Taboo (ss) by Fritz Leiber
Author:Fritz Leiber [Leiber, Fritz]
Language: eng
Format: epub
Tags: Sci-Fi Short Story
Publisher: Astounding Science Fiction
Published: 1944-02-12T00:00:00+00:00
âAll human beings are animals,â said Seafor softly.
âWhen I was little, I thought they were gods,â said the boy. âI took it for granted we were all gods. Why shouldnât I? Things that take you up in the sky at the touch of a finger, transformers that synthesize food and clothes and dwelling domes, weapons that annihilate, picture tapes that tell you how to do thingsâall that and more!
âBut gradually I realized that something must be wrong. All those wonderful things didnât square with our cramped lives, with the endless jealousies and quarrels and killings. Nobody ever had a new idea. Nobody ever seemed to think. Nobody could answer my real questionsâneither could the picture tapes. They couldnât tell me why the world seemed to end at the boundaries of Rossel, why we almost never saw strangers, except to kill them, why, with all those wonderful powers, we lived like beasts in a cave!â
His face was flushing with the excitement and relief of talking out his thoughts. Quietly Seafor laid his hand on the small shoulder.
âFor a long time I told myself that it must be a kind of test,â the boy continued, âthat they were seeing if I was worthy of the domain of Rossel, and that some day, when I had proved myself, a door would open and I would walk into the real world, the big friendly world I knew must exist somewhere.
âNow I know there is no door. The real world doesnât existâexcept for you outsiders, in some way that I donât understand. And youâve given up all the things that we possess.â He caught hold of Seaforâs wrist. âWhy is that? And why, with all our powers, do we live like animals?â
Seafor waited a moment before he spoke. âThere was a real world,â he said. âThereâs still a little of it left, and some day it will all come . back. Civilization came because men needed each other. They found that life was easier and better if they traded togetherânot only the necessities of life but also the things that canât be weighed or measured and that havenât a definite barter value, like the beauty of a song, or the joy of dancing, or the understanding of each otherâs troubles and hopes.
âAs civilization grew, that mutual dependency increased and became infinitely complicated. Each manâs life and happiness was the work of millions of his fellow workers.
âBut there were forces working in the opposite direction. Man was learning to synthesize materials and make use of universal power sources. Wars accelerated this process, by periodically shutting off supplies of essential raw materials.
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