FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   247   248   249   250   251   252   253   254   255   256   257   258   259   260   261   262   263   264   265   266   267   268   269   270   271  
272   273   274   275   276   277   278   279   280   281   282   283   284   285   286   287   288   289   290   >>  
, and Monsieur, now that he could see them, embraced them again. Whence had they come, and how had it fared with them, up there? Very well, as anybody could see. What did they want first,--supper, perhaps? Their room was always ready for them; and the clothes they had left were in the big chest. David explained that their shirts had not once been dry for four days; and what they most desired was to be dry and to be clean. Old Martha, already in bed, was routed out to heat water. M. Joubert carried the big washtub upstairs. Tomorrow for conversation, he said; tonight for repose. The boys followed him and began to peel off their wet uniforms, leaving them in two sodden piles on the floor. There was one bath for both, and they threw up a coin to decide which should get into the warm water first. M. Joubert, seeing Claude's fat ankle strapped up in adhesive bandages, began to chuckle. "Oh, I see the Boche made you dance up there!" When they were clad in clean pyjamas out of the chest, Papa Joubert carried their shirts and socks down for Martha to wash. He returned with the big meat platter, on which was an omelette made of twelve eggs and stuffed with bacon and fried potatoes. Mme. Joubert brought the three-story earthen coffee-pot to the door and called, "Bon appetit!" The host poured the coffee and cut up the loaf with his clasp knife. He sat down to watch them eat. How had they found things up there, anyway? The Boches polite and agreeable as usual? Finally, when there was not a crumb of anything left, he poured for each a little glass of brandy, "pour cider la digestion," and wished them good-night. He took the candle with him. Perfect bliss, Claude reflected, as the chill of the sheets grew warm around his body, and he sniffed in the pillow the old smell of lavender. To be so warm, so dry, so clean, so beloved! The journey down, reviewed from here, seemed beautiful. As soon as they had got out of the region of martyred trees, they found the land of France turning gold. All along the river valleys the poplars and cottonwoods had changed from green to yellow,--evenly coloured, looking like candle flames in the mist and rain. Across the fields, along the horizon they ran, like torches passed from hand to hand, and all the willows by the little streams had become silver. The vineyards were green still, thickly spotted with curly, blood-red branches. It all flashed back beside his pillow in the dark: this beautifu
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   247   248   249   250   251   252   253   254   255   256   257   258   259   260   261   262   263   264   265   266   267   268   269   270   271  
272   273   274   275   276   277   278   279   280   281   282   283   284   285   286   287   288   289   290   >>  



Top keywords:

Joubert

 

shirts

 

carried

 

Martha

 
pillow
 

coffee

 

Claude

 

candle

 
poured
 

lavender


Perfect
 
sniffed
 

sheets

 

reflected

 

brandy

 

Boches

 

polite

 

agreeable

 

things

 

Finally


digestion
 

wished

 

streams

 

silver

 

vineyards

 

willows

 
passed
 
fields
 

Across

 
horizon

torches

 

thickly

 
beautifu
 

flashed

 

spotted

 
branches
 
region
 

martyred

 

reviewed

 

journey


beautiful

 

France

 

turning

 
evenly
 

yellow

 
coloured
 

flames

 

changed

 

cottonwoods

 
valleys