Three Soldiers by John Dos Passos (best e book reader android .txt) đ
- Author: John Dos Passos
- Performer: -
Book online «Three Soldiers by John Dos Passos (best e book reader android .txt) đ». Author John Dos Passos
Andrews followed Henslowe across the steam-filled platform to the door of a first-class carriage. They climbed in. Henslowe immediately pulled down the black cloth over the half globe of the light. The compartment was empty. He threw himself down with a sigh of comfort on the soft buff-colored cushions of the seat.
âBut what on earth?â stammered Andrews.
âMâen fous, câest mon metier,â interrupted Henslowe.
The train pulled out of the station.
IIIHenslowe poured wine from a brown earthen crock into the glasses, where it shimmered a bright thin red, the color of currants. Andrews leaned back in his chair and looked through half-closed eyes at the table with its white cloth and little burnt umber loaves of bread, and out of the window at the square dimly lit by lemon-yellow gas lamps and at the dark gables of the little houses that huddled round it.
At a table against the wall opposite a lame boy, with white beardless face and gentle violet-colored eyes, sat very close to the bareheaded girl who was with him and who never took her eyes off his face, leaning on his crutch all the while. A stove hummed faintly in the middle of the room, and from the half-open kitchen door came ruddy light and the sound of something frying. On the wall, in brownish colors that seemed to have taken warmth from all the rich scents of food they had absorbed since the day of their painting, were scenes of the Butte as it was fancied to have once been, with windmills and wide fields.
âI want to travel,â Henslowe was saying, dragging out his words drowsily. âAbyssinia, Patagonia, Turkestan, the Caucasus, anywhere and everywhere. What do you say you and I go out to New Zealand and raise sheep?â
âBut why not stay here? There canât be anywhere as wonderful as this.â
âThen Iâll put off starting for New Guinea for a week. But hell, Iâd go crazy staying anywhere after this. Itâs got into my bloodâŠall this murder. Itâs made a wanderer of me, thatâs what itâs done. Iâm an adventurer.â
âGod, I wish it had made me into anything so interesting.â
âTie a rock on to your scruples and throw âem off the Pont Neuf and set outâŠ. O boy, this is the golden age for living by your wits.â
âYouâre not out of the army yet.â
âI should worryâŠ. Iâll join the Red Cross.â
âHow?â
âIâve got a tip about it.â
A girl with oval face and faint black down on her upper lip brought them soup, a thick greenish colored soup, that steamed richly into their faces.
âIf you tell me how I can get out of the army youâll probably save my life,â said Andrews seriously.
âThere are two waysâŠOh, but let me tell you later. Letâs talk about something worth whileâŠSo you write music do you?â
Andrews nodded.
An omelet lay between them, pale golden-yellow with flecks of green; a few amber bubbles of burnt butter still clustered round the edges.
âTalk about tone-poems,â said Henslowe.
âBut, if you are an adventurer and have no scruples, how is it you are still a private?â
Henslowe took a gulp of wine and laughed uproariously.
âThatâs the joke.â
They ate in silence for a little while. They could hear the couple opposite them talking in low soft voices. The stove purred, and from the kitchen came a sound of something being beaten in a bowl. Andrews leaned back in his chair.
âThis is so wonderfully quiet and mellow,â he saidâŠ. It is so easy to forget that thereâs any joy at all in life.â
âRotâŠItâs a circus parade.â
âHave you ever seen anything drearier than a circus parade? One of those jokes that arenât funny.â
âJustine, encore du vin,â called Henslowe.
âSo you know her name?â
âI live hereâŠ. The Butte is the boss on the middle of the shield. Itâs the axle of the wheel. Thatâs why itâs so quiet, like the centre of a cyclone, of a vast whirling rotary circus parade!â
Justine, with her red hands that had washed so many dishes off which other people had dined well, put down between them a scarlet langouste, of which claws and feelers sprawled over the tablecloth that already had a few purplish stains of wine. The sauce was yellow and fluffy like the breast of a canary bird.
âDâyou know,â said Andrews suddenly talking fast and excitedly while he brushed the straggling yellow hair off his forehead, âIâd almost be willing to be shot at the end of a year if I could live up here all that time with a piano and a million sheets of music paperâŠIt would be worth it.â
âBut this is a place to come back to. Imagine coming back here after the highlands of Thibet, where youâd nearly got drowned and scalped and had made love to the daughter of an Afghan chief⊠who had red lips smeared with loukoumi so that the sweet taste stayed in your mouth.â Henslowe stroked softly his little brown mustache.
âBut whatâs the use of just seeing and feeling things if you canât express them?â
âWhatâs the use of living at all? For the fun of it, man; damn ends.â
âBut the only profound fun I ever have is thatâŠâ Andrewsâs voice broke. âO God, I would give up every joy in the world if I could turn out one page that I felt was adequateâŠ. Dâyou know itâs years since Iâve talked to anybody?â
They both stared silently out of the window at the fog that was packed tightly against it like cotton wool, only softer, and a greenish-gold color.
âThe M.P.âs sure wonât get us tonight,â said Henslowe, banging his fist jauntily on the table. âIâve a great mind to go to Rue St. Anne and leave my card on the Provost MarshalâŠ. God damn! Dâyou remember that man who took the bite out of our wine-bottle âŠHe didnât give a hoot in hell, did he? Talk about expression. Why donât you express that? I think thatâs the turning point of your career. Thatâs what made you come to Paris; you canât deny it.â
They both laughed loudly rolling about on their chairs.
Andrews caught glints of contagion in the pale violet eyes of the lame boy and in the dark eyes of the girl.
âLetâs tell them about it,â he said still laughing, with his face, bloodless after the months in hospital, suddenly flushed.
âSalut,â said Henslowe turning round and elevating his glass. âNous rions parceque nous sommes gris de vin gris.â Then he told them about the man who ate glass. He got to his feet and recounted slowly in his drawling voice, with gestures. Justine stood by with a dish full of stuffed tomatoes of which the red skins showed vaguely through a mantle of dark brown sauce. When she smiled her cheeks puffed out and gave her face a little of the look of a white catâs.
âAnd you live here?â asked Andrews after they had all laughed.
âAlways. It is not often that I go down to townâŠ. Itâs so difficultâŠ. I have a withered leg.â He smiled brilliantly like a child telling about a new toy.
âAnd you?â
âHow could I be anywhere else?â answered the girl. âItâs a misfortune, but there it is.â She tapped with the crutch on the floor, making a sound like someone walking with it. The boy laughed and tightened his arm round her shoulder.
âI should like to live here,â said Andrews simply.
âWhy donât you?â
âBut donât you see heâs a soldier,â whispered the girl hurriedly.
A frown wrinkled the boyâs forehead.
âWell, it wasnât by choice, I suppose,â he said.
Andrews was silent. Unaccountable shame took possession of him before these people who had never been soldiers, who would never be soldiers.
âThe Greeks used to say,â he said bitterly, using as phrase that had been a long time on his mind, âthat when a man became a slave, on the first day he lost one-half of his virtue.â
âWhen a man becomes a slave,â repeated the lame boy softly, âon the first day he loses one-half of his virtue.â
âWhatâs the use of virtue? It is love you need,â said the girl.
âIâve eaten your tomato, friend Andrews,â said Henslowe. âJustine will get us some more.â He poured out the last of the wine that half filled each of the glasses with its thin sparkle, the color of red currants.
Outside the fog had blotted everything out in even darkness which grew vaguely yellow and red near the sparsely scattered street lamps. Andrews and Henslowe felt their way blindly down the long gleaming flights of steps that led from the quiet darkness of the Butte towards the confused lights and noises of more crowded streets. The fog caught in their throats and tingled in their noses and brushed against their cheeks like moist hands.
âWhy did we go away from that restaurant? Iâd like to have talked to those people some more,â said Andrews.
âWe havenât had any coffee eitherâŠ. But, man, weâre in Paris. Weâre not going to be here long. We canât afford to stay all the time in one placeâŠ. Itâs nearly closing time alreadyâŠ.â
âThe boy was a painter. He said he lived by making toys; he whittles out wooden elephants and camels for Noahâs ArksâŠ. Did you hear that?â
They were walking fast down a straight, sloping street. Below them already appeared the golden glare of a boulevard.
Andrews went on talking, almost to himself. âWhat a wonderful life that would be to live up here in a small room that would overlook the great rosy grey expanse of the city, to have some absurd work like that to live on, and to spend all your spare time working and going to concertsâŠ. A quiet mellow existenceâŠ. Think of my life beside it. Slaving in that iron, metallic, brazen New York to write ineptitudes about music in the Sunday paper. God! And this.â
They were sitting down at a table in a noisy cafe, full of yellow light flashing in eyes and on glasses and bottles, of red lips crushed against the thin hard rims of glasses.
âWouldnât you like to just rip it off?â Andrews jerked at his tunic with both hands where it bulged out over his chest. âOh, Iâd like to make the buttons fly all over the cafe, smashing the liqueur glasses, snapping in the faces of all those dandified French officers who look so proud of themselves that they survived long enough to be victorious.â
âThe coffeeâs famous here,â said Henslowe. âThe only place I ever had it better was at a bistro in Nice on this last permission.â
âSomewhere else again!â
âThatâs itâŠ. For ever and ever, somewhere else! Letâs have some prunelle. Before the war prunelle.â
The waiter was a solemn man, with a beard cut like a prime ministerâs. He came with the bottle held out before him, religiously lifted. His lips pursed with an air of intense application, while he poured the white glinting liquid into the glasses. When he had finished he held the bottle upside down with a tragic gesture; not a drop came out.
âIt is the end of the good old times,â he said.
âDamnation to the good old times,â said Henslowe. âHereâs to the good old new roughhousy circus parades.â
âI wonder how many people they are good for, those circus parades of yours,â said Andrews.
âWhere are you going to spend the night?â said Henslowe.
âI donât knowâŠ. I suppose I can find a hotel or something.â
âWhy donât you come with me and see Berthe; she probably has friends.â
âI want to wander about alone, not that I scorn Bertheâs friends,â said AndrewsâŠ.âBut I am so greedy for solitude.â
John Andrews was walking alone down streets full of drifting fog. Now
Comments (0)