The Big Engine
Galaxy Magazine February 1962
Have you found out about the Big Engine? It’s all around us, you know—can’t
you hear it even now?
There are all sorts of screwy
theories (the Professor said) of what makes the wheels of the world go round.
There’s a boy in Chicago who thinks we’re all of us just the thoughts of a
green cat; when the green cat dies we’ll all puff to nothing like smoke. There’s
a man in the west who thinks all women are witches and run the world by conjure
magic. There’s a man in the east who believes all rich people belong to a
secret society that’s a lot tighter and tougher than the Mafia and that has a
monopoly of power-secrets and pleasure-secrets other people don’t dream exist.
Me, I think the wheels of the
world just go. I decided that forty years ago and I’ve never since seen or
heard or read anything to make me change my mind.
I was a stoker on a lake boat
then (the Professor continued, delicately sipping smoke from his long thin
cigarette). I was as stupid as they make them, but I liked to think. Whenever I’d
get a chance I’d go to one of the big libraries and make them get me all sorts
of books. That was how guys started calling me the Professor. I’d get books on philosophy,
metaphysics, science, even religion. I’d read them and try to figure out the
world. What was it all about, anyway? Why was I here?
What was the point in the whole
business of getting born and working and dying? What was the use of it? Why’d
it have to go on and on?
And why’d it have to be so
complicated?
Why all the building and tearing
down? Why’d there have to be cities, with crowded streets and horse cars and
cable cars and electric cars and big open-work steel boxes built to the sky to
be hung with stone and wood—my closest friend got killed falling off one of
those steel box-kites. Shouldn’t there be some simpler way of doing it all? Why
did things have to be so mixed up that a man like myself couldn’t have a single
clear decent thought?
More than that, why weren’t
people a real part of the world? Why didn’t they show more honest-to-God
response? When you slept with a woman, why was it something you had and she
didn’t? Why, when you went to a prize fight, were the bruisers only so much
meat, and the crowd a lot of little screaming popinjays? Why was a war nothing
but blather and blow-up and bother? Why’d everybody have to go through their
whole lives so dead, doing everything so methodical and prissy like a Sunday-school
picnic or an orphan’s parade?
***
And then, when I was reading one
of the science books, it came to me.
The answer was all there, printed
out plain to see only nobody saw it.
It was just this: Nobody was
really alive.
Back of other people’s foreheads
there weren’t any real thoughts or minds, or love or fear, to explain things.
The whole universe—stars and men and dirt and worms and atoms, the whole
shooting match—was just one great big engine. It didn’t take mind or life or
anything else to run the engine. It just ran.
Now one thing about science. It
doesn’t lie. Those men who wrote those science books that showed me the answer,
they had no more minds than anybody else. Just darkness in their brains, but
because they were machines built to use science, they couldn’t help but get the
right answers. They were like the electric brains they’ve got now, but hadn’t then,
that give out the right answer when you feed in the question. I’d like to feed
in the question, “What’s Life?” to one of those machines and see what came out.
Just figures, I suppose. I read somewhere that if a billion monkeys had
typewriters and kept pecking away at them they’d eventually turn out all the Encyclopedia Britannica in trillions and
trillions of years. Well, they’ve done it all right, and in jig time.
They’re doing it now.
A lot of philosophy and
psychology books I worked through really fit in beautifully. There was Watson’s
Behaviorism telling how we needn’t even
assume that people are conscious to explain their actions. There was Leibnitz’s
Monadology, with its theory that we’re
all of us lonely atoms that are completely out of touch and don’t effect each
other in the slightest, but only seem to...because all our little clockwork motors
were started at the same time in pre-established harmony. We seem to be responding to each other, but
actually we’re just a bunch of wooden-minded puppets. Jerk one puppet up into
the flies and the others go on acting as if exactly nothing at all had
happened.
So there it was all laid out for
me (the Professor went on, carefully pinching out the end of his cigarette).
That was why there was no honest-to-God response in people. They were machines.
The fighters were machines made
for fighting. The people that watched them were machines for stamping and
screaming and swearing. The bankers had banking cogs in their bellies, the
crooks had crooked cams. A woman was just a loving machine, all nicely adjusted
to give you a good time (sometimes!) but the farthest star was nearer to you
than the mind behind that mouth you kissed.
See what I mean? People just
machines, set to do a certain job and then quietly rust away. If you kept on
being the machine you were supposed to be, well and good. Then your actions
fitted with other people’s. But if you didn’t, if you started doing something
else, then the others didn’t respond.
They just went on doing what was
called for.
It wouldn’t matter what you did,
they’d just go on making the motions they were set to make. They might be set
to make love, and you might decide you wanted to fight. They’d go on making
love while you fought them. Or it might happen the other way—seems to, more
often!
Or somebody might be talking
about Edison. And you’d happen to say something about Ingersoll. But he’d just
go on talking about Edison.
You were all alone.
***
Except for a few others—not more
than one in a hundred thousand, I guess—who wake up and figure things out. And
they mostly go crazy and run themselves to death, or else turn mean. Mostly
they turn mean. They get a cheap little kick out of pushing things around that
can’t push back. All over the world you find them—little gangs of three or
four, half a dozen—who’ve waked up, but just to their cheap kicks. Maybe it’s a
couple of coppers in ‘Frisco, a schoolteacher in K.C., some artists in New
York, some rich kids in Florida, some undertakers in London—who’ve found that
all the people walking around are just dead folk and to be treated no decenter,
who see how bad things are and get their fun out of making it a little worse.
Just a mean little bit worse. They
don’t dare to destroy in a big way, because they know the machine feeds them
and tends them, and because they’re always scared they’d be noticed by gangs
like themselves and wiped out. They haven’t the guts to really wreck the whole
shebang. But they get a kick out of scribbling their dirty pictures on it, out
of meddling and messing with it.
I’ve seen some of their fun, as
they call it, sometimes hidden away, sometimes in the open streets.
You’ve seen a clerk dressing a
figure in a store window? Well, suppose he slapped its face. Suppose a kid
stuck pins in a calico pussy-cat, or threw pepper in the eyes of a doll.
No decent live man would have
anything to do with nickel sadism or dime paranoia like that. He’d either go
back to his place in the machine and act out the part set for him, or else he’d
hide away like me and live as quiet as he could, not stirring things up. Like a
mouse in a dynamo or an ant in an atomics plant.
(The Professor went to the window
and opened it, letting the sour old smoke out and the noises of the city in.)
***
Listen (he said), listen to the
great mechanical symphony, the big black combo. The airplanes are the double
bass. Have you noticed how you can always hear one nowadays? When one walks out
of the sky another walks in.
Presses and pumps round out the
bass section. Listen to them rumble and thump! Tonight they’ve got an old steam
locomotive helping. Maybe they’re giving a benefit show for the old duffer.
Cars and traffic—they’re the
strings. Mostly cellos and violas. They purr and wail and whine and keep trying
to get out of their section.
Brasses? To me the steel-on-steel
of streetcars and El trains always sounds like trumpets and cornets. Strident,
metallic, fiery cold.
Hear that siren way off? It’s a
clarinet. The ship horns are tubas, the diesel horn’s an oboe. And that lovely
dreadful French horn is an electric saw cutting down the last tree.
But what a percussion section
they’ve got! The big stuff, like streetcar bells jangling, is easy to catch,
but you have to really listen to get the subtleties—the buzz of a defective
neon sign, the click of a stoplight changing.
Sometimes you do get human
voices, I’ll admit, but they’re not like they are in Beethoven’s Ninth or Holst’s Planets.
There’s the real
sound of the universe (the Professor concluded, shutting the window). That’s
your heavenly choir. That’s the music of the spheres the old alchemists kept
listening for—if they’d just stayed around a little longer they’d all have been
deafened by it. Oh, to think that Schopenhauer was bothered by the crack of
carters’ whips!
And now it’s time for this mouse
to tuck himself in his nest in the dynamo. Good night, gentlemen!
End
The image is from Canstock and is from the collection
of Louis Shalako. It was originally used as the cover image for Engines
of Creation, a nice coincidence. If you want to use it, it's better if you go there and buy your own copy.
Readers can get that book, a collection of my own short stories, for free from
Barnes & Noble.
Thank you for reading.
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