Where Robot Mice And Robot Men Run Round In Robot Towns. Ray Bradbury

Where Robot Mice And Robot Men Run Round In Robot Towns - Ray  Bradbury


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Prologue

      They asked me where I’d choose to run, which favored? Ups? or Downs?

      Where robot mice and men, I said, run round in robot towns.

      But is that wise? for tin’s a fool and iron has no thought!

      Computer mice can find me facts and teach me what I’m not.

      But robot all inhuman is, all’s sin with cog and mesh.

      Not if we teach the good stuff in, so it can teach our flesh.

      There’s nothing wrong with metal-men that better dreams can’t chalk.

      I’d find me robot-Plato’s cave if he lived on my block;

      And though his eyes electric were, computerized his tongue,

      Is that more wrong than Berlioz on LPs harped and sung?

      So much electric fills our lives, some bad, some good, some ill.

      But look! there Shaw and Shakespeare dance on Channel 7’s sill:

      A gift of hearts and minds and eyes to see our dark/light face,

      To weigh and balance halos/blights that half-destroy our race;

      To midget make our rocket-ships, and squeeze grand Kong down small

      Then Giants grow from Shavian seed to taunt, provoke us all.

      As man himself a mixture is, rambunctious paradox,

      So we must teach our mad machines: stand tall, pull up your socks!

      Come run with me, wild children/men, half dires and dooms, half clowns.

      Pace robot mice, race robot men, win-lose in robot towns.

      Byzantium

      I come not from

      But from another time and place

      Whose race is simple, tried and true;

      As boy

      I dropped me forth in Illinois,

      A name with neither love nor grace

      Was Waukegan. There I came from

      And not, good friends, Byzantium.

      And yet in looking back I see

      From topmost part of farthest tree

      A land as bright, beloved and blue

      As any Yeats found to be true.

      The house I lived in, hewn of gold

      And on the highest market sold

      Was dandelion-minted, made

      By spendthrift bees in bee-loud glade.

      And then of course our finest wine

      Came forth from that same dandelion,

      While dandelion was my hair

      As bright as all the summer air;

      I dipped in rainbarrels for my eyes

      And cherries stained my lips, my cries,

      My shouts of purest exaltation:

      Byzantium? No. That Indian nation

      Which made of Indian girls and boys

      Spelled forth itself as Illinois.

      Yet all the Indian bees did hum:

      Byzantium.

      Byzantium.

      So we grew up with mythic dead

      To spoon upon midwestern bread

      And spread old gods’ bright marmalade

      To slake in peanut-butter shade.

      Pretending there beneath our sky

      That it was Aphrodite’s thigh;

      Pretending, too, that Zeus was ours

      And Thor fell down in thundershowers.

      While by the porch-rail calm and bold

      His words pure wisdom, stare pure gold

      My grandfather a myth indeed

      Did all of Plato supersede;

      While Grandmama in rocking-chair

      Sewed up the raveled sleeve of care,

      Crocheted cool snowflakes rare and bright

      To winter us on summer night.

      And uncles gathered with their smokes

      Emitted wisdoms masked as jokes,

      And aunts as wise as Delphic maids

      Dispensed prophetic lemonades

      To boys knelt there as acolytes

      On Grecian porch on summer nights.

      Then went to bed there to repent

      The evils of the innocent

      The gnat-sins sizzling in their ears

      Said, through the nights and through the years

      Not Illinois nor Waukegan

      But blither sky and blither sun;

      Though mediocre all our Fates

      And Mayor not as bright as Yeats

      Yet still we knew ourselves. The sum?

      Byzantium.

      Byzantium.

       for Gerard Manley Hopkins

      What I do is me—for that I came.

      What I do is me!

      For that I came into the world!

      So said Gerard;

      So said that gentle Manley Hopkins.

      In his poetry and prose he saw the Fates that chose

      Him in genetics, then set him free to find his way

      Among the sly electric printings in his blood.

      God thumbprints thee! he said.

      Within your hour of birth

      He touches hand to brow, He whorls and softly stamps

      The ridges and the symbols of His soul above your eyes!

      But in that selfsame hour, full born and shouting

      Shocked pronouncements of one’s birth,

      In mirrored gaze of midwife, mother, doctor

      See that Thumbprint fade and fall away in flesh

      So, lost, erased, you seek a lifetime’s days for it

      And dig deep to find the sweet instructions there

      Put by when God first circuited and printed thee to life:

      “Go hence! do this! do that! do yet another thing!

      This self is yours! Be it!”

      And what is that?! you cry at hearthing breast,

      Is there no rest? No, only journeying to be yourself.

      And


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