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Our journey to a strange planet
The best way to introduce these notes from our journey is to report
Great Leader Cottaft’s speech to us. On the day before we left Earth
he called us all together and said:
“Tomorrow, the Globe will go out. Tomorrow, the science and skill of
Earth will win a victory over nature. There were other races on Earth
before ours, but they could not control nature so they died as
conditions changed. We have become stronger, and we have solved problem
after problem. And now we must solve the most difficult problem of all.
Earth, our world, is old and nearly dead. The end is near, and we must
find a new home and make sure our race survives.
“Tomorrow the Globe will set out to search the heavens in every
direction. Each one of you holds the whole history, art, science, and
skill of Earth. Use this knowledge to help others. Learn from others,
and add to Earth’s knowledge, if you can. If you do not use your
knowledge and add to it, there will be no future for our race.
“And if we are the only intelligent life in the universe, then you
are responsible not only for our race, but for all intelligent life that
may develop.
“Go out into the universe, then. Go and be wise, kind, and truthful.
Go in peace. Our prayers go with you.â€Â
After the meeting I looked again through the telescope at the planet to
which our Globe is being sent. It is a planet, which is neither too
young nor too old. It shines like a blue pearl because so much of it is
covered with water. I am glad we are going to the blue planet; the other
Globes are being sent to worlds that do not look so inviting.
I am full of hope. I no longer have any fear. I shall go into the Globe
tomorrow, and the gas will put me to sleep. When I will wake again, it
will be in our shining new world. If I do not wake, something will have
gone wrong, but I shall never know.
It is all very simple really – if we trust in God.
This evening I went down to look at the Globes for the last time before
we board them. They are amazing! Our scientists have achieved the
impossible. They are the largest things ever built. They are so heavy
that they look more likely to sink into the surface of Earth than to fly
off into the space. It is hard to believe that we have built thirty of
these metal mountains. But there they stand, ready for tomorrow.
Some of them will be lost. Oh, God, if ours survives, I hope that we
can meet the challenges and satisfy the trust place in us.
These may be the last words I shall ever write. If I do write again, it
will be in a new world under a strange sky.
I have just woken up. Has it happened, or have we failed to start? I
cannot tell. Was it an hour ago that we entered the Globe? Or was it a
day, or a year, or a century? It cannot have been an hour ago. I am sure
of that, because my body is tired and aching.
However, it seems only a short time ago that we climbed the long passage
into the Globe and went to our place. Each one of us found his or her
compartment and crawled into it. I fastened myself into my compartment.
Its plastic walls filled with air and pushed against me, protecting me
against shock from all directions. I lay and wait. One moment I lay
there fresh and strong. The next moment, it seemed, I was tired and
aching.
The journey must have ended. The sides of my compartment are empty of
air. We must have arrived on that beautiful, shining blue planet, with
Earth only a tiny light in our new havens. I feel full of hope. Until
now, my life has been spent on a dying planet. Here, there is a world to
build and a future to build for.
I can hear our machines at work, opening the long passage which had been
filled for the journey. What shall we find, I wonder? Whatever this
world is like, we must not betray our trust. We each possess a million
years of history, and a million years of knowledge. All this must be
preserved.
This planet is very young, and if we do find intelligent life, it will
be only at its beginning. We must find them and make friends with them.
They may be very different from us, but we must remember that this is
their world. It will be very wicked to hurt any kind of life on its own
planet. If we find any such life, our duty is to teach, and to learn,
and to work with them. Perhaps one day we shall build a world even more
civilized than Earth’s own…
This is a terrible place! Is this really the beautiful blue planet that
promise so much? We are by far the most advanced race there has even
been, but the horrible monsters around us terrify us (or: we are
terrified by the horrible monsters around us).
We are hiding in a dark cave. There are nine hundred and sixty-four of
us. There were a thousand. This is how we lost the others.
The machines clearing the passage out of the Globe stopped. We crawled
out of our compartments and met in the center hall of the Globe. Sunss,
our leader, made a short speech. He reminded us that we must be brave as
we went into the unknown. We were the seed of the future, and we were
responsible for taking Earth into the future.
We went through the long passage, and left the Globe.
How can I describe this terrible world? It is a dull and shadowy place,
although it is not night-time. What little light there it comes from a
huge square hanging in the sky. The square is divided into four smaller
squares by two black bars.
We stood on a wide level plain, but a plain such as I have never seen
before. We could not see an end to it, whichever way we looked. It was
made of rows of straight, endless, parallel roads all going the same
way. (I call them roads, because they looked like roads, but each one
was much wider than any road I have ever seen.) Each road was divided
from the next by a deep, straight cutting as wide as by height. The man
next to me said that we had come into a world of straight lines lit by a
square sun. I told him he was talking nonsense. However, I could not
explain what I saw.
Suddenly we heard a noise, and looked towards it. We saw an enormous
face looking at us round the Globe. It was high above us, and it was
black. It had two pointed ears, the size of towers, and two huge,
shining eyes.
As the monster came towards us round the Globe, we saw its legs, which
were like great columns. We turned to run away, so great was our terror.
Then the monster moved like lightning. A huge black paw, suddenly
showing long, sharp claws, smacked down. When the paw was raised again,
twenty of our men and women were no more than marks on the ground. The
paw came down again. Eleven more of us were killed.
Sunss, our leader, ran forward and stood between the monster’s front
paws. His fire-tube was in his hands. He aimed and fired. I thought the
weapon would have no effect on such a huge creature, but Sunss knew
better. Suddenly the monster’s head went up, and then the creature
dropped dead.
And Sunss was under it. He was a very brave man.
We chose Iss as our next leader. He decided we must find a place of
safety as soon as possible. Once we had found one, we could remove our
records, instruments and equipment from the Globe. He started to lead us
forward along one of the wide roads.
After traveling a very long way, we reached the bottom of a cliff. It
went straight up in front of us. Its surface was made up of strangely
regular blocks of rock. We walked along the bottom of the cliff, and
found a cave, which went a long way into the cliff and to both sides.
Again, the cave was very regular in shape and height. Perhaps the man
who spoke about the world of straight lines was not as stupid as
seemed…
Anyway, here we are safe from monsters like the ones that killed Sunss.
The cave is too narrow for those huge paws to reach inside.
Later. We went to the Globe and we took all the equipment that was
there. After that a terrible thing has happened! Our Globe has gone.
While Iss had taken a group to explore the cave, the rest of us were on
guard at the entrance. We could see our Globe, and the grate monster
lying close to it. Then a strange thing happened. Suddenly the plain
become lighter. Then there was a noise like thunder, and everything
around us shook. A huge object came down on the dead monster and removed
it from our sight. The light suddenly faded again.
I cannot explain these things; none of us can understand them. All I can
do is to keep an accurate record.
It was some time later when the worst possible thing happened. Again the
plain become suddenly lighter and the ground shook. I looked out of the
cave, and saw something that I can still hardly believe. Four huge
creatures, compared with which the previous monster was very small, were
approaching the Globe. I know that nobody will believe this, but they
were three times the height of our enormous Globe! They bent over it,
put their front legs to it, and lifted that unbelievably heavy ball of
metal from the ground. Then the ground shook again even more violently
as they walked away carrying the extra weight.
Our Globe is lost. Thanks God we had removed our precious things from
it.
But there was more sorrow to come. Two of the group who had gone with
Iss returned with a dreadful story. Behind the cave they had found a
large number of wide tunnels, full of the dirt and smell of some unknown
creatures. As the group went through the tunnels, six-legged, and
sometimes eight-legged, creatures of horrible appearance attacked them.
Many of these were a great deal larger than themselves, and had huge
claws and teeth. However, the creatures, though very fierce, were not
intelligent, and were soon killed by our fire –tubes.
Iss found open country beyond the tunnels, and decided to come back and
fetch us. It was then that the next dreadful thing happened. Fierce gray
creatures about half the size of the first monsters attacked them. These
creatures were probably the builders of the tunnels. There was a
terrible battle in which nearly all our men were killed before the
monsters were beaten. Only two men survived to bring us the bad news.
We have chosen Muin as our new leader. He has decided we must go forward
through the tunnels to the open country. We pray to God that beyond the
tunnels we shall find a world that is not mad and evil like this one.
Is it too much we ask – simply to live, to work, and to build, in
peace…?
As we went through the tunnels, we met again the “builders†of those
tunnels. The battle begun, and this time we won. At the end of the
tunnel we met some tiny creatures. I picked up one to take a closer
look. It was a strange-looking little thing. Its body was an almost
perfect half of a ball, with the flat side underneath. The round top was
pink and shiny. It was like an insect, except that it had only four
legs, which were very short. It had no separated head, but it had two
eyes on the edge where the covered top of its body met the bottom.
As I looked at it, it stood up on two of its legs, showing a pale flat
underside. In its front legs it seemed to be holding a bit of grass or
thin wire. I felt a sudden burning pain in my hand.
“Hell!†I exclaimed, shaking the creature off my hand. â€ÂThe little
horrors certainly can sting. I don’t know what they are, but they’re
dangerous things to have in the garden or the house. “
When I looked in front of me I saw several hundreds of the little pink
creatures crawling towards the walls of the tunnel. I shook a tin, and
send a cloud of insect-killer over them.
We all watched as the little creatures crawled more and more slowly.
Some of them turned over, weakly waving their legs in the air. Then they
lay still.
“We won’t have any more trouble from them,†I said. “Horrible
little creatures! I’ve never seen anything like them – I wonder what
on earth they were?â€Â
Later. We entered the new world, a beautiful place, where it is light,
green-grass and many rivers.
The planet it is called Ygam, as we later found out. In this planet, a
race of detached, intellectual blue giants, called Traags, live in
abstracted peace. They spend much of their time meditating, sending
their consciousnesses sailing over their planet’s surface in colorful
bubbles. They merge and distort their bodies in a ritual called
“Imaginationâ€Â. They acquire their race’s collected knowledge
through a metal induction device, ensuring that even their young
children quickly become remote geniuses. Their world contains cruel
predators, but little seems to touch the aloof Traags.
As a society, their only enduring problem seems to be the presence of a
race they call Oms, a species of tiny pink-skinned bipeds brought back
to Ygam as pets after a trip to a planet. Oms have a tendency to escape
and breed in the wild at an alarming rate, and they steal food and
destroy property. Frequent â€Âde–Oming†runs are necessary to keep
the population down, and some Traags debate the wisdom of keeping Oms as
pets at all–back on their planet, they show signs of organized life,
and it’s possible they may even be intelligent. From one side they
seem like us.
We make them our friends and we soon discovered that they were brought
here without their permission.
They live in some villages and their society begins to change and mature
from a near–Neanderthal tribal state into a more cohesive group (that
might actually challenge the Traags) as they learn to read Traag
language and use Traag technology.
Now that we are their friends we are helping them with our knowledge and
they are teaching us the Traag language.
We hope that one day will live like we were used to live back there on
our beloved Earth. But until then we are learning and teaching….
THE END
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