Conference, being told that Canopus proposed to
develop
the Colony 10 volunteers, to
stabilize
them, to
make use
of their
evolution
to
advance
the Canopean Empire, what we understood from this was no more than the sort of development, stabilization, evolution, advance, that we associated with our own territories.
The second theme was how Canopus proposed to achieve these admirable results. For we were given â or offered, for we did not make use of this opportunity â all the information we wanted.
We did not accept because we were handicapped by being resentful, even though the general euphoria of the Conference succeeded in masking these unfortunate emotions. The northern areas were plentifully stocked with a certain species of primate. In parts these were already upright, using tools and weapons, with the beginnings of semipermanent settlement. This type of animal, at this level of evolution, is always of value, both for experiment and in training for simple tasks. There were none in Isolated Southern Continent II; and while there were some apes in Southern Continent I, they were at a low level of evolution, suitable for experiment, but of no use at all for work.
We saw Canopus âas usualâ grabbing the best of everything, for not once did we remind ourselves that there was no reason we should ever have been allowed on Rohanda at all. It was not we who had discovered this planet.
Canopus told us that certain rapid and desirable developments of the Colony 10 colonists would be because of a âsymbiosisâ between them and the apes, and that the apes, too, would be benefited. We saw this âsymbiosisâ in terms of a beneficial cultural exchange and, more specifically, as the superior immigrants being set free for higher tasks by using the apes as servants.
In short, the two main pieces of information, the bases on which the Canopean plan was predicated, were not understood by us at all. In spite of our being told everything. To emphasize this even more: now, looking back at the Conference, I can see that there was nothing
not
said,
not
made plain,
not
explained. But we misinterpreted what we were being told. And again, it is impossible not to ask, now,
why
Canopus set up the Conference in this way? To forestall reproaches of niggardliness? No! Knowing Canopus, this was not the reason. But they must have realized that we were not taking in what was being said, were understanding everything in our own way.
So why did they do it? It is only recently that I have had an answer to this question. The
beginnings
of an answer â¦
The end of the Conference was marked by all kinds of festivities and jollities. We were taken on trips to other Canopean colonies; invited, âif we were in that part of the Galaxyâ, to visit them for as long as we liked â the usual courtesies.
Back on our Home Planet we Sirians lost no time. Planets in the healthy, vigorous conditon of Rohanda were â and are â rare. We of the Colonial Service were all delighted and full of optimism. Incidentally, it was at that Conference that Rohanda acquired its name. Perhaps this is not the place â it is too soon â to remark that when the planet suffered its cosmic reversal, and ceased to be so pleasant, even if it did not lose any of its fertility, Canopus at once jettisoned the name Rohanda, substituting another, Shikasta, âthe broken or damaged oneâ, felt by us to be unnecessarily negative. This mixture of pedantry and poeticism is a characteristic of Canopus, and one that I have always found irritating.
Spacecraft had already thoroughly surveyed both Southern Continents, independently of Canopus. Our scientists had visited selected areas, and recommendations had been made. It was decided that Southern Continent I would be used mainly for agriculture. We had recently acquired our Colonized Planet 23 (C.P. 23) and had found it was well able to sustain large-scale settlement, provided it