Short Fiction Poul Anderson (reading a book .TXT) đ
- Author: Poul Anderson
Book online «Short Fiction Poul Anderson (reading a book .TXT) đ». Author Poul Anderson
Eventually there was a fixed psychosomatic type, one which lived close to the land, in primitive changeless communities and isolated farmsteadsâ âa type content to gain its simple needs by the labor of hand, horse, or an occasional battered engine. A culture grew up which increased that rigidity. So few had visited Earth in the last several thousand yearsâ âperhaps one outsider a century, stopping briefly off on his way to somewhere elseâ âthat there was no challenge or encouragement to alter. The Terrans didnât want more people, more machines, more anything; they wished only to remain as they were.
You couldnât call them stagnant. Their life was too healthy, their civilization too rich in its own wayâ âfolk art, folk music, ceremony, religion, the intimacy of family life which the Galactics had lostâ âfor that term. But to one who flew between the streaming suns, it was a small existence.
Kormtâs voice broke in on his reverie. âDreams, triumphs, work, deeds, love and life and finally death and the long sleep in the earth,â he said. âWhy should we want to change them? They never grow old; they are new for each child that is born.â
âWell,â said Jorun, and stopped. You couldnât really answer that kind of logic. It wasnât logic at all, but something deeper.
âWell,â he started over, after a while, âas you know, this evacuation was forced on us, too. We donât want to move you, but we must.â
âOh, yes,â said Kormt. âYou have been very nice about it. It would have been easier, in a way, if youâd come with fire and gun and chains for us, like the barbarians did long ago. We could have understood you better then.â
âAt best, it will be hard for your people,â said Jorun. âIt will be a shock, and theyâll need leaders to guide them through it. You have a duty to help them out there, good sir.â
âMaybe.â Kormt blew a series of smoke rings at his youngest descendant, three years old, who crowed with laughter and climbed up on his knee. âBut theyâll manage.â
âYou canât seem to realize,â said Jorun, âthat you are the last man on Earth who refuses to go. You will be alone. For the rest of your life! We couldnât come back for you later under any circumstances, because thereâll be Hulduvian colonies between Sol and Sagittarius which we would disturb in passage. Youâll be alone, I say!â
Kormt shrugged. âIâm too old to change my ways; there canât be many years left me, anyway. I can live well, just off the food-stores thatâll be left here.â He ruffled the childâs hair, but his face drew into a scowl. âNow, no more of that, good sir, if you please; Iâm tired of this argument.â
Jorun nodded and fell into the silence that held the rest. Terrans would sometimes sit for hours without talking, content to be in each otherâs nearness. He thought of Kormt, Gerlaugâs son, last man on Earth, altogether alone, living alone and dying alone; and yet, he reflected, was that solitude any greater than the one in which all men dwelt all their days?
Presently the Speaker set the child down, knocked out his pipe, and rose. âCome, good sir,â he said, reaching for his staff. âLet us go.â
They walked side by side down the street, under the dim lamps and past the yellow windows. The cobbles gave back their footfalls in a dull clatter. Once in a while they passed someone else, a vague figure which bowed to Kormt. Only one did not notice them, an old woman who walked crying between the high walls.
âThey say it is never night on your worlds,â said Kormt.
Jorun threw him a sidelong glance. His face was a strong jutting of highlights from sliding shadow. âSome planets have been given luminous skies,â said the technician, âand a few still have cities, too, where it is always light. But when every man can control the cosmic energies, there is no real reason for us to live together; most of us dwell far apart. There are very dark nights on my own world, and I cannot see any other home from my ownâ âjust the moors.â
âIt must be a strange life,â said Kormt. âBelonging to no one.â
They came out on the market-square, a broad paved space walled in by houses. There was a fountain in its middle, and a statue dug out of the ruins had been placed there. It was broken, one arm goneâ âbut still the white slim figure of the dancing girl stood with youth and laughter, forever under the sky of Earth. Jorun knew that lovers were wont to meet here, and briefly, irrationally, he wondered how lonely the girl would be in all the millions of years to come.
The City Hall lay at the farther end of the square, big and dark, its eaves carved with dragons, and the gables topped with wing-spreading birds. It was an old building; nobody knew how many generations of men had gathered here. A long, patient line of folk stood outside it, shuffling in one by one to the registry desk; emerging, they went off quietly into the darkness, toward the temporary shelters erected for them.
Walking by the line, Jorun picked faces out of the shadows. There was a young mother holding a crying child, her head bent over it in a timeless pose, murmuring to soothe it. There was a mechanic, still sooty from his work, smiling wearily at some tired joke of the man behind him. There was a scowling, black-browed peasant who muttered a curse as Jorun went by; the rest seemed to accept their fate meekly enough. There was a priest, his head bowed, alone with his God. There was a younger man, his hands clenching and unclenching, big helpless hands, and Jorun heard him saying to
Comments (0)