The Circle of Zero by Stanley Grauman Weinbaum (e books for reading .txt) đ
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The Circle of Zero
by Stanley G. Weinbaum
1936
Try for EternityIf there were a mountain a thousand miles high and every thousand years a bird flew over it, just brushing the peak with the tip of its wing, in the course of inconceivable eons the mountain would be worn away. Yet all those ages would not be one second to the length of eternity.
I donât know what philosophical mind penned the foregoing, but the words keep recurring to me since last I saw old Aurore de Neant, erstwhile professor of psychology at Tulane. When, back in â24, I took that course in Morbid Psychology from him, I think the only reason for taking it at all was that I needed an eleven oâclock on Tuesdays and Thursdays to round out a lazy program.
I was gay Jack Anders, twenty-two years old, and the reason seemed sufficient. At least, Iâm sure that dark and lovely Yvonne de Neant had nothing to do with it. She was but a slim child of sixteen.
Old de Neant liked me, Lord knows why, for I was a poor enough student. Perhaps it was because I never, to his knowledge, punned on his name. Aurore de Neant translates to Dawn of Nothingness, you see; you can imagine what students did to such a name. âRising ZeroâââEmpty Morningââthose were two of the milder soubriquets.
That was in â24. Five years later I was a bond salesman in New York and Professor Aurore de Neant was fired. I learned about it when he called me up. I had drifted quite out of touch with University days.
He was a thrifty sort. He had saved a comfortable sum, and had moved to New York and thatâs when I started seeing Yvonne again, now darkly beautiful as a Tanagra figurine. I was doing pretty well and was piling up a surplus against the day when Yvonne and I âŠ
At least that was the situation in August, 1929. In October of the same year I was as clean as a gnawed bone and old de Neant had but little more meat. I was young and could afford to laughâhe was old and he turned bitter. Indeed, Yvonne and I did little enough laughing when we thought of our own futureâbut we didnât brood like the professor.
I remember the evening he broached the subject of the Circle of Zero. It was a rainy, blustering fall night and his beard waggled in the dim lamplight like a wisp of grey mist. Yvonne and I had been staying in evenings of late. Shows cost money and I felt that she appreciated my talking to her father, andâafter allâhe retired early.
She was sitting on the davenport at his side when he suddenly stabbed a gnarled finger at me and snapped, âHappiness depends on money!â
I was startled. âWell, it helps,â I agreed.
His pale blue eyes glittered. âWe must recover ours!â he rasped.
âHow?â
âI know how. Yes, I know how,â he grinned thinly. âThey think Iâm mad. You think Iâm mad. Even Yvonne thinks so.â
The girl said softly, reproachfully, âFather!â
âBut Iâm not,â he continued. âYou and Yvonne and all the fools holding chairs at universitiesâyes! But not I.â
âI will be all right, if conditions donât get better soon,â I murmured. I was used to the old manâs outbursts.
âThey will be better for us,â he said, calming. âMoney! We will do anything for money, wonât we, Anders?â
âAnything honest.â
âYes, anything honest. Time is honest, isnât it? An honest cheat, because it takes everything human and turns it into dust.â He peered at my puzzled face. I will explain,â he said, âhow we can cheat time.â
âCheatââ
âYes. Listen, Jack. Have you ever stood in a strange place and felt a sense of having been there before? Have you ever taken a trip and sensed that sometime, somehow, you had done exactly the same thingâwhen you know you hadnât?â
âOf course. Everyone has. A memory of the present, Bergson calls it.â
âBergson is a fool! Philosophy without science. Listen to me.â He leaned forward. âDid you ever hear of the Law of Chance?â
I laughed. âMy business is stocks and bonds. I ought to know of it.â
âAh,â he said, âbut not enough of it. Suppose I have a barrel with a million trillion white grains of sand in it and one black grain. You stand and draw single grains, one after the other, look at each one and throw it back into the barrel. What are the odds against drawing the black grain?â
âA million trillion to one, on each draw.â
âAnd if you draw half of the million trillion grains?â
âThen the odds are even.â
âSo!â he said. âIn other words, if you draw long enough, even though you return each grain to the barrel and draw again, some day you will draw the black oneâ_if you try long enough!_â
âYes,â I said.
He half smiled.
âSuppose now you tried for eternity?â
âEh?
âDonât you see, Jack? In eternity the Law of Chance functions perfectly. In eternity, sooner or later, every possible combination of things and events must happen. Must happen, if itâs a possible combination. I say, therefore, that in eternity, whatever can happen, will happen!â His blue eyes blazed in pale fire.
I was a trifle dazed. âI guess youâre right,â I muttered.
âRight! Of course Iâm right. Mathematics is infallible. Now do you see the conclusion?â
âWhyâthat sooner or later everything will happen.â
âBah! It is true that there is eternity in the future; we cannot imagine time ending. But Flammarion, before he died, pointed out that there is also an eternity in the past. Since in eternity everything possible must happen, it follows that everything must already have happened!â
I gasped. âWait a minute! I donât seeââ
âStupidity!â he hissed. âIt is but to say with Einstein that not only space is curved, but time. To say that, after untold eons of millennia, the same things repeat themselves because they must! The Law of Chance says they must, given time enough. The past and the future are the same thing, because everything that will happen must already have happened. Canât you follow so simple a chain of logic?â
âWhyâyes. But where does it lead?â
To our money! To our money!â
âWhat?â
âListen. Do not interrupt. In the past all possible combinations of atoms and circumstances must have occurred.â He paused then stabbed that bony finger of his at me. âJack Anders, you are a possible combination of atoms and circumstances! Possible because you exist at this moment!â
âYou meanâthat I have happened before?â
âHow apt you are! Yes, you have happened before and will again.â
âTransmigration!â I gulped. âThatâs unscientific.â
âIndeed?â He frowned as if in effort to gather his thoughts. âThe poet Robert Burns was buried under an apple tree. When, years after his death, he was to be removed to rest among the great men of Westminster Abbey, do you know what they found? Do you know?â
âIâm sorry, but I donât.â
âThey found a root! A root with a bulge for a head, branch roots for arms and legs and little rootlets for fingers and toes. The apple tree had eaten Bobby Burnsâbut who had eaten the apples?â
âWhoâwhat?â
âExactly. Who and what? The substance that had been Burns was in the bodies of Scotch countrymen and children, in the bodies of caterpillars who had eaten the leaves and become butterflies and been eaten by birds, in the wood of the tree. Where is Bobby Burns? Transmigration, I tell you! Isnât that transmigration?â
âYesâbut not what you meant about me. His body may be living, but in a thousand different forms.â
âAh! And when some day, eons and eternities in the future, the Laws of Chance form another nebula that will cool to another sun and another earth, is there not the same chance that those scattered atoms may reassemble another Bobby Burns?â
âBut what a chance! Trillions and trillions to one!â
âBut eternity, Jack! In eternity that one chance out of all those trillions must happenâmust happen!â
I was floored. I stared at Yvonneâs pale and lovely features, then at the glistening old eyes of Aurore de Neant.
âYou win,â I said with a long sigh. âBut what of it? This is still nineteen twenty-nine, and our moneyâs still sunk in a very sick securities market.â
âMoney!â he groaned. âDonât you see? That memory we started fromâthat sense of having done a thing beforeâthatâs a memory out of the infinitely remote future. If onlyâif only one could remember clearly! But I have a way.â His voice rose suddenly to a shrill scream. âYes, I have a way!â
Wild eyes glared at me. I said, âA way to remember our former incarnations?â One had to humour the old professor. âTo rememberâthe future?â
âYes! Reincarnation!â His voice crackled wildly. Re-in-carnatione, which is Latin for âby the thing in the carnationâ, but it wasnât a carnationâit was an apple tree. The carnation is dianthus carophyllus, which proved that the Hottentots plant carnations on the graves of their ancestors, whence the expression ânipped in the budâ. If carnations grow on apple treesââ
âFather!â cut in Yvonne sharply. âYouâre tired!â Her voice softened. âCome. Youâre going to bed.â
âYes,â he cackled. âTo a bed of carnations.â
Memory of Things PastSome evenings later Aurore de Neant reverted to the same topic. He was clear enough as to where he had left off.
âSo in this millennially dead past,â he began suddenly, âthere was a year nineteen twenty-nine and two fools named Anders and de Neant, who invested their money in what are sarcastically called securities. There was a clownâs panic, and their money vanished.â He leered fantastically at me.
âWouldnât it be nice if they could remember what happened in, say, the months from December, nineteen twenty-nine, to June, nineteen thirtyânext year?â His voice was suddenly whining. âThey could get their money back then!â
I humoured him. âIf they could remember.â
They can!â he blazed. âThey can!â
âHow?â
His voice dropped to a confidential softness. âHypnotism! You studied Morbid Psychology under me, didnât you, Jack? YesâI remember.â
âBut, hypnotism!â I objected. âEvery psychiatrist uses that in his treatments and no one has remembered a previous incarnation or anything like it.â
âNo. Theyâre fools, these doctors and psychiatrists. Listenâdo you remember the three stages of the hypnotic state as you learned them?â
âYes. Somnambulism, lethargy, catalepsy.â
âRight. In the first the subject speaks, answers questions. In the second he sleeps deeply. In the third, catalepsy, he is rigid, stiff, so that he can be laid across two chairs, sat onâall that nonsense.â
âI remember. What of it?â
He grinned bleakly. âIn the first stage the subject remembers everything that ever happened during his life. His subconscious mind is dominant and that never forgets. Correct?â
âSo we were taught.â
He leaned tensely forward. âIn the second stage, lethargy, my theory is that he remembers everything that happened in his other lives! He remembers the future!â
âHuh? Why doesnât someone do it, then?â
âHe remembers while he sleeps. He forgets when he wakes. Thatâs why. But I believe that with proper training he can learn to remember.â
âAnd youâre going to try?â
âNot I. I know
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