The Machineries of Joy. Ray Bradbury

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The Machineries of Joy - Ray  Bradbury


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Now we see I have cleaved close by the truth.”

      “Sure,” said Father Brian quickly, “but as our poet William Blake put it, ‘A truth that’s told with bad intent beats all the lies you can invent.’”

      “Yes.” Vittorini relaxed further into his amiability. “And didn’t Blake also write

       He who doubts from what he sees,

       Will ne’er believe, do what you please.

       If the Sun and Moon should doubt

       They’d immediately go out.

      Most appropriate,” added the Italian priest, “for the Space Age.”

      Father Brian stared at the outrageous man.

      “I’ll thank you not to quote our Blake at us.”

      “Your Blake?” said the slender pale man with the softly glowing dark hair. “Strange, I’d always thought him English.”

      “The poetry of Blake,” said Father Brian, “was always a great comfort to my mother. It was she told me there was Irish blood on his maternal side.”

      “I will graciously accept that,” said Father Vittorini. “But back to the newspaper story. Now that we’ve found it, it seems a good time to do some research on Pius the Twelfth’s encyclical.”

      Father Brian’s wariness, which was a second set of nerves under his skin, prickled alert.

      “What encyclical is that?”

      “Why, the one on space travel.”

      “He didn’t do that?”

      “He did.”

      “On space travel, a special encyclical?”

      “A special one.”

      Both Irish priests were near onto being flung back in their chairs by the blast.

      Father Vittorini made the picky motions of a man cleaning up after a detonation, finding lint on his coat sleeve, a crumb or two of toast on the tablecloth.

      “Wasn’t it enough,” said Brian, in a dying voice, “he shook hands with the astronaut bunch and told them well done and all that, but he had to go on and write at length about it?”

      “It was not enough,” said Father Vittorini. “He wished, I hear, to comment further on the problems of life on other worlds, and its effect on Christian thinking.”

      Each of these words, precisely spoken, drove the two other men farther back in their chairs.

      “You hear?” said Father Brian. “You haven’t read it yourself yet?”

      “No, but I intend—”

      “You intend everything and mean worse. Sometimes, Father Vittorini, you do not talk, and I hate to say this, like a priest of the Mother Church at all.”

      “I talk,” replied Vittorini, “like an Italian priest somehow caught and trying to preserve surface tension treading an ecclesiastical bog where I am outnumbered by a great herd of clerics named Shaughnessy and Nulty and Flannery that mill and stampede like caribou or bison every time I so much as whisper ‘papal bull.’”

      “There is no doubt in my mind”—and here Father Brian squinted off in the general direction of the Vatican, itself—“that it was you, if you could’ve been there, might’ve put the Holy Father up to this whole space-travel monkeyshines.”

      “I?”

      “You! It’s you, is it not, certainly not us, that lugs in the magazines by the carload with the rocket ships on the shiny covers and the filthy green monsters with six eyes and seventeen gadgets chasing after half-draped females on some moon or other? You I hear late nights doing the countdowns from ten, nine, eight on down to one, in tandem with the beast TV, so we lie aching for the dread concussions to knock the fillings from our teeth. Between one Italian here and another at Castel Gandolfo, may God forgive me, you’ve managed to depress the entire Irish clergy!”

      “Peace,” said Father Kelly at last, “both of you.”

      “And peace it is, one way or another I’ll have it,” said Father Brian, taking the envelope from his pocket.

      “Put that away,” said Father Kelly, sensing what must be in the envelope.

      “Please give this to Pastor Sheldon for me.”

      Father Brian rose heavily and peered about to find the door and some way out of the room. He was suddenly gone.

      “Now see what you’ve done!” said Father Kelly.

      Father Vittorini, truly shocked, had stopped eating. “But, Father, all along I thought it was an amiable squabble, with him putting on and me putting on, him playing it loud and me soft.”

      “Well, you’ve played it too long, and the blasted fun turned serious!” said Kelly. “Ah, you don’t know William like I do. You’ve really torn him.”

      “I’ll do my best to mend—”

      “You’ll mend the seat of your pants! Get out of the way, this is my job now.” Father Kelly grabbed the envelope off the table and held it up to the light, “The X ray of a poor man’s soul. Ah, God.”

      He hurried upstairs. “Father Brian?” he called. He slowed. “Father?” He tapped at the door. “William?”

      In the breakfast room, alone once more, Father Vittorini remembered the last few flakes in his mouth. They now had no taste. It took him a long slow while to get them down.

      It was only after lunch that Father Kelly cornered Father Brian in the dreary little garden behind the rectory and handed back the envelope.

      “Willy, I want you to tear this up. I won’t have you quitting in the middle of the game. How long has all this gone on between you two?”

      Father Brian sighed and held but did not rip the envelope. “It sort of crept upon us. It was me at first spelling the Irish writers and him pronouncing the Italian operas. Then me describing the Book of Kells in Dublin and him touring me through the Renaissance. Thank God for small favors, he didn’t discover the papal encyclical on the blasted space traveling sooner, or I’d have transferred myself to a monkery where the fathers keep silence as a vow. But even there, I fear, he’d follow and count down the Canaveral blastoffs in sign language. What a Devil’s advocate that man would make!”

      “Father!”

      “I’ll do penance for that later. It’s just this dark otter, this seal, he frolics with Church dogma as if it was a candy-striped bouncy ball. It’s all very well to have seals cavorting, but I say don’t mix them with the true fanatics, such as you and me! Excuse the pride, Father, but there does seem to be a variation on the true theme every time you get them piccolo players in amongst us harpers, and don’t you agree?”

      “What an enigma, Will. We of the Church should be examples for others on how to get along.”

      “Has anyone told Father Vittorini that? Let’s face it, the Italians are the Rotary of the Church. You couldn’t have trusted one of them to stay sober during the Last Supper.”

      “I wonder if we Irish could?” mused Father Kelly.

      “We’d wait until it was over, at least!”

      “Well, now, are we priests or barbers? Do we stand here splitting hairs, or do we shave Vittorini close with his own razor? William, have you no plan?”

      “Perhaps to call in a Baptist to mediate.”

      “Be off with your Baptist! Have you researched the encyclical?”

      “The encyclical?”

      “Have you let grass grow since breakfast between your toes? You have!


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