Robert Heinlein - Stranger in a Strange Land
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- Название:Stranger in a Strange Land
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“Death isn’t funny.”
“Then why are there so many jokes about death? Jill, with us—us humans—death is so sad that we must laugh at it. All those religions—they contradict each other on every other point but every one of them is filled with ways to help people be brave enough to laugh even though they know they are dying.” He stopped and Jill could feel that he had almost gone into his trance state. “Jill? Is it possible that I was searching them the wrong way? Could it be that every one of all those religions is true?”
“Huh? How could that possibly be? Mike, if one of them is true, then the others are wrong. Logic.”
“So? Point to the shortest direction around the universe. It doesn’t matter which way you point, it’s the shortest… and you’re pointing right back at yourself.”
“Well, what does that prove? You taught me the true answer, Mike. ‘Thou art God.’”
“And Thou art God, my lovely. I wasn’t disputing that… but that one prime fact which doesn’t depend at all on faith may mean that all faiths are true.”
“Well… if they’re all true, then right now I want to worship Siva.” Jill changed the subject with emphatic direct action.
“Little pagan,” he said softly. “They’ll run you out of San Francisco.”
“But we’re going to Los Angeles… where it won’t be noticed. Oh! Thou art Siva!”
“Dance, Kali, dance!”
Some time during the night she woke and saw him standing at the window, looking out over the city. (“Trouble, my brother?”)
He turned and spoke. “There’s no need for them to be so unhappy.”
“Darling, darling! I think I had better take you home. The city is not good for you.”
“But I would still know it. Pain and sickness and hunger and fighting—there’s no need for any of it. It’s as foolish as those little monkeys.”
“Yes, darling. But it’s not your fault—”
“Ah, but it is!”
“Well… that way—yes. But it’s not just this one city; it’s five billion people and more. You can’t help five billion people.”
“I wonder.”
He came over and sat down by her. “I grok with them now, I can talk to them. Jill, I could set up our act again… and make the marks laugh every minute. I am certain.”
“Then why not do it? Patty would certainly be pleased… and so would I. I liked being ‘with it’—and now that we’ve shared water with Patty, it would be like being home.”
He didn’t answer. Jill felt his mind and knew that he was contemplating, trying to grok. She waited.
“Jill? What do I have to do to be ordained?”
PART FOUR: HIS SCANDALOUS CAREER
XXX
THE FIRST MIXED LOAD OF permanent colonists arrived on Mars; six of the seventeen survivors of the twenty-three originals returned to Earth. Prospective colonists trained in Peru at sixteen thousand feet. The president of Argentina moved one night to Montevideo, taking with him such portables as could be stuffed into two suitcases, and the new Presidente started an extradition process before the high Court to yank him back, or at least the two suitcases. Last rites for Alice Douglas were held privately in the National Cathedral with less than two thousand attending, and editorialists and stereo commentators alike praised the dignified fortitude with which the Secretary General took his bereavement. A three-year-old named Inflation, carrying 126 pounds with Jinx Jenkins Up, won the Kentucky Derby, paying fifty-four for one, and two guests of the Colony Airotel, Louisville, Kentucky, discorporated, one voluntarily, the other by heart failure.
Another bootleg edition of the (unauthorized) biography The Devil and Reverend Foster appeared simultaneously on news stands throughout the United States; by nightfall every copy had been burned and the plates destroyed, along with incidental damage to other chattels and to real estate, plus a certain amount of mayhem, maiming, and simple assault. The British Museum was rumored to possess a copy of the first edition (untrue), and also the Vatican Library (true, but available only to certain church scholars).
In the Tennessee legislature a bill was again introduced to make the ratio pi exactly equal to three; it was reported out by the committee on public education and morals, passed with no objection by the lower house and died in committee in the upper house. An interchurch fundamentalist group opened offices in Van Buren, Arkansas, for the purpose of soliciting funds to send missionaries to the Martians; Dr. Jubal Harshaw happily sent them a lavish donation, but took the precaution of sending it in the name (and with the address) of the editor of the New Humanist, a rabid atheist and his close friend.
Other than that, Jubal had very little to feel amused about—there had been too much news about Mike lately, and all of it depressing. He had treasured the occasional visits home of Jill and Mike and had been most interested in Mike’s progress, especially after Mike developed a sense of humor. But they came home less frequently now and Jubal did not relish the latest developments.
It had not troubled Jubal when Mike was run out of Union Theological Seminary, hotly pursued in spirit by a pack of enraged theologians, some of whom were angry because they believed in God and others because they did not—but all united in detesting the Man from Mars. Jubal honestly evalued anything that happened to a theologian short of breaking him on the wheel was no more than meet—and the experience was good for the boy; he’d know better next time.
Nor had he been troubled when Mike (with the help of Douglas) had enlisted under an assumed name in the Federation armed forces. He had been quite sure (through private knowledge) that no sergeant could cause Mike any permanent distress, and contrariwise, Jubal was not troubled by what might happen to sergeants or other ranks—an unreconciled old reactionary, Jubal had burned his own honorable discharge and all that went with it on the day that the United States had ceased having its own armed forces.
Actually, Jubal had been surprised at how little shambles Mike had created as “Private Jones” and how long he had lasted—almost three weeks. He had crowned his military career the day that he had seized on the question period following an orientation lecture to hold forth on the utter uselessness of force and violence under any circumstances (with some side continents on the desirability of reducing surplus population through cannibalism) and had offered himself as a test animal for any weapon of any nature to prove to them that force was not only unnecessary but literally impossible when attempted against a self-disciplined person.
They had not taken his offer; they had kicked him out.
But there had been a little more to it than that, Douglas had allowed Jubal to see a top-level super secret eyes-only numbered-one-of-three report after cautioning Jubal that no one, not even the Supreme Chief of staff, knew that “Private Jones” was the Man from Mars. Jubal had merely scanned the exhibits, which had been mostly highly conflicting reports of eye witnesses as to what had happened at various times when “Jones” had been “trained” in the uses of various weapons; the only surprising thing to Jubal about them was that some witnesses had the courage and self-confidence to state under oath that they had seen weapons disappear. “Jones” had also been placed on the report three times for losing weapons, same being accountable property of the Federation.
The end of the report was all that Jubal had bothered to read carefully enough to remember: “Conclusion: Subject man is an extremely talented natural hypnotist and, as such, could conceivably be useful in intelligence work, although he is totally unfitted for any combat branch. However, his low intelligence quotient (moron), his extremely low general classification score, and his paranoid tendencies (delusions of grandeur) make it inadvisable to attempt to exploit his idiot-savant talent. Recommendation: Discharge, Inaptitude—no pension credit, no benefits.”
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