Dreamers

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by James Gunn


  Now that Achilles is dead, the war has shifted in favor of the Trojans. Helen once more is mine, and every night is like Cranaë all over again. But Cassandra continues to scream her prophecies from the pyramidal prison on the citadel, and in the palace of Priam Helenus echoes her forebodings.

  Let Hades take them! I will not be depressed. I, too, have powers.

  Yet word has come that Odysseus and Diomedes have sailed for Lemnos to fetch Philoctetes.

  Philoctetes! The name fills me with obscure terror. I have a vision when I hear it of arrows flying at me through the sky, poisoned arrows that strike my wrist, my right eye, my ankle. And I have begun to dream of hollow horses.

  The Mnemonist IV

  Now, Thetis had warned Achilles that if ever he killed a son of Apollo, he must himself die by Apollo's hand; and a servant named Mnemon accompanied him for the sole purpose of reminding him of that. But Achilles, when he saw Tenes hurling a huge rock from a cliff at the Greek ships, swam ashore, and thoughtlessly thrust him through the heart. The Greeks then landed and ravaged Tenedos; and realizing too late what he had done, Achilles put Mnemon to death because he had failed to remind him of Thetis's words.

  —Robert Graves

  The Mnemonist flinched as if he, too, sensed the imminence of poisoned arrows. “Are the dreamers, too, the victims of their dreams?” the Mnemonist asked. He stirred uneasily on his pallet, unclenching his hands and stretching his legs, as if the butterfly within his cocoon of withered flesh was anxious to emerge. His eyes inspected the room with more awareness than had come to them for many cycles. Questions still pounded against the inside of his skull, but now they were tinged with statement.

  we

  are

  such

  stuff

  as dreams

  are

  made on

  and our

  little

  life

  is

  rounded

  with

  a sleep

  a new experience

  is perceived

  it initiates some kind

  of reverbatory

  electrical signal

  among a set or web

  of neurons

  as the short term

  memory signals

  leap across thousands

  of synapses

  they begin to activate

  chemical processes

  at the synaptic junctions

  check

  all

  blood

  analyses

  for

  inclinations

  toward

  information

  storage

  and

  curiosity

  about

  the world

  of facts

  Now he remembered where the door was. His gaze sought out the spot on the wall where cracks had been sealed by the dust of time. If he gave the command, it would open, to let him out or to let someone in. To let him out! He could not imagine leaving this place. Where would he go? What would he do? He had given too much of himself to his passion, and there was nothing left of him but a husk stuffed with memories. “Had there ever been another choice?” he asked. “Is there a choice now?"

  footfalls echo

  in the memory

  down the passage

  which we

  did not take

  towards the door

  we never opened

  into the rose garden

  within a few seconds

  or minutes

  Chemical changes begin

  perhaps the synthesis

  of rna

  perhaps the construction

  of complex molecules

  in the form of peptides

  close off

  rooms 3412

  5367 2943

  and 4618

  and install

  temporary bypasses

  on the lift

  and drop shafts

  The Mnemonist also could not imagine anyone coming through that disused door into this skull of a room where dreams and memories swam like misshapen fish and nibbled on the cellular fragments that were all that was left of his humanity. The door was useless, he thought. And his search for a successor—was that, too, useless? “Should I stop thinking about it?” he asked. “Can I stop?"

  i am tired

  of tears

  and laughter

  of men

  that laugh and weep

  for men

  that sow to reap

  i am weary

  of days and hours

  blown buds

  of barren flowers

  and everything

  but sleep

  the chemical material

  forms a longer lasting

  but still temporary

  memory trace and

  perhaps in hours or days

  it induces profound

  anatomical changes

  in the cortex

  of the brain

  later these

  physical chemical changes

  become the soldered wiring

  of long term memory

  check

  all

  other

  centers

  for

  an increase

  in the

  death rate

  and

  a decrease

  in

  the

  birthrate

  Historians, volunteers, dreamers—all had proved inadequate. Everyone was weak in his or her own way—an Achilles heel, a chink in the armor, all the old phrases came floating up to his consciousness out of the crowded cellar of his memories. Everyone was weak but the Mnemonist himself; there was not another like him. And yet, he thought, wasn't his own love of the knowledge that flowed ceaselessly through his head a weakness as great as theirs? Didn't it seduce him from life just as their dreams seduced them? And was his conviction that he dealt with reality indistinguishable from illusion? Was his sense of his indispensability only the lie to which he gave his personal faith, the essential lie that supported his dream?

  and meet it is

  that over these

  sea pastures

  the waves should

  rise and fall

  and ebb and flow

  Unceasingly

  for here

  millions of

  mixed shades

  and shadows

  drowned dreams

  Somnambulisms

  Reveries

  all that we call

  lives and souls

  lie dreaming

  dreaming still

  tossing like

  Slumberers

  in their beds

  the russian psychologist

  alexander luria

  described a man

  whose memory seemed

  to have no limit

  a mnemonist whose mind

  was so extraordinary

  that luria wrote of him

  in terms usually reserved

  for the mentally ill

  he could commit to memory

  in a couple of minutes

  a table of fifty numbers

  which he could recall

  in every minute detail

  many years later

  his greatest difficulty

  was in learning

  how to forget

  the endless trivia

  that cluttered his mind

  check

  other

  urban

  centers

  to

  determine

  if

  mnemonists

  are

  still

  in

  charge

  or

  if

  each

  has

  a

  possible

  successor

  in

  training

  A great weariness reminded the Mnemonist
of his long-forgotten body. Somewhere within it was a heart that pumped something other than memories to his brain. He was more than an extension of the console, of the computers, of the urban center; somewhere inside this shell of flesh was a creature that was more than the sum of its memories, that had needs and desires. “What would it be like to forget?” he asked. No more the rush of memory, the flow of information, the remembering river that surged through his head leaving behind its detritus of data, its delta of detail. What would it be like to have a mind as bare as a bone? How would it feel to experience the darkness of unknowing? The thought was like a blasphemy, and yet it was only the opposite side of the coin of his life.

  adieu

  adieu

  the

  plaintive

  anthem

  fades

  past

  the near

  meadows

  over

  the still

  stream

  up the

  hill side

  and

  Now

  Tis buried

  Deep

  in the

  Next

  Valley

  Glades

  Was it

  a vision

  Or

  a waking

  Dream

  Fled

  is that

  Music

  do i wake

  Or

  in 1968 krech testified

  before the senate

  brain research

  is immeasurably

  more significant

  for the future of man

  than anything else

  going on in science

  within five to ten years

  a regimen will be available

  which will permit us

  to exercise a significant

  degree of control

  over the development

  of man's intellectual

  capacities

  this can mean a future

  of enormous promise

  chemical therapy for many

  of the mentally retarded

  and senile

  chemical release for those

  who suffer

  from crippling memories

  teamwork among chemists

  psychologists and educators

  for the first business

  of society

  the development

  of the mind of the child

  the shaping of its

  strengths and

  surely

  there

  is

  no

  compulsion

  for

  one

  man

  to

  try

  to

  reverse

  the

  course

  of

  events

  all

  by

  himself

  turn

  all

  operations

  to

  automatic

  and

  let

  loose

  the

  dark

  flood

  of

  forget

  All rights reserved, including without limitation the right to reproduce this ebook or any portion thereof in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of the publisher.

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, events, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, businesses, companies, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

  “The Volunteer,” published as IF I FORGET THEE copyright © 1980 by James Gunn, originally appeared in TRIAX published by Pinnicle Inc.

  Copyright © 1980 by James Gunn

  Cover design by Open Road Integrated Media

  ISBN 978-1-4976-2498-6

  This edition published in 2014 by Open Road Integrated Media, Inc.

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  New York, NY 10014

  www.openroadmedia.com

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