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
热门推荐
  • 翻身丫鬟俏红娘

    翻身丫鬟俏红娘

    相府小姐的贴身丫鬟星辰被打死了又活了,俩字:魂穿。穿越你好穿越再见,有完没完?人家个个都穿成小姐公主我这大龄剩女居然成了个丫鬟!人倒霉时还真杯具——等一下,我嫁不了人吗?!要是我这辈子都没有男人,小姐你可一定要嫁好呀!如果我放弃恋爱婚姻,是不是就可以永不伤心?淘气姑娘星辰初入江湖,恰逢各路二货频出,大家都是来搞笑的,人生不过如此一场,何不轻松一些?*******此文因设定不够周密筹备重写中,欢迎大家到我的新ID“初晓韵音”那里看新坑~
  • 微管理:用人的智慧

    微管理:用人的智慧

    本书从选人、定岗、协作、激励、授权、培训、留人等方面,选取了用人管理中的76个典型行为,按“问题界定 案例解析 实践指南 管理提升”四个模块,深入浅出地对管理者在用人过程中的管理行为进行了解析,并辅以漫画、情境、案例等表现形式,让管理者学会如何更好地选人用人、励人管人。本书适合企业管理人员、人力资源工作者、培训师、管理咨询师、高校人力资源管理相关专业师生使用。
  • 女骗子的爱情故事

    女骗子的爱情故事

    一个“女骗子”,她以纯真的心看待对待她的朋友可她在一天却发现她身边的人不是真心代她,她就变成了一个玩弄身边感情的人直到有天,一个男孩的介入使她重新开始了自己的生活,并且勇往直前。
  • 越绝书

    越绝书

    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。
  • 破噬心

    破噬心

    犹如滔天巨兽之口般的宇宙,散发出古老悠长的气息,没人能准确的计算出它存活的时间,万古不灭,生生不息。而在他那不起眼的一个小角落里,一颗蔚蓝的星球静静地躺在他的怀里,犹是出生的婴儿。。。新的旅程新世界
  • 传奇星座

    传奇星座

    十二星座来至凡间,并与凡人产生了情感。他们以各自不一样的性格特色,诠释着他们不一样的爱情故事...(如果大家有什么好的意见和建议,请留言...欢迎大家批评和指正...谢谢啊...)
  • 撞碎地球

    撞碎地球

    外星极高文明t8san星球高发战事,一些生命逃离出来,然后其中一位大能者,找了太阳系的几个有生命体存在的几个星球,撞碎,进行生命意志的最后传承!人类被异形能量包裹,然后地球碎裂,异形物质和太空真空气体以及少量元素催发,进行催眠,沉睡了三十年之后的人类陆续醒过来。而70亿人因为地球撞碎的冲击波太大,大多分散在太阳系之中。人类发现自己觉醒之后不但力量增强,同时身体机能适应宇宙空间。所有生物,意识之中都有了一个强烈的念头,为洛尔大人复仇,T8SAN星球。QQ群:546105679
  • 红棉袄之恋

    红棉袄之恋

    一部现代都市爱情小说。
  • 小公主的恋爱史

    小公主的恋爱史

    夏汐雅是三流中学的滞销货,某年某月去阻止老友闯祸,为了自保她假装一流学院——A大超级优生班老大韩宇泽的女友,为了圆谎,她不惜献出初吻。强吻韩宇泽,以求太平。没想到晚上即被抓到五星级酒店,突然被告知和韩宇泽结婚……就要跟他结婚(这什么情况啊?)两人的新婚生活从此开始,一拨一指的麻烦源源不断。一对小夫妻的“幸福”生活由此拉开序幕……
  • 秋陌

    秋陌

    小时候,被父母抛弃。十年后,千金强势来袭,霸气侧漏,女王风范,携历年好友,重返校园,踩渣男渣女,继豪门恩怨,一切皆在计划之内,唯独没有想到的,是他~他的出现,使她慌了。