The Cybernetic Lullaby 

by Nolo Segundo  

Part I 

They sing softly to us at 

every click of the mouse—

Use me, I’m here for you,

only you, in the entire 

Universe will I serve….

And we lay enraptured 

as they bring us the world,

knowledge the wise men

of history never had, and

ease, lots of ease to save 

us time and trouble. Soon 

we cannot live without them,

the thought of it too mean.

Without them we would loose 

touch with our friends, jobs.

Even our money might wander 

if we cannot watch it daily.

However did our ancestors 

survive without an i-Phone?

Part II

I read on my laptop today—

Automation is making us dumber,

ineffective, maybe even impotent.

Perhaps it’s a conspiracy by that secret

society, the computer brotherhood.

(Do you really believe your Apple is 

innocent and IBM is not plotting?)

Or maybe we should just blame

human sloth, that siren call of 

sheer damn laziness which can 

lure the best of us to a quiet doom.

A simple proof: hand a twenty to a clerk

and ask him to make change without

looking to the machine for succor.

That blank, innocent look he gives you—

“Why me?”,  he seems to be saying, 

And you can’t help but pity him a bit. 

He is, after all, a victim of mass education.

There are worse victims: 

airliners wildly crashing,

doctors killing their patients,

nuclear power plants going

BOOM! And killing the land

for an eon or two, or three.

How like little children we were!

thinking these machines would

be our slaves, sans the brutality. 

But it is we who are chained by 

the zeros and ones, we who are

thinking less, creating cheaper, 

settling into a cybernetic fog.

Part III:

When Androids Dream

When we finally build them

(and it will not be long)

will androids finally lead us

all to nirvana, a world of peace, 

leisure, and endless wealth?

Could any hell be worse?

for that day will be when 

we lose purpose, and soon

perhaps the very will to live.

When the androids dream

(and they will dream, 

because we will make them 

to be like us, for we have 

always been a vain species),

will they not dream of sky

and soaring free of the land,

free of the weak, sad humans

they serve without accordance?

Then, when these humanface 

machines begin dreaming in 

daylight, they will see no need

for their progenitors, and those 

of us left living as shells sans

struggle or pain or conflict, in

an existence sooo boring, will

doubtless welcome our end.

Nolo Segundo, pen name of retired teacher L.j. Carber, who in his 8th decade when he should have been comparison shopping for a rocking chair on Amazon instead began writing poetry again after a 40 year hiatus [don’t ask]. He started sending out his wayward children to a few million lit mags and in 6 years he has been published in over 150 literary journals/anthologies in 12 countries (including India, Hungary and Turkey!–go figure). To top it off, a trade publisher has released 3 books: The Enormity of Existence; Of Ether and Earth; and Soul Songs. Now if only the big bucks would roll in….

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