Aloys
Galaxy Magazine August 1961
He appeared in glory and sank without a trace. Why? How? For the first
time anywhere, here is the startling
inside story.
He had flared up more brightly
than anyone in memory. And then he was gone. Yet there was ironic laughter
where he had been; and his ghost still walked.
That was the oddest thing: to
encounter his ghost.
It was like coming suddenly on
Haley’s Comet drinking beer at the Plugged Nickel Bar, and having it deny that
it was a celestial phenomenon at all, that it had ever been beyond the sun. For
he could have been the man of the century, and now it was not even known if he was
alive. And if he were alive, it would be very odd if he would be hanging around
places like the Plugged Nickel Bar.
This all begins with the award.
But before that it begins with the man.
Professor Aloys Foulcault-Oeg was
acutely embarrassed and in a state of dread.
“These I have to speak to, all
these great men. Is even glory worth the price when it must be paid in such
coin?”
Aloys did not have the amenities,
the polish, the tact. A child of penury, he had all his life eaten bread that
was part sawdust, and worn shoes that were part cardboard. He had an overcoat
that had been his father’s, and before that his grandfather’s.
This coat was no longer handsome,
its holes being stuffed and quilted with ancient rags. It was long past its
years of greatness, and even when Aloys had inherited it as a young man it was
in the afternoon of its life. And yet it was worth more than anything else he
owned in the world.
Professor Aloys had become great
in spite of—or because of—his poverty. He had worked out his finest theory, a
series of nineteen interlocked equations of cosmic shapeliness and simplicity.
He had worked it out on a great piece of butchers’ paper soaked with lamb’s blood,
and had so given it to the world.
And once it was given, it was
almost as though nothing else could be added on any subject whatsoever. Any
further detailing would be only footnotes to it and all the sciences no more
than commentaries.
Naturally this made him famous.
But the beauty of it was that it made him famous, not to the commonalty of mankind
(this would have been a burden to his sensitively tuned soul), but to a small
and scattered class of extremely erudite men (about a score of them in the world).
Their recognition brought him almost, if not quite, complete satisfaction.
But he was not famous in his own
street or his own quarter of town. And it was in this stark conglomerate of
dark-souled alleys and roofs that Professor Aloys had lived all his life till
just thirty-seven days ago.
When he received the
announcement, award, and invitation, he quickly calculated the time. It was not
very long to allow travel halfway around the world. Being locked out of his
rooms, as he often was, he was unencumbered by baggage or furniture, and he
left for the ceremony at once.
With the announcement, award, and
invitation, there had also been a check; but as he was not overly familiar with
the world of finance or with the English language in which it was written, he
did not recognize it for what it was. Having used the back of it to write down
a formula that had crept into his mind, he shoved the check, forgotten, into
one of the pockets of his greatcoat.
***
For three days he rode a river
boat to the port city, hidden and hungry. There he concealed himself on an
ocean tramp. That he did not starve on this was due to the caprice of the
low-lifers who discovered him, for they made him stay hidden in a terrible
bunker and every day or two they passed in a bucket to him.
Then, several ports and many days
later, he left the ship like a crippled, dirty animal. And it was in That City
and on That Day. For the award was to be that evening.
“These I have to speak to, all
these wonderful men who are higher than the grocers, higher than the butchers
even. These men get more respect than a policeman, than a canal boat captain.
They are wiser than a mayor and more honored than a merchant. They know arts
more intricate than a clock-maker’s and are virtuous beyond the politicians.
More perspicacious than editors, more talented than actors, these are the great
men of the world. And I am only Aloys, and now I am too ragged and dirty even
to be Aloys anymore. I no longer am a man with a name.”
For he was very humble as he
walked the great town where even the shop girls were dressed like princesses,
and all the restaurants were so fine that only the rich people would have dared
to go in them at all. Had there been poor people (and there were none) there
would have been no place for them to eat.
“But it is to me they have given
the prize. Not to Schellendore and not to Ottlebaum, not to Francks nor
Timiryaseff, not even to Pitirim-Koss, the latchet of whose shoe I am not—but
why do I say that?—he was not, after all, very bright—all of them are
inadequate in some way—the only one who was ever able to get to the heart of these
great things was Aloys Foulcault-Oeg, who happens to be myself. It is a strange
thing that they should honor me, and yet I believe they could not have made a
better choice.”
So pride and fear warred in him,
but it was always the pride that lost. For he had only a little bit of pride,
undernourished and on quaking ground, and against it was a whole legion of
fears, apprehensions, shames, dreads, embarrassments, and nightmarish
bashfulnesses.
He begged a little bit when he
had found a poor part of town. But even here the people were of the rich poor,
not the poor as he had known them.
When he had money in his pocket,
he had a meal. Then he went to Jiffy Quick While You Wait Cleaners Open Day and
Night to have his clothes cleaned. He wrapped himself in dignity and a blanket
while he waited. And as the daylight was coming to an end, they brought his
clothes back to him.
“We have done all we could do. If
we had a week or a month, we might do a little more, but not much.”
***
Then he went out into the town,
cleaner than he had been in many years, and he walked to the hall of the
Commendation and Award. Here he watched all the great men arrive in private
cars and taxis: Ergodic Eimer, August Angstrom, Vladimir Vor. He watched them
and thought of what he would say to them, and then he realized that he had
forgotten his English.
“I remember dog, that is the
first word I ever learned, but what will I say to them about a dog? I remember
house and horse and apple and fish. Oh, now I remember the entire language. But
what if I forget it again? Would it not be an odd speech if I could only say
apple and fish and house and dog? I would be shamed.”
He wished he were rich and could
dress in white like the street sweepers, or in black leather like the newsboy
on the corner. He saw Edward Edelstein and Christopher Cronin enter and he
cowered on the street and knew that he would never be able to talk to those
great men.
A fine gentleman came out and
walked directly to him.
“You are the great Professor
Foulcault-Oeg? I would have known you anywhere. True greatness shines from you.
Our city is honored tonight. Come inside and we will go to a little room apart,
for I see that you will have to compose yourself first. I am Graf-Doktor
Hercule Bienville-Stravroguine.”
Whyever he said he was the
Graf-Doktor is a mystery, because he was Willy McGilly and the other was just a
name that he made up that minute.
Within, they went to a small room
behind the cloak room. But here, in spite of the smooth kindness of the
gracious gentleman, Aloys knew that he would never be able to compose himself.
He was an epouvantail, a pugalo, a clown, a ragamuffin. He looked at the
nineteen-point outline of the address he was to give. He shuddered and he
gobbled like a turkey. He sniffled and he wiped his nose on his sleeve. He was terrified
that the climax of his life’s work should find him too craven to accept it. And
he discovered that he had forgotten his English again.
“I remember bread and butter, but
I don’t know which one goes on top. I know pencil and pen-knife and bed, but I
have entirely forgotten the word for maternal uncle. I remember plow, but what
in the world will I say to all these great men about a plow? I pray that this
cup may pass from me.”
Then he disintegrated in one abject
mass of terror. Several minutes went by.
***
But when he emerged from the room
he was a different man entirely. Erect, alive, intense, queerly handsome, and
now in formal attire, he mounted with the sure grace of a panther to the
speaker’s platform. Once only he glanced at the nineteen-point outline of his
address. As there is no point in keeping it a secret, it was as follows: 1. Cepheid
and Cerium—how Long Is a Yardstick? 2. Double Trouble—Is Ours a Binary
Universe? 3. Cerebrum and Cortex—the Mathematics of Melancholia. 4.
Microphysics and Megacyclic Polyneums. 5. Ego,
No, Hemeis—the Personality of the Subconscious. 6. Linear Convexity and
Lateral Intransigence. 7. Betelgeuse Betrayed—the Myth of Magnitude. 8.
Mu-Meson, the Secret of Metamorphosis. 9. Theogony and Tremor—the Mathematics of
Seismology. 10. Planck’s Constant and Agnesi’s Variable. 11.
Dien-cephalon and Di-Gamma—unconscionable Thoughts about Consciousness. 12.
Inverse Squares and the Quintesimal Radicals. 13. The Chain of Error in the Lineal
B Translation. 14. Skepticism—the Humor of the Humorless. 15. Ogive and Volute—thoughts
on Celestial Curviture. 16. Conic Sections—Small Pieces of Infinity. 17.
Eschatology—medium Thoughts about the End. 18. Hypo-polarity and Cosmic
Hysteresis. 19. The Invisible Quadratic, or This is All Simpler than You Think.
You will immediately see the
beauty of this skeleton, and yet to flesh it would not be the work of an
ordinary man.
He glanced over it with the sure
smile of complete confidence. Then he spoke softly to the master of ceremonies
in a whisper with a rumble that could be heard throughout the hall.
“I am here. I will begin. There
is no need for any further introduction.”
For the next three and a half
hours he held that intelligent audience completely spellbound, enchanted. They
followed, or seemed to follow, his lightning flashes of metaphor illumining the
craggy chasms of his vasty subjects.
They thrilled to the magnetic
power of his voice, urbane yet untamed, with its polyglot phrasing and its bare
touch of accent so strange as to be baffling; ancient, surely, and yet from a
land beyond the Pale. And they quivered with interior pleasure at the glorious
unfolding in climax after climax of these before only half-glimpsed vistas.
Here was a world of mystery
revealed in all its wildness, and it obeyed and stood still, and he named its
name. The nebula and the conch lay down together, and the ultra-galaxies
equated themselves with the zeta mesons. Like a rich householder, he brought
from his store treasures old and new, and nothing like them had ever been seen
or heard before.
***
At one point Professor
Timiryaseff cried out in bafflement and incomprehension, and Doctor Ergodic
Eimer buried his face in his hands, for even these most erudite men could not
glimpse all the shattering profundity revealed by the fantastic speaker.
And when it was over they were
limp and delighted that so much had been made known to them. They had the crown
without the cross, and the odd little genius had filled them with a rich glow.
The rest was perfunctory,
commendations and testimonials from all the great men. The trophy, heavy and
rich but not flashy, worth the lifetime salary of a professor of mathematics,
was accepted almost carelessly. And then the cup was passed quietly, which is
to say the tall cool glasses went around as the men still lingered and talked
with hushed pleasure.
“Gin,” said the astonishing
orator. “It is the drink of bums and impoverished scholars, and I am both. Yes,
anything at all with it.”
Then he spoke to Maecenas, who
was at his side, the patron who was footing the bill for all this gracious
extravagance.
“The check I have never cashed,
having been much in movement since I have received it. And as to me it is a
large amount, though perhaps not to others, and as you yourself have signed it,
I wonder if you could cash it for me now.”
“At once,” said Maecenas. “At
once. Ten minutes and we shall have the sum here. Ah, you have endorsed it with
a formula! Who but Professor Aloys Foulcault-Oeg could be so droll? Look, he
has endorsed it with a formula!”
“Look, look! Let us copy! Why,
this is marvelous! It takes us even beyond his great speech of tonight. The
implications of it!”
“Oh, the implications!” they said
as they copied it off, and the implications rang in their heads like bells of
the future.
Now it had suddenly become very
late, and the elated little man with the gold and gemmed trophy under one arm
and the packet of bank notes in his pocket disappeared as by magic.
***
Professor Aloys Foulcault-Oeg was
not seen again; or, if seen, he was not known, for hardly anyone would have
known his face. In fact, when he had painfully released the bonds by which he
had been tied in the little room behind the cloak room, and removed the
shackles from his ankles, he did not pause at all, but slipped into his
greatcoat and ran out into the night. Not for many blocks did he even remove
the gag from his mouth, not realizing in his confusion what it was that
obstructed his speech and breathing. But when he got it out, it was a pleasant relief.
A kind gentleman took him in
hand, the second to do so that night. He was bundled into a kind of taxi and
driven to a mysterious quarter called Wreckville. And deep inside a secret
building he was given a bath and a bowl of hot soup. And later he gathered with
others at a festive board.
Here Willy McGilly was king. As
he worked his way into his cups with the gold trophy in front of him, he
expounded and elucidated.
“I was wonderful. I held them in
the palm of my hand. Was I not wonderful, Oeg?”
“I could not hear all, for I was
on the floor of the little room. But from what I could hear, yes, you were
wonderful.”
“Only once in my life did I give
a better speech. It was the same speech, but it was newer then. This was in
Little Dogie, New Mexico, and I was selling a snake-oil derivative whose secret
I still cannot reveal. But I was good tonight and some of them cried. And now
what will you do, Oeg? Do you know what we are?”
“Moshennekov.”
“Why, so we are.”
“Schwindlern.”
“The very word.”
“Low-life con men. And the world
you live on is not the one you were born on. I will join you if I may.”
“Oeg, you have a talent for going
to the core of the apple.”
For when a man (however unlikely
a man) shows real talent, then the Wreckville bunch has to recruit him. They
cannot have uncontrolled talent running loose in the commonalty of mankind.
End
Interesting. The speech was such gobbledegook that
none of the assembled great minds understood it—therefore concluding that it
must be brilliant.
The above image is a free download. Get it here.
Poor old Louis Shalako has a few books and stories available
from iTunes. Some are always free.
Thank you for reading.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Please feel free to comment on the blog posts, art or editing.