登陆注册
15705500000037

第37章 THE CONSCRIPT AND THE CRISIS(1)

Very few of us ever see the history of our own time happening.And Ithink the best service a modern journalist can do to society is to record as plainly as ever he can exactly what impression was produced on his mind by anything he has actually seen and heard on the outskirts of any modern problem or campaign.Though all he saw of a railway strike was a flat meadow in Essex in which a train was becalmed for an hour or two,he will probably throw more light on the strike by describing this which he has seen than by describing the steely kings of commerce and the bloody leaders of the mob whom he has never seen--nor any one else either.If he comes a day too late for the battle of Waterloo (as happened to a friend of my grandfather)he should still remember that a true account of the day after Waterloo would be a most valuable thing to have.Though he was on the wrong side of the door when Rizzio was being murdered,we should still like to have the wrong side described in the right way.

Upon this principle I,who know nothing of diplomacy or military arrangements,and have only held my breath like the rest of the world while France and Germany were bargaining,will tell quite truthfully of a small scene I saw,one of the thousand scenes that were,so to speak,the anterooms of that inmost chamber of debate.

In the course of a certain morning I came into one of the quiet squares of a small French town and found its cathedral.It was one of those gray and rainy days which rather suit the Gothic.The clouds were leaden,like the solid blue-gray lead of the spires and the jewelled windows;the sloping roofs and high-shouldered arches looked like cloaks drooping with damp;and the stiff gargoyles that stood out round the walls were scoured with old rains and new.I went into the round,deep porch with many doors and found two grubby children playing there out of the rain.Ialso found a notice of services,etc.,and among these I found the announcement that at 11.30(that is about half an hour later)there would be a special service for the Conscripts,that is to say,the draft of young men who were being taken from their homes in that little town and sent to serve in the French Army;sent (as it happened)at an awful moment,when the French Army was encamped at a parting of the ways.There were already a great many people there when I entered,not only of all kinds,but in all attitudes,kneeling,sitting,or standing about.And there was that general sense that strikes every man from a Protestant country,whether he dislikes the Catholic atmosphere or likes it;I mean,the general sense that the thing was "going on all the time";that it was not an occasion,but a perpetual process,as if it were a sort of mystical inn.

Several tricolours were hung quite near to the altar,and the young men,when they came in,filed up the church and sat right at the front.They were,of course,of every imaginable social grade;for the French conscription is really strict and universal.Some looked like young criminals,some like young priests,some like both.Some were so obviously prosperous and polished that a barrack-room must seem to them like hell;others (by the look of them)had hardly ever been in so decent a place.But it was not so much the mere class variety that most sharply caught an Englishman's eye.It was the presence of just those one or two kinds of men who would never have become soldiers in any other way.

There are many reasons for becoming a soldier.It may be a matter of hereditary luck or abject hunger or heroic virtue or fugitive vice;it may be an interest in the work or a lack of interest in any other work.

But there would always be two or three kinds of people who would never tend to soldiering;all those kinds of people were there.A lad with red hair,large ears,and very careful clothing,somehow conveyed across the church that he had always taken care of his health,not even from thinking about it,but simply because he was told,and that he was one of those who pass from childhood to manhood without any shock of being a man.

In the row in front of him there was a very slight and vivid little Jew,of the sort that is a tailor and a Socialist.By one of those accidents that make real life so unlike anything else,he was the one of the company who seemed especially devout.Behind these stiff or sensitive boys were ranged the ranks of their mothers and fathers,with knots and bunches of their little brothers and sisters.

同类推荐
  • 重黎

    重黎

    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。
  • 客座偶谈

    客座偶谈

    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。
  • 琴操

    琴操

    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。
  • 诗地理考

    诗地理考

    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。
  • 山中酬杨补阙见过

    山中酬杨补阙见过

    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。
热门推荐
  • 逆天四人组:狂女闯天下

    逆天四人组:狂女闯天下

    当冷漠的他遇上呆萌的她:吖?吃饭木带钱?怎么办?瞅上目标向上扑,钱坑到手了该咋办?废话!当然是马上逃啦。当邪魅的他遇上腹黑的她:青楼——某个女孩对着某个老鸨:”50片金叶子,不然免谈”说罢,瞥了眼一旁不能动弹的某男……最后…某女拿着钱乐呵呵的跑出青楼,留下被卖的某男气个半天死。当稳重的他遇上大咧的她:某女正一脚踩在凳子上,和底下的人讲如何泡妹纸,讲累了,端起桌子上的粥喝,突然某男从背后轻轻拍了她一下:”公子,请问…””噗”还未等某男问完…某女成功呛住了”你丫…咳咳…”。当性格不定的他遇上随心情的她:一切都为未知数。
  • 暖男寻妻:半神悍妇敢逆天

    暖男寻妻:半神悍妇敢逆天

    一朝穿越,如何在异世生存?魂穿有住处,快穿有任务她却只有一个开了灵智的小伙伴?幸好遇到美男一路相助,还有各方星宿围堵。不如趁机开个学院,混到毕业偷偷溜走。有位帝尊却突然开口:想跑?想得美!美男被KO,星宿被碾压,只有本尊万事俱备,只求推倒!
  • 雷霆特战队

    雷霆特战队

    卧底暴露,雇佣兵设陷,雷霆特战队陷入敌人陷阱,狙击手猎鹰断后,最终陷入绝境……疯狂训练只为胜利曙光,雷霆霹雳斩断万千凌魔,超级狙击手绝地求生出生入死,为国效力,一切尽在雷霆特战队。
  • 六界轮

    六界轮

    吊丝教师云风感社会不公跳崖,却意外得到纯阳子吕洞宾的传承。在洞中修炼近两年,重新回到纷繁的世界。凭着洞中所学,走进大学校园,当学生,做教师,自是免不了香车美人和各种纠纷。并且吞并申都两大黑帮,成立超级集团公司。???不过与众不同的是,云风有颗“兼济天下”的心。一次游览黄帝陵时,云风得到上古轩辕的召唤,得赠“六界轮”,因而能穿梭于人界、冥界、妖界、古界、仙界、神界……???古今中外,历史上、传说中、神话里各种人物都将粉墨登场,荟萃成一支气势恢宏的交响曲。
  • 隋天台智者大师别传

    隋天台智者大师别传

    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。
  • 萌妻嫁到:夫君,你好

    萌妻嫁到:夫君,你好

    木一第一次看到自家老大不要脸的行为,表示相当震惊。“这位公子甚是面熟,长得好像我未来的夫君,敢问公子是否有家眷?”“否”“公子是否介意有一个家眷?”“否”此后,某女就以扑倒某男为己任。某日,不正经的少女(???)看双颊微红的良家妇男,伸出了自己的罪恶之爪,光明正大的占便宜“相公,我看今天风和日丽阳光明媚,实在是做些不可描述的事情的好日子,我们就不要在外面浪费大好时光了吧”“……”“既然娘子这么饥渴,那为夫自然是不好拒绝的。”纯情的良家妇男微笑着把自家媳妇儿拦腰抱起,回房。“???”嗯?怎么好像那里不对劲?!
  • 不灭心火

    不灭心火

    铁可碎,金可熔,唯心难撼。命多舛,路多曲,唯心难移。火有焚天之势,心亦有容地之能。是登上九天,还是泯灭红尘。都亦由我而定
  • 夏之韵

    夏之韵

    这是本人自几编纂的散文集,这本散文集收集了本人在夏季写的散文,为抒情类,记叙类和景物类。本人尚未毕业,知识有限,如有错误,请大家批评指出,还请谅解。这是本人的处女作,希望大家多多支持!谢谢!
  • 中国经济:战略、调控与改革

    中国经济:战略、调控与改革

    本书由国家发展和改革委员会经济研究所2006-2007年度基本科研专项资金课题优秀成果编辑而成。
  • 神迹:异世之光

    神迹:异世之光

    一场战斗,让她下凡。一场战斗,将她带到了异世界。一场逃离,让她经历情苦。一场梦,让她接受不平凡的命运她是碎梦还是风幽羽?在这异世中,成王败寇,她以天才的能力狂傲。他却无情打断她的幻想。他给予她最美的花季和雨季。情、苦皆是惩罚。“北祀,时光易老,我情不变。”“戰,时光易老,唯有我对你的情才是永恒。”