登陆注册
5223700000061

第61章 CHAPTER I WHAT DON MARCELO ENVIED(4)

The millionaire followed the carpenter with a look of respect, immeasurably increased since he had taken his part in this human avalanche. And this respect had in it something of envy, the envy that springs from an uneasy conscience.

Whenever Don Marcelo passed a bad night, suffering from nightmare, a certain terrible thing--always the same--would torment his imagination. Rarely did he dream of mortal peril to his family or self. The frightful vision was always that certain notes bearing his signature were presented for collection which he, Marcelo Desnoyers, the man always faithful to his bond, with a past of immaculate probity, was not able to pay. Such a possibility made him tremble, and long after waking his heart would be oppressed with terror. To his imagination this was the greatest disgrace that a man could suffer.

Now that war was overturning his existence with its agitations, the same agonies were reappearing. Completely awake, with full powers of reasoning, he was suffering exactly the same distress as when in his horrible dreams he saw his dishonored signature on a protested document.

All his past was looming up before his eyes with such extraordinary clearness that it seemed as though until then his mind must have been in hopeless confusion. The threatened land of France was his native country. Fifteen centuries of history had been working for him, in order that his opening eyes might survey progress and comforts that his ancestors did not even know. Many generations of Desnoyers had prepared for his advent into life by struggling with the land and defending it that he might be born into a free family and fireside. . . . And when his turn had come for continuing this effort, when his time had arrived in the rosary of generations--he had fled like a debtor evading payment! . . . On coming into his fatherland he had contracted obligations with the human group to whom he owed his existence. This obligation should be paid with his arms, with any sacrifice that would repel danger . . . and he had eluded the acknowledgment of his signature, fleeing his country and betraying his trust to his forefathers! Ah, miserable coward! The material success of his life, the riches acquired in a remote country, were comparatively of no importance. There are failures that millions cannot blot out. The uneasiness of his conscience was proving it now. Proof, too, was in the envy and respect inspired by this poor mechanic marching to meet his death with others equally humble, all kindled with the satisfaction of duty fulfilled, of sacrifice accepted.

The memory of Madariaga came to his memory.

"Where we make our riches, and found a family--there is our country."

No, the statement of the centaur was not correct. In normal times, perhaps. Far from one's native land when it is not exposed to danger, one may forget it for a few years. But he was living now in France, and France was being obliged to defend herself against enemies wishing to overpower her. The sight of all her people rising en masse was becoming an increasingly shameful torture for Desnoyers, making him think all the time of what he should have done in his youth, of what he had dodged.

The veterans of '70 were passing through the streets, with the green and black ribbon in their lapel, souvenirs of the privations of the Siege of Paris, and of heroic and disastrous campaigns. The sight of these men, satisfied with their past, made him turn pale. Nobody was recalling his, but he knew it, and that was enough. In vain his reason would try to lull this interior tempest. . . . Those times were different; then there was none of the present unanimity; the Empire was unpopular . . . everything was lost. . . . But the recollection of a celebrated sentence was fixing itself in his mind as an obsession--"France still remained!" Many had thought as he did in his youth, but they had not, therefore, evaded military service. They had stood by their country in a last and desperate resistance.

Useless was his excuse-making reasoning. Nobler thoughts showed him the fallacy of this beating around the bush. Explanations and demonstrations are unnecessary to the understanding of patriotic and religious ideals; true patriotism does not need them. One's country . . . is one's country. And the laboring man, skeptical and jesting, the self-centred farmer, the solitary pastor, all had sprung to action at the sound of this conjuring word, comprehending it instantly, without previous instruction.

"It is necessary to pay," Don Marcelo kept repeating mentally. "I ought to pay my debt."

As in his dreams, he was constantly feeling the anguish of an upright and desperate man who wishes to meet his obligations.

Pay! . . . and how? It was now very late. For a moment the heroic resolution came into his head of offering himself as a volunteer, of marching with his bag at his side in some one of the groups of future combatants, the same as the carpenter. But the uselessness of the sacrifice came immediately into his mind. Of what use would it be? . . . He looked robust and was well-preserved for his age, but he was over seventy, and only the young make good soldiers.

Combat is but one incident in the struggle. Equally necessary are the hardship and self-denial in the form of interminable marches, extremes of temperature, nights in the open air, shoveling earth, digging trenches, loading carts, suffering hunger. . . . No; it was too late. He could not even leave an illustrious name that might serve as an example.

同类推荐
  • 佛说大自在天子因地经

    佛说大自在天子因地经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 佛说罗摩伽经卷上

    佛说罗摩伽经卷上

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 至言总卷

    至言总卷

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 孔子家语

    孔子家语

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 道经

    道经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 九印决

    九印决

    青梅煮酒,举手投足间看破苍穹。沧海茫茫,红尘争香时却未猜透。夜来何妨?却有神伤。听南邙仙音三清,看牌匾写满仇怨。纨绔只为一时张狂,世间沉沉恶恶,且融与我一席置身。醉又何妨?震破四方!
  • 旋砚:北师大二附中文科实验班作文精选

    旋砚:北师大二附中文科实验班作文精选

    《旋砚:北师大二附中文科实验班作文精选》是一本别开生面的文集,编者和作者都是北京师范大学二附中文科实验班的学生,他们的年龄大约在16-17岁,将要面临人生的又一个重要的结点;他们也是我们十分期盼的各种事业的后继者。这本文集里收入的应当是年轻的作者们的作文,也许在作文里会有一些虚应故事的话,但每篇文章里都含有他们的真诚,看得出,他们是把自己的真情实感写在这份“答卷”里。
  • 狂医至尊之废材七小姐

    狂医至尊之废材七小姐

    “滚,爷岂是你能惦记的。”某女一脸的嫌弃。某男笑的妖孽:“殇儿不能惦记,为夫让你惦记。”一脚踹飞。她,是末世的灭尸队组长离殇与丧尸王卡罗同归于尽后,穿越到凌炎大陆废物月离殇的身上,从此丹药当糖药吃,武器随便拿,神兽当小弟,废物逆天,傲视天下。他,是皇族的最宠爱的皇子,身份神秘来到这最低等的国家疗伤,万年冰封的心出现了道不明说不清的情愫。
  • 老六闸

    老六闸

    父亲名义上不是爷爷的儿子,其实是爷爷亲生。爷爷熊老六解放前就是名震汾河灌区的埝头,曾是一名出色的地下交通员,经历奇特,晚景悲惨、一生坎坷,父亲却不买爷爷的账,与爷爷性格不合,争战不断。爷爷尽管对儿子百般宠爱,最终却将儿子“活埋”;由此,也使奶奶与爷爷根绝往来。这其中的离奇曲折、恩恩怨怨、情感纠结禁不住令人心灵震撼、荡气回肠、杂味无穷。
  • 寻龙密码

    寻龙密码

    从死人堆中爬出的扬州小混混,却成了神州道派的唯一传人。为了寻找已经散开的神州龙脉,他从过去来到了现代,为得是能将龙脉重新聚合。嘻笑怒骂也好,恩怨情仇也罢,他义无返顾的踏上了漫漫的寻龙之路。
  • 大学辨业

    大学辨业

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 封神之至上天王

    封神之至上天王

    “至上者”唯一无上“天王者”天之君王洪荒世界,天地正统。天心意志,我为第一。看一看这个不一样“雷公”在这无限洪荒世界如何走出不一样的未来
  • 灭世邪尊

    灭世邪尊

    穿越到天武大陆,杨奇脑海中居然多了个怪异空间,在这个空间里面,修为可以扶摇直上,武学能够瞬息学会!从此他便开始了一段夺香刺激的美妙生活。“是男人,就要更长,更粗,更硬!好不容易来一次异界,不做到最长,最粗,最硬,都不好意思说我是地球出生的流氓。”
  • 执局

    执局

    面临亡国之祸的南朝于列强环伺之下,慕雪行迎刃而上力挽南朝之危,混入靖北城则是计划第一步。
  • 良缘喜嫁

    良缘喜嫁

    重生后的夏安生一夜之间便成为了京城炙手可热的香饽饽,泼天的富贵向着她铺天盖地而来,求娶的王孙显贵更是一直排到了长安街。有人为她双手沾满血腥,有人默默守护她安生无忧,夏安生表示很纠结,这挑选夫君还真不是一般的气力活。圣人有云:肥水不流外人田,如此肥美的美男祸水,可不可以照单全收?