按键盘上方向键 ← 或 → 可快速上下翻页,按键盘上的 Enter 键可回到本书目录页,按键盘上方向键 ↑ 可回到本页顶部!
————未阅读完?加入书签已便下次继续阅读!
ing it; and now I felt a plete and savage satisfaction in our predicament。 〃This;〃 I said to myself; 〃will teach him a lesson。〃
But this gratifying sense of superiority could obviously not last very long。 Riguelle sent the plane earthward in a long diagonal line that brought us within sixty feet of the sand … an altitude at which there was no question of picking out a landing…place。 We lost both wheels against one sand…dune; a wing against another; and crashed with a sudden jerk into a third。
〃You hurt?〃 Riguelle called out。
〃Not a bit;〃 I said。
〃That's what I call piloting a ship!〃 he boasted cheerfully。
I who was busy on all fours extricating myself from what had once been a ship; was in no mood to feed his pride。
〃Guillaumet will be along in a minute to pick us up;〃 he added。
Guillaumet was flying our convoy; and very shortly we saw him e down on a stretch of smooth sand a few hundred yards away。 He asked if we were all right; was told no damage had been done; and then proposed briskly that we give him a hand with the sacks。 The mail transferred out of the wrecked plane; they explained to me that in this soft sand it would not be possible to lift Guillaumet's plane clear if I was in it。 They would hop to the next outpost; drop the mail there; and e back for me。
Now this was my first day in Africa。 I was so ignorant that I could not tell a zone of danger from a zone of safety; I mean by that; a zone where the tribes had submitted peacefully to European rule from a zone where the tribes were still in rebellion。 The region in which we had landed happened to be considered safe; but I did not know that。
〃You've got a gun; of course;〃 Riguelle said。
I had no gun and said so。
〃My dear chap; you'll have to have a gun;〃 he said; and very kindly he gave me his。 〃And you'll want these extra clips of cartridges;〃 he went on。 〃Just bear in mind that you shoot at anything and everything you see。〃
They had started to walk across to the other plane when Guillaumet; as if driven by his conscience; came back and handed me his cartridge clips; too。 And with this they took off。 Title: Wind; Sand; and Stars
Author: Antoine de Saint…Exupery
Translator: Lewis Galantiere
Publisher: Harcourt Brace Javanovich; New York; 1967
Date first posted: February 2000
Date most recently updated: January 2006
XML markup by Wesman 02/23/2000。
Wind Sand and Stars
Antoine de Saint…Exupery
8
Prisoner of the Sand
After three years of life in the desert; I was transferred out。 The fortunes of the air service sent me wandering here and there until one day I decided to attempt a long…distance flight from Paris to Saigon。 When; on December 29; 1935; I took off; I had no notion that the sands were preparing for me their ultimate and culminating ordeal。
This is the story of the Paris…Saigon flight。
I paid my final visit to the weather bureau; where I found Monsieur Viaud stooped over his maps like a medieval alchemist over an alembic。 Lucas had e with me; and we stared together at the curving lines marking the new…sprung winds。 With their tiny flying arrows; they put me in mind of curving tendrils studded with thorns。 All the atmospheric depressions of the world were charted on this enormous map; ochre…colored; like the earth of Asia。
〃Here is a storm that we'll not hear from before Monday;〃 Monsieur Viaud pointed out。
Over Russia and the Scandinavian peninsula the swirling lines took the form of a coiled demon。 Out in Iraq; in the neighborhood of Basra; an imp was whirling。
〃That fellow worries me a little;〃 said Monsieur Viaud。
〃Sand…storm; is it?〃
I was not being idly curious。 Day would not yet be breaking when I reached Basra and I was fearful of flying at night in one of those desert storms that turn the sky into a yellow furnace and wipe out hills; towns; and river…banks; drowning earth and sky in one great conflagration。 It would be bad enough to fly in daylight through a chaos in which the very elements themselves were indistinguishable。
〃Sand…storm? No; not exactly。〃
〃So much the better;〃 I said to myself; and I looked round the room。 I liked this laboratory atmosphere。 Viaud; I felt; was a man escaped from the world。 When he came in here and hung up his hat and coat on the peg; he hung up with them all the confusion in which the rest of mankind lived。 Family cares; thoughts of ine; concerns of the heart … all that vanished on the threshold of this room as at the door of a hermit's cell; or an astronomer's tower; or a radio operator's shack。 Here was one of those men who are able to lock themselves up in the secrecy of their retreat and hold discourse with the universe。
Gently; for he was reflecting; Monsieur Viaud rubbed the palms of his hands together。
〃No; not a sand…storm。 See here。〃
His finger traveled over the map and pointed out why。
At four in the morning Lucas shook me into consciousness。
〃Wake up!〃
And before I could so much as rub my eyes he was saying; 〃Look here; at this report。 Look at the moon。 You won't see much of her tonight。 She's new; not very bright; and she'll set at ten o'clock; And here's something else for you: sun…rise in Greenwich Meridian Time and in local time as well。 And here: here are your maps; with your course all marked out。 And here …〃
〃… is your bag packed for Saigon;〃 my wife broke in。
A razor and a change of shirt。 He who would travel happily must travel light。
We got into a car and motored out to Le Bourget while Fate spying in ambush put the finishing touches to her plans。 Those favorable winds that were to wheel in the heavens; that moon that was to sink at ten o'clock; were so many strategic positions at which Fate was assembling her forces。 。
It was cold at the airport; and dark。 The Simoon was wheeled out of her hangar。 I walked round my ship; stroking her wings with the back of my hand in a caress that I believe was love。 Eight thousand miles I had flown in her; and her engines had not skipped a beat; not a bolt in her had loosened。 This was the marvel that was to save our l