One of Ours Willa Cather (accelerated reader books txt) đ
- Author: Willa Cather
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âDo you know, Wheeler,â the doctor remarked one day when they came up from the hospital together to get a breath of air, âI sometimes wonder whether all these inoculations theyâve been having, against typhoid and smallpox and whatnot, havenât lowered their vitality. Iâll go off my head if I keep losing men! What would you give to be out of it all, and safe back on the farm?â Hearing no reply, he turned his head, peered over his raincoat collar, and saw a startled, resisting look in the young manâs blue eyes, followed by a quick flush.
âYou donât want to be back on the farm, do you! Not a little bit! Well, well; thatâs what it is to be young!â He shook his head with a smile which might have been commiseration, might have been envy, and went back to his duties.
Claude stayed where he was, drawing the wet grey air into his lungs and feeling vexed and reprimanded. It was quite true, he realized; the doctor had caught him. He was enjoying himself all the while and didnât want to be safe anywhere. He was sorry about Tannhauser and the others, but he was not sorry for himself. The discomforts and misfortunes of this voyage had not spoiled it for him. He grumbled, of course, because others did. But life had never seemed so tempting as it did here and now. He could come up from heavy work in the hospital, or from poor Fanning and his everlasting eggs, and forget all that in ten minutes. Something inside him, as elastic as the grey ridges over which they were tipping, kept bounding up and saying: âI am all here. Iâve left everything behind me. I am going over.â
Only on that one day, the cold day of the Virginianâs funeral, when he was seasick, had he been really miserable. He must be heartless, certainly, not to be overwhelmed by the sufferings of his own men, his own friendsâ âbut he wasnât. He had them on his mind and did all he could for them, but it seemed to him just now that he took a sort of satisfaction in that, too, and was somewhat vain of his usefulness to Doctor Trueman. A nice attitude! He awoke every morning with that sense of freedom and going forward, as if the world were growing bigger each day and he were growing with it. Other fellows were sick and dying, and that was terribleâ âbut he and the boat went on, and always on.
Something was released that had been struggling for a long while, he told himself. He had been due in France since the first battle of the Marne; he had followed false leads and lost precious time and seen misery enough, but he was on the right road at last, and nothing could stop him. If he hadnât been so green, so bashful, so afraid of showing what he felt, and so stupid at finding his way about, he would have enlisted in Canada, like Victor, or run away to France and joined the Foreign Legion. All that seemed perfectly possible now. Why hadnât he?
Well, that was not âthe Wheelersâ way.â The Wheelers were terribly afraid of poking themselves in where they werenât wanted, of pushing their way into a crowd where they didnât belong. And they were even more afraid of doing anything that might look affected or âromantic.â They couldnât let themselves adopt a conspicuous, much less a picturesque course of action, unless it was all in the dayâs work. Well, History had condescended to such as he; this whole brilliant adventure had become the dayâs work. He had got into it after all, along with Victor and the Marine and other fellows who had more imagination and self-confidence in the first place. Three years ago he used to sit moping by the windmill because he didnât see how a Nebraska farmer boy had any âcall,â or, indeed, any way, to throw himself into the struggle in France. He used enviously to read about Alan Seeger and those fortunate American boys who had a right to fight for a civilization they knew.
But the miracle had happened; a miracle so wide in its amplitude that the Wheelersâ âall the Wheelers and the roughnecks and the lowbrows were caught up in it. Yes, it was the roughnecksâ own miracle, all this; it was their golden chance. He was in on it, and nothing could hinder or discourage him unless he were put over the side himselfâ âwhich was only a way of joking, for that was a possibility he never seriously considered. The feeling of purpose, of fateful purpose, was strong in his breast.
IXâLook at this, Doctor!â Claude caught Dr. Trueman on his way from breakfast and handed him a written notice, signed D. T. Micks, Chief Steward. It stated that no more eggs or oranges could be furnished to patients, as the supply was exhausted.
The doctor squinted at the paper. âIâm afraid thatâs your patientâs death warrant. Youâll never be able to keep him going on anything else. Why donât you go and talk it over with Chessup? Heâs a resourceful fellow. Iâll join you there in a few minutes.â
Claude had often been to Dr. Chessupâs cabin since the epidemic broke outâ ârather liked to wait there when he went for medicines or advice. It was a comfortable, personal sort of place with cheerful chintz hangings. The walls were lined with books, held in place by sliding wooden slats, padlocked at the ends. There were a great many scientific works in German and English; the rest were French novels in paper covers. This morning he found Chessup weighing out white powders at his desk. In the rack over his bunk was the book with which he had read himself to sleep last night; the title, Un Crime dâAmour, lettered in black on yellow, caught Claudeâs eye. The doctor put on
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