Three Soldiers by John Dos Passos (books to read to be successful txt) 📕
A sharp voice beside his cot woke him with a jerk.
"Get up, you."
The white beam of a pocket searchlight was glaring in the face of the man next to him.
"The O. D." said Fuselli to himself.
"Get up, you," came the sharp voice again.
The man in the next cot stirred and opened his eyes.
"Get up."
"Here, sir," muttered the man in the next cot, his eyes blinking sleepily in the glare of the flashlight. He got out of bed and stood unsteadily at attention.
"Don't you know better than to sleep in your O. D. shirt? Take it off."
"Yes, sir."
"What's your name?"
The man looked up, blinking, too dazed to
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“Say, I’m going to stick to you, Andy.” Walters’s voice broke into his reverie. “I’m going to appoint you the corps of interpreters.”
Andrews laughed.
“D’you know the way to the School Headquarters?”
“The R. T. O. said take the subway.”
“I’m going to walk,” said Andrews.
“You’ll get lost, won’t you?”
“No danger, worse luck,” said Andrews, getting to his feet. “I’ll see you fellows at the School Headquarters, whatever those are…. So long.”
“Say, Andy, I’ll wait for you there,” Walters called after him.
Andrews darted down a side street. He could hardly keep from shouting aloud when he found himself alone, free, with days and days ahead of him to work and think, gradually to rid his limbs of the stiff attitudes of the automaton. The smell of the streets, and the mist, indefinably poignant, rose like incense smoke in fantastic spirals through his brain, making him hungry and dazzled, making his arms and legs feel lithe and as ready for delight as a crouching cat for a spring. His heavy shoes beat out a dance as they clattered on the wet pavements under his springy steps. He was walking very fast, stopping suddenly now and then to look at the greens and oranges and crimsons of vegetables in a push cart, to catch a vista down intricate streets, to look into the rich brown obscurity of a small wine shop where workmen stood at the counter sipping white wine. Oval, delicate faces, bearded faces of men, slightly gaunt faces of young women, red cheeks of boys, wrinkled faces of old women, whose ugliness seemed to have hidden in it, stirringly, all the beauty of youth and the tragedy of lives that had been lived; the faces of the people he passed moved him like rhythms of an orchestra. After much walking, turning always down the street which looked pleasantest, he came to an oval with a statue of a pompous personage on a ramping horse. “Place des Victoires,” he read the name, which gave him a faint tinge of amusement. He looked quizzically at the heroic features of the sun king and walked off laughing. “I suppose they did it better in those days, the grand manner,” he muttered. And his delight redoubled in rubbing shoulders with the people whose effigies would never appear astride ramping-eared horses in squares built to commemorate victories. He came out on a broad straight avenue, where there were many American officers he had to salute, and M. P.‘s and shops with wide plate-glass windows, full of objects that had a shiny, expensive look. “Another case of victories,” he thought, as he went off into a side street, taking with him a glimpse of the bluish-grey pile of the Opera, with its pompous windows and its naked bronze ladies holding lamps.
He was in a narrow street full of hotels and fashionable barber shops, from which came an odor of cosmopolitan perfumery, of casinos and ballrooms and diplomatic receptions, when he noticed an American officer coming towards him, reeling a little,—a tall, elderly man with a red face and a bottle nose. He saluted.
The officer stopped still, swaying from side to side, and said in a whining voice:
“Shonny, d’you know where Henry’sh Bar is?”
“No, I don’t, Major,” said Andrews, who felt himself enveloped in an odor of cocktails.
“You’ll help me to find it, shonny, won’t you?… It’s dreadful not to be able to find it…. I’ve got to meet Lootenant Trevors in Henry’sh Bar.” The major steadied himself by putting a hand on Andrews’ shoulder. A civilian passed them.
“Dee-donc,” shouted the major after him, “Dee-donc, Monshier, ou ay Henry’sh Bar?”
The man walked on without answering.
“Now isn’t that like a frog, not to understand his own language?” said the major.
“But there’s Henry’s Bar, right across the street,” said Andrews suddenly.
“Bon, bon,” said the major.
They crossed the street and went in. At the bar the major, still clinging to Andrews’ shoulder, whispered in his ear: “I’m A. W. O. L., shee?… Shee?…. Whole damn Air Service is A. W. O. L. Have a drink with me…. You enlisted man? Nobody cares here…. Warsh over, Sonny…. Democracy is shafe for the world.”
Andrews was just raising a champagne cocktail to his lips, looking with amusement at the crowd of American officers and civilians who crowded into the small mahogany barroom, when a voice behind him drawled out:
“I’ll be damned!”
Andrews turned and saw Henslowe’s brown face and small silky mustache. He abandoned his major to his fate.
“God, I’m glad to see you…. I was afraid you hadn’t been able to work it.”…Said Henslowe slowly, stuttering a little.
“I’m about crazy, Henny, with delight. I just got in a couple of hours ago….” Laughing, interrupting each other, they chattered in broken sentences.
“But how in the name of everything did you get here?”
“With the major?” said Andrews, laughing.
“What the devil?”
“Yes; that major,” whispered Andrews in his friend’s ear, “rather the worse for wear, asked me to lead him to Henry’s Bar and just fed me a cocktail in the memory of Democracy, late defunct…. But what are you doing here? It’s not exactly…exotic.”
“I came to see a man who was going to tell me how I could get to Rumania with the Red Cross…. But that can wait…. Let’s get out of here. God, I was afraid you hadn’t made it.”
“I had to crawl on my belly and lick people’s boots to do it…. God, it was low!… But here I am.”
They were out in the street again, walking and gesticulating.
“But ‘Libertad, Libertad, allons, ma femme!’ as Walt Whitman would have said,” shouted Andrews.
“It’s one grand and glorious feeling…. I’ve been here three days. My section’s gone home; God bless them.”
“But what do you have to do?”
“Do? Nothing,” cried Henslowe. “Not a blooming bloody goddam thing! In fact, it’s no use trying…the whole thing is such a mess you couldn’t do anything if you wanted to.”
“I want to go and talk to people at the Schola Cantorum.”
“There’ll be time for that. You’ll never make anything out of music if you get serious-minded about it.”
“Then, last but not least, I’ve got to get some money from somewhere.”
“Now you’re talking!” Henslowe pulled a burnt leather pocket book out of the inside of his tunic. “Monaco,” he said, tapping the pocket book, which was engraved with a pattern of dull red flowers. He pursed up his lips and pulled out some hundred franc notes, which he pushed into Andrews’s hand.
“Give me one of them,” said Andrews.
“All or none…. They last about five minutes each.”
“But it’s so damn much to pay back.”
“Pay it back—heavens!… Here take it and stop your talking. I probably won’t have it again, so you’d better make hay this time. I warn you it’ll be spent by the end of the week.”
“All right. I’m dead with hunger.”
“Let’s sit down on the Boulevard and think about where we’ll have lunch to celebrate Miss Libertad…. But let’s not call her that, sounds like Liverpool, Andy, a horrid place.”
“How about Freiheit?” said Andrews, as they sat down in basket chairs in the reddish yellow sunlight.
“Treasonable…off with your head.”
“But think of it, man,” said Andrews, “the butchery’s over, and you and I and everybody else will soon be human beings again. Human; all too human!”
“No more than eighteen wars going,” muttered Henslowe.
“I haven’t seen any papers for an age…. How do you mean?”
“People are fighting to beat the cats everywhere except on the’ western front,” said Henslowe. “But that’s where I come in. The Red Cross sends supply trains to keep them at it…. I’m going to Russia if I can work it.”
“But what about the Sorbonne?”
“The Sorbonne can go to Ballyhack.”
“But, Henny, I’m going to croak on your hands if you don’t take me somewhere to get some food.”
“Do you want a solemn place with red plush or with salmon pink brocade?”
“Why have a solemn place at all?”
“Because solemnity and good food go together. It’s only a religious restaurant that has a proper devotion to the belly. O, I know, we’ll go over to Brooklyn.”
“Where?”
“To the Rive Gauche. I know a man who insists on calling it Brooklyn. Awfully funny man…never been sober in his life. You must meet him.”
“Oh, I want to…. It’s a dog’s age since I met anyone new, except you. I can’t live without having a variegated crowd about, can you?”
“You’ve got that right on this boulevard. Serbs, French, English, Americans, Australians, Rumanians, Tcheco-Slovaks; God, is there any uniform that isn’t here?… I tell you, Andy, the war’s been a great thing for the people who knew how to take advantage of it. Just look at their puttees.”
“I guess they’ll know how to make a good thing of the Peace too.”
“Oh, that’s going to be the best yet…. Come along. Let’s be little devils and take a taxi.”
“This certainly is the main street of Cosmopolis.”
They threaded their way through the crowd, full of uniforms and glitter and bright colors, that moved in two streams up and down the wide sidewalk between the cafes and the boles of the bare trees. They climbed into a taxi, and lurched fast through streets where, in the misty sunlight, grey-green and grey-violet mingled with blues and pale lights as the colors mingle in a pigeon’s breast feathers. They passed the leafless gardens of the Tuileries on one side, and the great inner Courts of the Louvre, with their purple mansard roofs and their high chimneys on the other, and saw for a second the river, dull jade green, and the plane trees splotched with brown and cream color along the quais, before they were lost in the narrow brownish-grey streets of the old quarters.
“This is Paris; that was Cosmopolis,” said Henslowe.
“I’m not particular, just at present,” cried Andrews gaily.
The square in front of the Odeon was a splash of white and the collonade a blur of darkness as the cab swerved round the corner and along the edge of the Luxembourg, where, through the black iron fence, many brown and reddish colors in the intricate patterns of leafless twigs opened here and there on statues and balustrades and vistas of misty distances. The cab stopped with a jerk.
“This is the Place des Medicis,” said Henslowe.
At the end of a slanting street looking very flat, through the haze, was the dome of the Pantheon. In the middle of the square between the yellow trams and the green low busses, was a quiet pool, where the shadow of horizontals of the house fronts was reflected.
They sat beside the window looking out at the square.
Henslowe ordered.
“Remember how sentimental history books used to talk about prisoners who were let out after years in dungeons, not being able to stand it, and going back to their cells?”
“D’you like sole meuniere?”
“Anything, or rather everything! But take it from me, that’s all rubbish. Honestly I don’t think I’ve ever been happier in my life…. D’you know, Henslowe, there’s something in you that is afraid to be happy.”
“Don’t be morbid…. There’s only one real evil in the world: being somewhere without being able to get away;… I ordered beer. This is the only place in Paris where it’s fit to drink.”
“And I’m going to every blooming concert…Colonne-Lamoureux on Sunday, I know that…. The only evil in the world is not to be able to hear music or to make it…. These oysters are fit for Lucullus.”
“Why not say fit for John Andrews and Bob Henslowe, damn it?… Why the ghosts of poor old dead Romans
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