it happens at times) you plunge into sweet, warm sleep—when all at once, as
if something pricks you, you tremble and your eyes are again widely open. So it was now;
there on the floor in her room were the pink checks stamped with traces of footsteps, one
of them bore the letter F and some figures. … Plus and minus fused within my mind into
one lump. … I could not say even now what sort of a feeling it was but I crushed her so that
she cried out with pain. …
   One more minute out of these ten or fifteen; her head thrown back, lying on the bright
white pillow, her eyes half closed, a sharp, sweet line of teeth. … And all this reminded me
in an irresistible, absurd, torturing way about something forbidden, something not
permissible at that moment. More tenderly, more cruelly, I pressed her to myself, more
bright grew the blue traces of my fingers. …
   She said, without opening her eyes (I noticed this), “They say you went to see the Well-
Doer yesterday, is it true?”
   “Yes.”
   Then her eyes opened widely and with delight I looked at her and saw that her face grew
quickly paler and paler, that it effaced itself, disappearing—only the eyes remained.
   I told her everything. Only for some reason, what I don’t know—(no, it is not true, I know
the reason) I was silent about one thing: His assertion at the end that they needed me only
in order. …
   Like the image on a photographic plate in a developing fluid, her face gradually
reappeared; the cheeks, the white line of teeth, the lips. She stood up and went to the
mirror-door of the closet. My mouth was dry again. I poured water but it was revolting to
drink it; I put the glass back on the table and asked:
   “Did you come to see me because you wanted to inquire … ?”
   A sharp, mocking triangle of brows drawn to the temples looked at me from the mirror.
She turned around to say something but said nothing.
   It was not necessary; I knew.
   To bid her goodbye, I moved my foreign limbs, struck the chair with them. It fell upside
down, dead, like the table in her room. Her lips were cold … just as cold was once the floor,
here, near my bed. …
   When she left I sat down on the floor, bent over the cigarette-butt. …
   I cannot write any more—I no longer want to!
                              RECORD THIRTY-NINE
The end.
All this was like the last crystal of salt thrown into a saturated solution; quickly, needle-like
crystals began to appear, to grow more substantial and solid. It was clear to me; the
decision was made and tomorrow morning I shall do it! It amounts to suicide but perhaps
then I shall be reborn. For only what is killed can be reborn.
   Every second the sky twitched in convulsion there in the west. My head was burning and
pulsating inside; I was up all night and I fell asleep only at about seven o’clock in the
morning when the darkness of the night was already dispelled and becoming gray and
when the roofs crowded with birds became visible. …
   I woke up; ten o’clock. Evidently the bell did not ring today. On the table—left from
yesterday—there stood the glass of water. I gulped the water down with avidity and I ran; I
had to do it quickly, as quickly as possible.
   The sky was deserted, blue, all eaten up by the storm. Sharp corners of shadows. …
Everything seemed to be cut out of blue autumnal air—thin, dangerous to touch; it seemed
so brittle, ready to disperse into glass dust. Within me something similar; I ought not to
think; it was dangerous to think, for. …
   And I did not think, perhaps I did not even see properly; I only registered impressions.
There on the pavement, thrown from somewhere, branches were strewn; their leaves were
green, amber and cherry-red. Above, crossing each other, birds and aeros were tossing
about. Here below heads, open mouths, hands waving branches. … All this must have been
shouting, buzzing, chirping. …
   Then—streets empty as if swept by a plague. I remember I stumbled over something
disgustingly soft, yielding yet motionless. I bent down—a corpse. It was lying flat, the legs
apart. The face. … I recognized the thick negro lips which even now seemed to sprinkle
with laughter. His eyes, firmly screwed in, laughed into my face. One second. … I stepped
over him and ran. I could no longer. … I had to have everything done as soon as possible, or
else I felt I would break, I would break in two like an overloaded sail. …
   Luckily it was not more than twenty steps away; I already saw the sign with the golden
letters: “The Bureau of Guardians.” At the door I stopped for a moment to gulp down as
much air as I could and stepped in.
   Inside, in the corridor stood an endless chain of numbers, holding small sheets of paper
and heavy notebooks. They moved slowly, advancing a step or two and stopping again. I
began to be tossed about along the chain, my head was breaking to pieces; I pulled them by
the sleeves, I implored them as a sick man implores to be given something that would even
at the price of sharpest pain end everything, forever.
   A woman with a belt tightly clasped around her waist over the unif and with two
distinctly protruding squatty hemispheres tossing about as if she had eyes on them,
chuckled at me:
   “He has a bellyache! Show him to the room second door to the right!”
   Everybody laughed, and because of that laughter something rose in my throat; I felt I
should either scream or … or. …
   Suddenly from behind someone touched my elbow. I turned around. Transparent wing-
ears! But they were not pink as usual; they were purplish red; his Adam’s apple was tossing
about as though ready to tear the covering. …
   Quickly boring into me: “What are you here for?”
   I seized him.
   “Quickly! Please! Quickly! … into your office. … I must tell everything … right away. … I
am glad that you. … It may be terrible that it should be you to whom. … But it is well, it is
well. …”
   He too, knew her; this made it even more tormenting for me. But perhaps he too, would
tremble when he should hear. … And we would both be killing. … And I would not be
alone at that, my supreme second. …
   The door closed with a slam. I remember a piece of paper was caught beneath the door
and it rustled on the floor when the door closed. And then a strange airless silence covered
us as if a glass bell were put over us. If only he had uttered a single, most insignificant word,
no matter what, I should have told him everything at once. But he was silent. So keyed up
that I heard a noise in my ears, I said without looking at him:
   “I think I always hated her from the very beginning. … I struggled. … Or, no, no, don’t
believe me; I could have but I did not want to save myself; I wanted to perish; this was
dearer to me than anything else … and even now, even this minute, when I know already
everything. … Do you know that I was summoned to the Well-Doer?”
   “Yes, I do.”
   “But what he told me! Please realize that it was equivalent to … it was as if someone
should remove the floor from under you this minute, and you and all here on the desk, the
papers, the ink … the ink would splash out and cover everything with blots. …”
   “What else? What further? Hurry up, others are waiting!”
   Then stumbling, muttering, I told him everything that is recorded in these pages. …
About my real self, and about my hairy self, and about my hands … yes … exactly that was
the beginning. And how I would not do my duty then, and how I lied to myself, and how she
obtained false certificates for me, and how I grew worse and worse, every day, and about
the long corridors underground, and there beyond the Wall. …
   All this I threw out in formless pieces and lumps. I would stutter and fail to find words.
The lips double-curved in a smile would prompt me with the word I needed and I would
nod gratefully: “Yes, yes!”. … Suddenly, what was it? He was talking for me and I only
listened and nodded: “Yes, yes,” and then, “Yes, exactly so, … yes, yes. …”
   I felt cold around my mouth as though it were wet with ether, and I asked with difficulty:
   “But how is it. … You could not learn anywhere. …”
   He smiled a smile growing more and more curved; then:
   “But I see that you do want to conceal from me something. For example, you enumerated
everything you saw beyond the Wall but you failed to mention one thing. You deny it? But
don’t you remember that once, just in passing, just for a second you saw me there? Yes, yes
me!”
   Silence.
   Suddenly, like a flash of lightning, it became shamelessly clear to me: he—he too—. And
all myself, my torment, all that I brought here, crushed by the burden, plucking up my last
strength as if performing a great feat, all appeared to me only funny—like the ancient
anecdote about Abraham and Isaac; Abraham all in a cold sweat, with the knife already
raised over his son, over himself—and suddenly a voice from above: “Never mind. … I was
only joking.”
   Without taking my eyes from the smile which grew more and more curved, I put my
hands on the edge of the desk and slowly, very slowly pushed myself with my chair away
from him. Then instantly gathering myself into my own hands, I dashed madly out, past
loud voices, past steps and mouths. …
   I do not remember how I got into one of the public restrooms at a station of the
Underground Railway. Above, everything was perishing; the greatest civilization, the most
rational in human history was crumbling—but here, by some irony everything remained as
before, beautiful. The walls shone; water murmured cosily and like the water—the unseen,
transparent music. … Only think of it! All this is doomed; all this will be covered with grass,
some day; only myths will remain. …
   I moaned aloud. At the same instant I felt someone gently patting my knee. It was from
the left; it was my neighbor who occupied a seat on my left—an enormous forehead, a bald
parabola, yellow unintelligible lines of wrinkles on his forehead, those lines about me.
   “I understand you. I understand completely,” he said. “Yet you must calm yourself. You
must. It will return. It will inevitably return. It is only important that everybody should
learn of my discovery. You are the first to whom I talk about it. I have calculated that there
is no infinity! No!”
   I looked at him wildly.
   “Yes, yes, I tell you so. There is no infinity. If the universe is infinite, then the average
density of matter must equal zero, but as it is not zero, we know, consequently the universe
is finite; it is spherical in form and the square of its radius—R2—is equal to the average
density multiplied by. … The only thing left is to calculate the numerical coefficient and
then. … Do you realize what it means? It means that everything is final, everything is
simple. … But you, my honored sir, you disturb me, you prevent my finishing my
calculations by your yelling!”
   I do not know which shattered me more, his discovery, or his positiveness at that
apocalyptic hour. I only then noticed that he had a notebook in his hands and a logarithmic
dial. I understood then that even if everything was perishing it was my duty (before you,
my unknown and beloved) to leave these records in a finished form.
   I asked him to give me some paper, and here in the restroom to the accompaniment of
the quiet music, transparent like water, I wrote down these last lines.
   I was about to put down a period as the ancients would put a cross over the caves into
which they used to throw their dead, when all of a sudden my pencil trembled and fell from
between my fingers. …
   “Listen!” (I pulled my neighbor). “Yes, listen, I say. There where your finite universe ends,
what is there? What?”
He had no time to answer. From above, down the steps, stamping. …
                                  RECORD FORTY
Daylight. It is clear. The barometer—760 mm. It is possible that I, D-503, really wrote
these—pages? Is it possible that I ever felt, or imagined I felt all this?
   The handwriting is mine. And what follows is all in my handwriting. Fortunately only the
handwriting. No more delirium, no absurd metaphors, no feelings—only facts. For I am
healthy, perfectly, absolutely healthy. … I am smiling; I cannot help smiling; a splinter has
been taken out of my head and I feel so light, so empty! To be more exact, not empty, but
there is nothing foreign, nothing that prevents me from smiling. (Smiling is the normal
state for a normal human being).
   The facts are as follows: That evening my neighbor who discovered the finiteness of the
universe, and I, and all others who did not have a certificate showing that we had been
operated on, all of us were taken to the nearest auditorium. (For some reason the number
of the auditorium, 112, seemed familiar to me). There they tied us to the tables and
performed the great operation. Next day, I, D-503, appeared before the Well-Doer and told
him everything known to me about the enemies of happiness. Why before it seemed hard
for me to go, I cannot understand. The only explanation seems to be my illness—my soul.
   The same evening, sitting at the same table with Him, with the Well-Doer, I saw for the
first time in my life the famous Gas Chamber. They brought in that woman. She was to
testify in my presence. That woman remained stubbornly silent and smiling. I noticed that
she had sharp and very white teeth which were very pretty.
   Then she was brought under the Bell. Her face became very white and as her eyes were
large and dark—all was very pretty. When they began pumping the air from under the Bell
she threw her head back and half closed her eyes; her lips were pressed together. This
reminded me of something. She looked at me, holding the arms of the chair firmly. She
continued to look until her eyes closed. Then she was taken out and brought to by means of
electrodes and again put under the Bell. The procedure was repeated three times, yet she
did not utter a word.
   The others who were brought in with that woman, proved to be more honest; many of
them began to speak after the first trial. Tomorrow they will all ascend the steps to the
Machine of the Well-Doer. No postponement is possible for there still is chaos, groaning,
cadavers, beasts in the western section, and to our regret there are still quantities of
Numbers who betrayed Reason.
   But on the transverse avenue Forty, we succeeded in establishing a temporary Wall of
high voltage waves. And I hope we win. More than that; I am certain we shall win. For
Reason must win.
                              ENDNOTES
1. This word came down to us for use only as a poetic form, for the chemical
   constitution of this substance is unknown to us. ↩︎
2. These flowers naturally were brought from the Botanical Museum. I, personally,
   am unable to see anything beautiful in flowers, or in anything else that belongs
   to the lower kingdom which now exists only beyond the Green Wall. Only
   rational and useful things are beautiful: machines, boots, formulae, food, etc. ↩︎
3. It happened long ago, in the third century AT (After the Tables). ↩︎
                                         We
                              was published in 1924 by
                                 YEVGENY ZAMYATIN.
                     It was translated from Russian in 1924 by
                                 GREGORY ZILBOORG.
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