Under Fire by Henri Barbusse (best books to read for students .txt) đ
- Author: Henri Barbusse
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As for me, Iâve been lucky, and I see Paradis wandering about, his kindly face to the wind, grumbling and chewing a bit of wood. âTiens,â I say to him, âtake this.â
âA box of matches!â he exclaims amazed, looking at it as one looks at a jewel. âEgad! Thatâs capital! Matches!â
A moment later we see him lighting his pipe, his face saucily sideways and splendidly crimsoned by the reflected flame, and everybody shouts, âParadisâ got some matches!â
Towards evening I meet Paradis near the ruined triangle of a house-front at the corner of the two streets of this most miserable among villages.
He beckons to me. âHist!â He has a curious and rather awkward air.
âI say,â he says to me affectionately, but looking at his feet, âa bit since, you chucked me a box of flamers. Well, youâre going to get a bit of your own back for it. Here!â
He puts something in my hand. âBe careful!â he whispers, âitâs fragile!â
Dazzled by the resplendent purity of his present. hardly even daring to believe my eyes, I seeâan egg!
16
An Idyll
âREALLY and truly,â said Paradis, my neighbor in the ranks, âbelieve me or not, Iâm knocked outâIâve never before been so paid on a march as I have been with this one, this evening.â
His feet were dragging, and his square shoulders bowed under the burden of the knapsack, whose height and big irregular outline seemed almost fantastic. Twice he tripped and stumbled.
Paradis is tough. But he had been running up and down the trench all night as liaison man while the others were sleeping, so he had good reason to be exhausted and to growl âQuoi? These kilometers must be made of india-rubber, thereâs no way out of it.â
Every three steps he hoisted his knapsack roughly up with a hitch of his hips, and panted under its dragging; and all the heap that he made with his bundles tossed and creaked like an overloaded wagon.
âWeâre there,â said a non-com.
Non-coms. always say that, on every occasion. Butâin spite of the non-com.âs declarationâwe were really arriving in a twilight village which seemed to be drawn in white chalk and heavy strokes of black upon the blue paper of the sky, where the sable silhouette of the churchâa pointed tower flanked by two turrets more slender and more sharpâwas that of a tall cypress.
But the soldier, even when he enters the village where he is to be quartered, has not reached the end of his troubles. It rarely happens that either the squad or the section actually lodges in the place assigned to them, and this by reason of misunderstandings and cross purposes which tangle and disentangle themselves on the spot; and it is only after several quarter-hours of tribulation that each man is led to his actual shelter of the moment.
So after the usual wanderings we were admitted to our nightâs lodgingâa roof supported by four posts, and with the four quarters of the compass for its walls. But it was a good roofâan advantage which we could appreciate. It was already sheltering a cart and a plow, and we settled ourselves by them. Paradis, who had fumed and complained without ceasing during the hour we had spent in tramping to and fro, threw down his knapsack and then himself, and stayed there awhile, weary to the utmost, protesting that his limbs were benumbed, that the soles of his feet were painful, and indeed all the rest of him.
But now the house to which our hanging roof was subject, the house which stood just in front of us, was lighted up. Nothing attracts a soldier in the gray monotony of evening so much as a window whence beams the star of a lamp.
âShall we have a squint?â proposed Volpatte.
âSo be it,â said Paradis. He gets up gradually, and hobbling with weariness, steers himself towards the golden window that has appeared in the gloom, and then towards the door. Volpatte follows him, and I Volpatte.
We enter, and ask the old man who has let us in and whose twinkling head is as threadbare as an old hat, if he has any wine to sell.
âNo,â replies the old man, shaking his head, where a little white fluff crops out in places.
âNo beer? No coffee? Anything at allââ
âNo, mes amis, nothing of anything. We donât belong here; weâre refugees, you know.â
âThen seeing thereâs nothing, weâll be off.â We right-about face. At least we have enjoyed for a moment the warmth which pervades the house and a sight of the lamp. Already Volpatte has gained the threshold and his back is disappearing in the darkness.
But I espy an old woman, sunk in the depths of a chair in the other corner of the kitchen, who appears to have some busy occupation.
I pinch Paradisâ arm. âThereâs the belle of the house. Shall we pay our addresses to her?â
Paradis makes a gesture of lordly indifference. He has lost interest in womenâall those he has seen for a year and a half were not for him; and moreover, even when they would like to be his, he is equally uninterested.
âYoung or oldâpooh!â he says to me, beginning to yawn. For want of something to do and to lengthen the leaving, he goes up to the goodwife. âGood-evening, granâma,â he mumbles, finishing his yawn.
âGood-evening, mes enfants,â quavers the old dame. So near, we see her in detail. She is shriveled, bent and bowed in her old bones, and the whole of her face is white as the dial of a clock.
And what is she doing? Wedged between her chair and the edge of the table she is trying to clean some boots. It is a heavy task for her infantile hands; their movements are uncertain, and her strokes with the brush sometimes go astray. The boots, too, are very dirty indeed.
Seeing that we are watching her, she whispers to us that she must polish them well, and this evening too, for they are her little girlâs boots, who is a dressmaker in the town and goes off first thing in the morning.
Paradis has stooped to look at the boots more closely, and suddenly he puts his hand out towards them. âDrop it, granâma; Iâll spruce up your lassâs trotter-cases for you in three secs.â
The old woman lodges an objection by shaking her head and her shoulders. But Paradis takes the boots with authority, while the grandmother, paralyzed by her weakness, argues the question and opposes us with shadowy protest.
Paradis has taken a boot in each hand; he holds them gingerly and looks at them for a moment, and you would even say that he was squeezing them a little.
âArenât they small!â he says in a voice which is not what we hear in the usual way.
He has secured the brushes as well, and sets himself to wielding them with zealous carefulness. I notice that he is smiling, with his eyes fixed on his work.
Then, when the mud has gone from the boots, he takes some polish on the end of the double-pointed brush and caresses them with it intently.
They are dainty bootsâquite those of a stylish young lady; rows of little buttons shine on them.
âNot a single button missing,â he whispers to me, and there is pride in his tone.
He is no longer sleepy; he yawns no more. On the contrary, his lips are tightly closed; a gleam of youth and spring-time lights up his face; and he who was on the point of going to sleep seems just to have woke up.
And where the polish has bestowed a beautiful black his fingers move over the body of the boot, which opens widely in the upper part and betraysâever such a littleâthe lower curves of the leg. His fingers, so skilled in polishing, are rather awkward all the same as they turn the boots over and turn them again, as he smiles at them and pondersâprofoundly and afarâwhile the old woman lifts her arms in the air and calls me to witness âWhat a very kind soldier!â he is.
It is finished. The boots are cleaned and finished off in style; they are like mirrors. Nothing is left to do.
He puts them on the edge of the table, very carefully, as if they were saintly relics; then at last his hands let them go. But his eyes do not at once leave them. He looks at them, and then lowering his head, he looks at his own boots. I remember that while he made this comparison the great ladâa hero by destiny, a Bohemian, a monkâsmiled once more with all his heart.
The old woman was showing signs of activity in the depths of her chair; she had an idea. âIâll tell her! She shall thank you herself, monsieur! Hey, Josephine!â she cried, turning towards a door.
But Paradis stopped her with an expansive gesture which I thought magnificent. âNo, itâs not worth while, granâma; leave her where she is. Weâre going. We wonât trouble her, allez!â
Such decision sounded in his voice that it carried authority, and the old woman obediently sank into inactivity and held her peace.
We went away to our bed under the wall-less roof, between the arms of the plow that was waiting for us. And then Paradis began again to yawn; but by the light of the candle in our crib, a full minute later, I saw that the happy smile remained yet on his face.
17
In the Sap
IN the excitement of a distribution of letters from which the squad were returningâsome with the delight of a letter, some with the semi-delight of a postcard, and others with a new load (speedily reassumed) of expectation and hopeâa comrade comes with a brandished newspaper to tell us an amazing storyââTu sais, the weasel-faced ancient at Gauchin?â
âThe old boy who was treasure-seeking?â
âWell, heâs found it!â
âGerraway!â
âItâs just as I tell you, you great lump! What would you like me to say to you? Mass? Donât know it. Anyway, the yard of his place has been bombed, and a chest full of money was turned up out of the ground near a wall. He got his treasure full on the back. And now the parsonâs quietly cut in and talks about claiming credit for the miracleâ
We listen open-mouthed. âA treasureâwell! well! The old bald-head!â
The sudden revelation plunges us in an abyss of reflection. âAnd to think how damned sick we were of the old cackler when he made such a song about his treasure and dinned it into our ears!â
âWe were right enough down there, you remember, when we were saying âOne never knows.â Didnât guess how near we were to being right, either.â
âAll the same, there are some things you can be sure of,â says Farfadet, who as soon as Gauchin was mentioned had remained dreaming and distant, as though a lovely face was smiling on him. âBut as for this,â he added, âIâd never have believed it either! Shanât I find him stuck up, the old ruin, when I go back there after the war!â
*âThey want a willing man to help the sappers with a
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