Three Soldiers by John Dos Passos (best e book reader android .txt) đ
- Author: John Dos Passos
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After an hour he came out of the woods on a highroad, where he found himself walking beside a two-wheeled cart, that kept pace with him exactly, try as he would to get ahead of it. After a while, a boy leaned out:
âHey, lâAmericain, vous voulez monter?â
âWhere are you going?â
âConflans-Ste.-Honorine.â
âWhereâs that?â
The boy flourished his whip vaguely towards the horseâs head.
âAll right,â said Andrews.
âThese are potatoes,â said the boy, âmake yourself comfortable.â Andrews offered him a cigarette, which he took with muddy fingers. He had a broad face, red cheeks and chunky features. Reddish-brown hair escaped spikily from under a mud-spattered beret.
âWhere did you say you were going?â
âConflans-Ste.-Honorine. Silly all these saints, arenât they?â
Andrews laughed.
âWhere are you going?â the boy asked.
âI donât know. I was taking a walk.â
The boy leaned over to Andrews and whispered in his car: âDeserter?â
âNoâŠ. I had a day off and wanted to see the country.â
âI just thought, if you were a deserter, I might be able to help you. Must be silly to be a soldier. Dirty lifeâŠ. But you like the country. So do I. You canât call this country. Iâm not from this part; Iâm from Brittany. There we have real country. Itâs stifling near Paris here, so many people, so many houses.â
âIt seems mighty fine to me.â
âThatâs because youâre a soldier, better than barracks, hein? Dirty life that. Iâll never be a soldier. Iâm going into the navy. Merchant marine, and then if I have to do service Iâll do it on the sea.â
âI suppose it is pleasanter.â
âThereâs more freedom. And the seaâŠ. We Bretons, you know, we all die of the sea or of liquor.â
They laughed.
âHave you been long in this part of the country?â asked Andrews.
âSix months. Itâs very dull, this farming work. Iâm head of a gang in a fruit orchard, but not for long. I have a brother shipped on a sailing vessel. When he comes back to Bordeaux, Iâll ship on the same boat.â
âWhere to?â
âSouth America, Peru; how should I know?â
âIâd like to ship on a sailing vessel,â said Andrews.
âYou would? It seems very fine to me to travel, and see new countries. And perhaps I shall stay over there.â
âWhere?â
âHow should I know? If I like it, that isâŠ. Life is very bad in Europe.â
âIt is stifling, I suppose,â said Andrews slowly, âall these nations, all these hatreds, but stillâŠit is very beautiful. Life is very ugly in America.â
âLetâs have something to drink. Thereâs a bistro!â
The boy jumped down from the cart and tied the horse to a tree. They went into a small wine shop with a counter and one square oak table.
âBut wonât you be late?â said Andrews.
âI donât care. I like talking, donât you?â
âYes, indeed.â
They ordered wine of an old woman in a green apron, who had three yellow teeth that protruded from her mouth when she spoke.
âI havenât had anything to eat,â said Andrews.
âWait a minute.â The boy ran out to the cart and came back with a canvas bag, from which he took half a loaf of bread and some cheese.
âMy nameâs Marcel,â the boy said when they had sat for a while sipping wine.
âMine is JeanâŠJean Andre.â
âI have a brother named Jean, and my fatherâs name is Andre. Thatâs pleasant, isnât it?â
âBut it must be a splendid job, working in a fruit orchard,â said Andrews, munching bread and cheese.
âItâs well paid; but you get tired of being in one place all the time. Itâs not as it is in BrittanyâŠ.â Marcel paused. He sat, rocking a little on the stool, holding on to the seat between his legs. A curious brilliance came into his grey eyes. âThere,â he went on in a soft voice, âit is so quiet in the fields, and from every hill you look at the seaâŠ. I like that, donât you?â he turned to Andrews, with a smile.
âYou are lucky to be free,â said Andrews bitterly. He felt as if he would burst into tears.
âBut you will be demobilized soon; the butchery is over. You will go home to your family. That will be good, hein?â
âI wonder. Itâs not far enough away. Restless!â
âWhat do you expect?â
A fine rain was falling. They climbed in on the potato sacks and the horse started a jog trot; its lanky brown shanks glistened a little from the rain.
âDo you come out this way often?â asked Marcel.
âI shall. Itâs the nicest place near Paris.â
âSome Sunday you must come and Iâll take you round. The Castle is very fine. And then there is Malmaison, where the great Emperor lived with the Empress Josephine.â
Andrews suddenly remembered Jeanneâs card. This was Wednesday. He pictured her dark figure among the crowd of the pavement in front of the Cafe de Rohan. Of course it had to be that way. Despair, so helpless as to be almost sweet, came over him.
âAnd girls,â he said suddenly to Marcel, âare they pretty round here?â
Marcel shrugged his shoulders.
âItâs not women that we lack, if a fellow has money,â he said.
Andrews felt a sense of shame, he did not exactly know why.
âMy brother writes that in South America the women are very brown and very passionate,â added Marcel with a wistful smile. âBut travelling and reading books, thatâs what I likeâŠ. But look, if you want to take the train back to ParisâŠ.â Marcel pulled up the horse to a standstill. âIf you want to take the train, cross that field by the foot path and keep right along the road to the left till you come to the river. Thereâs a ferryman. The townâs Herblay, and thereâs a stationâŠ. And any Sunday before noon Iâll be at 3 rue des Eveques, Reuil. You must come and weâll take a walk together.â
They shook hands, and Andrews strode off across the wet fields. Something strangely sweet and wistful that he could not analyse lingered in his mind from Marcelâs talk. Somewhere, beyond everything, he was conscious of the great free rhythm of the sea.
Then he thought of the Majorâs office that morning, and of his own skinny figure in the mirrors, repeated endlessly, standing helpless and humble before the shining mahogany desk. Even out here in these fields where the wet earth seemed to heave with the sprouting of new growth, he was not free. In those office buildings, with white marble halls full of the clank of officersâ heels, in index cards and piles of typewritten papers, his real self, which they had power to kill if they wanted to, was in his name and his number, on lists with millions of other names and other numbers. This sentient body of his, full of possibilities and hopes and desires, was only a pale ghost that depended on the other self, that suffered for it and cringed for it. He could not drive out of his head the picture of himself, skinny, in an ill-fitting uniform, repeated endlessly in the two mirrors of the Majorâs white-painted office.
All of a sudden, through bare poplar trees, he saw the Seine.
He hurried along the road, splashing now and then in a shining puddle, until he came to a landing place. The river was very wide, silvery, streaked with pale-green and violet, and straw-color from the evening sky. Opposite were bare poplars and behind them clusters of buff-colored houses climbing up a green hill to a church, all repeated upside down in the color-streaked river. The river was very full, and welled up above its banks, the way the water stands up above the rim of a glass filled too full. From the water came an indefinable rustling, flowing sound that rose and fell with quiet rhythm in Andrewsâs ears.
Andrews forgot everything in the great wave of music that rose impetuously through him, poured with the hot blood through his veins, with the streaked colors of the river and the sky through his eyes, with the rhythm of the flowing river through his ears.
VâSo I came without,â said Andrews, laughing.
âWhat fun!â cried Genevieve. âBut anyway they couldnât do anything to you. Chartres is so near. Itâs at the gates of Paris.â
They were alone in the compartment. The train had pulled out of the station and was going through suburbs where the trees were in leaf in the gardens, and fruit trees foamed above the red brick walls, among the box-like villas.
âAnyway,â said Andrews, âit was an opportunity not to be missed.â
âThat must be one of the most amusing things about being a soldier, avoiding regulations. I wonder whether Damocles didnât really enjoy his sword, donât you think so?â
They laughed.
âBut mother was very doubtful about my coming with you this way. Sheâs such a dear, she wants to be very modern and liberal, but she always gets frightened at the last minute. And my aunt will think the worldâs end has come when we appear.â
They went through some tunnels, and when the train stopped at Sevres, had a glimpse of the Seine valley, where the blue mist made a patina over the soft pea-green of new leaves. Then the train came out on wide plains, full of the glaucous shimmer of young oats and the golden-green of fresh-sprinkled wheat fields, where the mist on the horizon was purplish. The trainâs shadow, blue, sped along beside them over the grass and fences.
âHow beautiful it is to go out of the city this way in the early morning!⊠Has your aunt a piano?â
âYes, a very old and tinkly one.â
âIt would be amusing to play you all I have done at the âQueen of Sheba.â You say the most helpful things.â
âIt is that I am interested. I think you will do something some day.â
Andrews shrugged his shoulders.
They sat silent, their ears filled up by the jerking rhythm of wheels over rails, now and then looking at each other, almost furtively. Outside, fields and hedges and patches of blossom, and poplar trees faintly powdered with green, unrolled, like a scroll before them, behind the nicker of telegraph poles and the festooned wires on which the sun gave glints of red copper. Andrews discovered all at once that the coppery glint on the telegraph wires was the same as the glint in Genevieveâs hair. âBerenike, Artemisia, Arsinoe,â the names lingered in his mind. So that as he looked out of the window at the long curves of the telegraph wires that seemed to rise and fall as they glided past, he could imagine her face, with its large, pale brown eyes and its small mouth and broad smooth forehead, suddenly stilled into the encaustic painting on the mummy case of some Alexandrian girl.
âTell me,â she said, âwhen did you begin to write music?â
Andrews brushed the light, disordered hair off his forehead.
âWhy, I think I forgot to brush my hair this morning,â he said. âYou see, I was so excited by the idea of coming to Chartres with you.â
They laughed.
âBut my mother taught me to play the piano when I was very small,â he went on seriously. âShe and I lived alone in an old house belonging to her family in Virginia. How different all that was from anything you have ever lived. It would not be possible in Europe to be as isolated as we were in VirginiaâŠ. Mother was very unhappy. She had led a dreadfully thwarted lifeâŠthat unre-lieved hopeless misery that only a woman can suffer. She used to tell me stories, and I used to make up little tunes about them, and about anything. The great success,â he laughed, âwas, I remember,
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