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wind sand and stars st.antoine de saint-exupery-第21章

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  Each side was waiting for something to be born in the invisible。 The rebels were waiting for the host of hesitant people in Madrid to declare themselves for France。 Barcelona was waiting for Saragossa to waken out of an inspired dream; declare itself Socialist; and fall。 It was the thought more than the soldier that was besieging the town。 The thought was the great hope and the great enemy。 
  It seemed to me that the bombers; the shells; the militiamen under arms; by themselves had no power to conquer。 On each side a single man entrenched behind his line of defense was better than a hundred besiegers。 But thought might worm its way in。 
  From time to time there is an attack。 From time to time the tree is shaken。 Not to uproot it; but merely to see if the fruit is yet ripe。 And if it is; a town falls。 
  II 
  Back from the front; I found friends in Barcelona who allowed me to join in their mysterious expeditions。 We went deep into the mountains and were now in one of those villages which are possessed by a mixture of peace and terror。 
  〃Oh; yes; we shot seventeen of them。〃 
  They had shot seventeen 〃fascists。〃 The parish priest; the priest's housekeeper; the sexton; and fourteen village notables。 Everything is relative; you see。 When they read in their provincial newspaper the story of the life of Basil Zaharoff; master of the world; they transpose it into their own language。 They recognize in him the nurseryman; or the pharmacist。 And when they shoot the pharmacist; in a way they are shooting Basil Zaharoff。 The only one who does not understand is the pharmacist。 
  〃Now we are all Loyalists together。 Everything has calmed down。〃 
  Almost everything。 The conscience of the village is tormented by one man whom I have seen at the tavern; smiling; helpful; so anxious to go on living! He es to the pub in order to show us that; despite his few acres of vineyard; he too is part of the human race; suffers with rheumatism like it; mops his face like it with a blue handkerchief。 He es; and he plays billiards。 Can one shoot a man who plays billiards? Besides; he plays badly with his great trembling hands。 He is upset; he still does not know whether he is a fascist or not。 He puts me in mind of those poor monkeys who dance before the boa…constrictor in the hope of softening it。 
  There was nothing we could do for the man。 For the time being we had another job in hand。 Sitting on a table and swinging my legs at mittee headquarters; while my panion; Pepin; pulled a bundle of soiled papers out of his pocket; I had a good look at these terrorists。 Their looks e belied their name: honorable peasants with frank eyes and sober attentive faces; they were the same everywhere we went; and though we were foreigners possessing no authority; we were everywhere received with the same grave courtesy。 
  〃Yes; here it is;〃 said Pepin; a document in his hand。 〃His name is Laporte。 Any of YOU know him?〃 
  The paper went from hand to hand and the members of the mittee shook their heads。 
  〃No。 Laporte? Never heard of him。〃 
  I started to explain something to them; but Pepin motioned me to be silent。 〃They won't talk;〃 he said; 〃but they know him well enough。〃 
  Pepin spread his references before the chair…man; saying casually: 
  〃I am a French socialist。 Here is my party card。〃 
  The card was passed round and the chairman raised his eyes to us: 
  〃Laporte。 I don't believe。 。 。 。〃 
  〃Of course you know him。 A French monk。 Probably in disguise。 You captured him yesterday in the woods。 Laporte; his name is。 The French consulate wants him。〃 Title: Wind; Sand; and Stars 
  Author: Antoine de Saint…Exupery 
  Translator: Lewis Galantiere 
  Publisher: Harcourt Brace Javanovich; New York; 1967 
  Date first posted: February 2000 
  Date most recently updated: January 2006 
  XML markup by Wesman 02/23/2000。 
  Wind Sand and Stars
  Antoine de Saint…Exupery
  10
  Conclusion
  Here; in the final pages of this book; I remember again those musty civil servants who served as our escort in the omnibus when we set out to fly our first mails; when we prepared ourselves to be transformed into men … we who' had had the luck to be called。 Those clerks were kneaded of the same stuff as the rest of us; but they knew not that they were hungry。 
  To e to man's estate it is not necessary to get oneself killed round Madrid; or to fly mail planes; or to struggle wearily in the snows out of respect for the dignity of life。 The man who can see the miraculous in a poem; who can take pure joy from music; who can break his bread with rades; opens his window to the same。 refreshing wind off the sea。 He too learns a language of men。 
  But too many men are left unawakened。 
  A few years ago; in the course of a long railway journey; I was suddenly seized by a desire to make a tour of the little country in which I was locked up for three days; cradled in that rattle that is like the sound of pebbles rolled over and over by the waves; and I got up out of my berth。 At one in the morning I went through the train in all its length。 The sleeping cars were empty。 The first…class carriages were empty。 They put me in mind of the luxurious hotels on the Riviera that open in winter for a single guest; the last representative of an extinct fauna。 A sign of bitter times。 
  But the third…class carriages were crowded with hundreds of Polish workmen sent home from France。 I made my way along those passages; stepping over sprawling bodies and peering into the carriages。 In the dim glow cast by the night…lamps into these barren and fortless partments I saw a confused mass of people churned about by the swaying of the train; the whole thing looking and smelling like a barrack…room。 A whole nation returning to its native poverty seemed to sprawl there in a sea of bad dreams。 Great shaven heads rolled on the cushionless benches。 Men; women; and children were stirring in their sleep; tossing from left to right and back again as if attacked by all the noises and jerkings that threatened them in their oblivion。 They had not found the hospitality of a sweet slumber。 
  Looking at them I said to myself that they had lost half their human quality。 These people had been knocked about from one end of Europe to the other by the economic currents; they had been torn from their little houses in the north of France; from their tiny garden…plots; their three pots of geranium that always stood in the windows of the Polish miners' families。 I saw lying beside them pots and pans; blankets; curtains; bound into bundles badly tied and swollen with hernias。 
  Out of all that they had caressed or loved in France; out of everything they had succeeded in taming in their four or five years in my country …the cat; the dog; the geranium…they had been able to bring away with them only a few kitchen utensils; two or three blankets; a curtain or so。 
  A baby lay at the breast of a mother so weary that she seemed asleep。 Life was being transmitted in the shabbiness and the disorder of this journey。 I looked at the father。 A powerful skull as naked as a stone。 A body hunched over in unfortable sleep; imprisoned 
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