Cat’s Cradle

Cat’s Cradle

by Kurt Vonnegut
Dr. Felix Hoenikker is no longer alive at the time of the book’s writing, but his influence on proceedings is unrivalled. He is portrayed as an ingenious scientific mind chronically lacking in human empathy. From what John can gather, Dr. Hoenikker considered his work—which included inventing ice-nine and the atom bomb—as “pure research,” outside of moral responsibility. To illustrate this, his daughter Angela explains that he was as interested in researching turtles as he was developing weapons of mass destruction. As part of John’s initial research into a book about the day the atom bomb was dropped, he learns that Dr. Hoenikker was more concerned with showing a cat’s cradle to the then six-year-old Newt than reflecting on the use that his invention had been put to.

Dr. Felix Hoenikker Quotes in Cat’s Cradle

The Cat’s Cradle quotes below are all either spoken by Dr. Felix Hoenikker or refer to Dr. Felix Hoenikker. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Science and Morality Theme Icon
).

Chapter 1 Quotes

When I was a much younger man, I began to collect material for a book to be called The Day the World Ended.

The book was to be factual.

The book was to be an account of what important Americans had done on the day when the first atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima, Japan.

It was to be a Christian book. I was a Christian then.

I am a Bokononist now.

Related Characters: John (speaker), Dr. Felix Hoenikker, Bokonon / Lionel Boyd Johnson
Page Number and Citation: 1-2
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 5 Quotes

“But he went down on his knees on the carpet next to me, and he showed me his teeth, and he waved that tangle of string in my face. ‘See? See? See?’ he asked. ‘Cat’s cradle. See the cat’s cradle? See where the nice pussycat sleeps? Meow. Meow.’

“His pores looked as big as craters on the moon. His ears and nostrils were stuffed with hair. Cigar smoke made him smell like the mouth of Hell. So close up, my father was the ugliest thing I had ever seen. I dream about it all the time.

“And then he sang. ‘Rockabye catsy, in the tree top’; he sang, ‘when the wind blows, the cray-dull will rock. It the bough breaks, the cray-dull will fall. Down will come cray-dull, catsy, and all.’”

Related Characters: Newt Hoenikker (speaker), Dr. Felix Hoenikker, John
Related Symbols: Cat’s Cradle
Related Literary Devices:
Page Number and Citation: 12
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 6 Quotes

There are lots of other good anecdotes about the bomb and Father, from other days. For instance, do you know the story about Father on the day they first tested a bomb out at Alamogordo? After the thing went off, after it was a sure thing that America could wipe out a city with just one bomb, a scientist turned to Father and said, ‘Science has now known sin.’ And do you know what Father said? He said, ‘What is sin?’

Related Characters: Newt Hoenikker (speaker), John, Dr. Felix Hoenikker
Page Number and Citation: 17
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 22 Quotes

“If the streams flowing through the swamp froze as ice-nine, what about the rivers and lakes the streams fed?”

“They’d freeze. But there is no such thing as ice-nine.”

“And the oceans the frozen rivers fed?”

“They’d freeze, of course,” he snapped. “I sup­pose you’re going to rush to market with a sensational story about ice-nine now. I tell you again, it does not exist!”

“And the springs feeding the frozen lakes and streams, and all the water underground feeding the springs?”

“They’d freeze, damn it!” he cried. “But if I had known that you were a member of the yellow press,” he said grandly, rising to his feet, “I wouldn’t have wasted a minute with you!”

“And the rain?”

“When it fell, it would freeze into hard little hob­ nails of ice-nine—and that would be the end of the world! And the end of the interview, too! Good-bye!”

Related Characters: Dr. Asa Breed (speaker), John (speaker), Dr. Felix Hoenikker
Related Symbols: Ice-Nine
Related Literary Devices:
Page Number and Citation: 49-50
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 51 Quotes

“I might as well tell you,” Angela said to me, “Dr. Breed told me I wasn’t supposed to co-operate with you. He said you weren’t interested in giving a fair picture of Father.” She showed me that she didn’t like me for that.

I placated her some by telling her that the book would probably never be done anyway, that I no longer had a clear idea of what it would or should mean.

“Well, if you ever do do the book, you better make Father a saint, because that’s what he was.”

Related Characters: Angela Hoenikker (speaker), Newt Hoenikker (speaker), Dr. Felix Hoenikker, Dr. Asa Breed
Page Number and Citation: 112
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 110 Quotes

From what Frank had said before he slammed the door, I gathered that the Republic of San Lorenzo and the three Hoenikkers weren’t the only ones who had ice-nine. Apparently the United States of America and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics had it, too. The United States had obtained it through Angela’s husband, whose plant in Indianapolis was understand­ably surrounded by electrified fences and homicidal German shepherds. And Soviet Russia had come by it through Newt’s little Zinka, that winsome troll of Ukrainian ballet.

Related Characters: John (speaker), Harrison C. Conners, Dr. Felix Hoenikker, Zinka, Frank Hoenikker, Angela Hoenikker , Newt Hoenikker
Related Symbols: Ice-Nine
Page Number and Citation: 244
Explanation and Analysis:
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Dr. Felix Hoenikker Character Timeline in Cat’s Cradle

The timeline below shows where the character Dr. Felix Hoenikker appears in Cat’s Cradle. The colored dots and icons indicate which themes are associated with that appearance.
Chapter 4. A Tentative Tangling of Tendrils
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John outlines who he sees as the members of his karass: Dr. Felix Hoenikker, the inventor of the atomic bomb, and Hoenikker’s children, Newt, Angela and Frank. (full context)
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...wrote a letter to Newt, the youngest of the children, to ask for “anecdotes” about Dr. Hoenikker on the day the bomb was dropped. In the letter, he told Newt that his... (full context)
Chapter 5. Letter from a Pre-Med
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...six on the day the bomb was dropped. He was playing on the carpet when Dr. Hoenikker interrupted him to show him a cat’s cradle made from string. This string, continues Newt,... (full context)
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The incident with the cat’s cradle was, according to Newt, the closest Dr. Hoenikker ever got to playing a game with his kids. He was once quote in Time... (full context)
Chapter 6. Bug Fights
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Newt’s letter continues. Apparently, Angela told Newt that he had really hurt Dr. Hoenikker by not admiring the cat’s cradle. Newt doesn’t think his father was very capable of... (full context)
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...one of the “unsung heroines” of the atom bomb. At one stage during its development, Dr. Hoenikker became more interested in turtles than in completing the bomb. Angela told the scientific authorities... (full context)
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...was first tested. After its immense power of destruction was confirmed, a scientist turned to Dr. Hoenikker and said “Science has now known sin.” Dr. Hoenikker replied, “What is sin?” (full context)
Chapter 9. Vice-president in Charge of Volcanoes
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...exchange of letters with Newt, John heads to Ilium in New York to see where Dr. Hoenikker did most of his work. He makes an appointment with Dr. Asa Breed, who was... (full context)
Chapter 10. Secret Agent X-9
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The night before his visit with Dr. Breed to Dr. Hoenikker ’s old research laboratory, John gets drunk in a bar. The bartender and the woman... (full context)
Chapter 11. Protein
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The two people in the bar explain to John that Dr. Hoenikker was meant to give a commencement speech at their school. Dr. Asa Breed gave it... (full context)
Chapter 12. End of the World Delight
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...bar, and made someone a cocktail called “End of the World Delight.” A scientist from Dr. Hoenikker ’s lab came in, saying he was going to resign as “anything a scientist worked... (full context)
Chapter 14. When Automobiles Had Cut-glass Vases
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...Breed travel through heavy traffic on their way to the lab. Dr. Breed explains that Dr. Hoenikker once abandoned his car in the middle of the Ilium traffic on the way to... (full context)
Chapter 19. No More Mud
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Dr. Breed explains that, though Dr. Hoenikker was free to work on whatever he felt like, he was often asked for solutions... (full context)
Chapter 20. Ice-nine
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Dr. Breed tells John about Dr. Hoenikker ’s proposed solution to mud: ice-nine. This is a substance which can make water crystallize... (full context)
Chapter 22. Member of the Yellow Press
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...Breed whether ice-nine really exists. Dr. Breed insists it doesn’t, and is only talking about Dr. Hoenikker ’s theory to demonstrate the latter man’s problem-solving skills. Furthermore, given that the lab operates... (full context)
Chapter 23. The Last Batch of Brownies
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...John informs the reader that Dr. Breed was wrong: there is such thing as ice-nine. Dr. Hoenikker had made a small chip of it just before he died. He told Frank, Angela,... (full context)
Chapter 25. The Main Thing About Dr. Hoenikker
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...to show him the door. On the way out, he convinces her to show him Dr. Hoenikker ’s lab first. She tells him that she doesn’t think Dr. Hoenikker was “knowable.” All... (full context)
Chapter 26. What God Is
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Miss Faust recalls a conversation with Dr. Hoenikker . He bet her she couldn’t say anything “absolutely true.” She told him “God is... (full context)
Chapter 27. Men From Mars
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John and Miss Faust arrive on the sixth floor, the location of Dr. Hoenikker ’s old lab. There is a plate commemorating him on the wall. The lab is... (full context)
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Miss Faust calls Dr. Hoenikker an “unusual man.” “Maybe,” she hypothesizes, “in a million years everybody will be as smart... (full context)
Chapter 28. Mayonnaise
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...they go to re-search for it!” He wonders, “who lost what?” Knowles says he knew Dr. Hoenikker , and that when he died he didn’t really die, but “entered a new dimension.” (full context)
Chapter 29. Gone, but Not Forgotten
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John takes a cab to the cemetery where Dr. Hoenikker is buried, hoping to take a picture of the tomb (potentially as an image for... (full context)
Chapter 30. Only Sleeping
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...mother Emily (though Newt’s is just an imprint of his infant hand). John discovers that Dr. Hoenikker ’s memorial is actually nearby, and is just a “marble cube forty centimetres on each... (full context)
Chapter 32. Dynamite Money
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Marvin Breed calls Dr. Hoenikker “a queer son of a bitch.” He explains that the large monument to Dr. Hoenikker’s... (full context)
Chapter 33. An Ungrateful Man
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John asks Marvin if he knew Emily Hoenikker, Dr. Hoenikker ’s wife. Marvin relays how they knew each other well at high school. He had... (full context)
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Marvin talks disparagingly about Dr. Hoenikker , who took Emily away from Asa and then didn’t appreciate what he had. He... (full context)
Chapter 34. Vin-dit
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...for his mother’s grave. Marvin continues talking about the Hoenikkers. He explains that Emily married Felix because she believed “his mind was tuned to the biggest music there was, the music... (full context)
Chapter 38. Barracuda Capital of the World
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...(a great infrastructure project), and makes references to Frank as the “blood son of Dr. Felix Hoenikker.” (full context)
Chapter 52. No Pain
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...of which are of her father. She talks a little bit about the Christmas when Dr. Hoenikker died. He passed away in a “big white wicker chair facing the sea.” John reminds... (full context)
Chapter 53. The President of Fabri-Tek
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...of Fabri-Tek, a secret government tech developer. Harrison, Angela tells John, sought her out after Dr. Hoenikker died. They married two weeks later. (full context)
Chapter 58. Tyranny with a Difference
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...He talks about Zinka and how they spent hours in each other’s arms, sitting in Dr. Hoenikker ’s wicker chair facing the sea. She broke his heart, he says. (full context)
Chapter 59. Fasten Your Seat Belts
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As the plane nears its landing, Crosby realizes he’s heard Newt’s surname before. Newt describes Dr. Hoenikker as “the father of the atom bomb.” Crosby was thinking more about something to do... (full context)
Chapter 80. The Waterfall Strainer
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...her father. He gave so much, and they gave him so little.” She says that Dr. Hoenikker didn’t earn what he deserved; Dr. Breed earned more. (full context)
Chapter 85. A Pack of Foma
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Frank’s servants bring the group gasoline lanterns. Angela and Newt tell John that Dr. Hoenikker had a twin brother, who is called Rudolph and makes music-boxes in Switzerland. He also... (full context)
Chapter 108. Frank Tells Us What to Do
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...the deceased Dr. Koenigswald, says that what’s happened is “like the dog” on the night Dr. Hoenikker died, but doesn’t clarify what he means. Newt asks Frank if he gave “Papa” the... (full context)
Chapter 110. The Fourteenth Book
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...wonders, “what hope can there be for mankind … when there are such men as Felix Hoenikker to give such playthings as ice-nine to such short-sighted children as almost all men... (full context)
Chapter 111. Time Out
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...Angela to tell him about the story of the dog on the Christmas Eve that Dr. Hoenikker died. The dog was a friendly black Labrador, they explain. All day long Dr. Hoenikker... (full context)
Chapter 112. Newt’s Mother’s Reticule
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Continuing the story, Angela says she assumed Dr. Hoenikker was just sleeping in his chair, but was dead. While she decorated the Christmas tree,... (full context)
Chapter 113. History
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Angela, Newt, and Frank talk about how they divided up Dr. Hoenikker ’s ice-nine on the day he died; at the time, “there was no talk of... (full context)