The Enormous Room by E. E. (Edward Estlin) Cummings
page 53 of 322 (16%)
page 53 of 322 (16%)
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Bump, slowing down. BUMP--BUMP. It is light outside. One sees the world. There is a world still, the _gouvernement francais_ has not taken it away, and the air must be beautifully cool. In the compartment it is hot. The _gendarmes_ smell worst. I know how I smell. What polite women. "_Enfin, nous voila._" My guards awoke and yawned pretentiously. Lest I should think they had dozed off. It is Paris. Some _permissionaires_ cried "Paris." The woman across from me said "Paris, Paris." A great shout came up from every insane drowsy brain that had travelled with us--a fierce and beautiful cry, which went the length of the train.... Paris, where one forgets, Paris, which is Pleasure, Paris, in whom our souls live, Paris, the beautiful, Paris at last. The Englishman woke up and said heavily to me: "I say, where are we?"--"Paris," I answered, walking carefully on his feet as I made my baggage-laden way out of the compartment. It was Paris. My guards hurried me through the station. One of them (I saw for the first time) was older than the other, and rather handsome with his Van Dyck blackness of curly beard. He said that it was too early for the _metro_, it was closed. We should take a car. It would bring us to the other station from which our next train left. We should hurry. We emerged from the station and its crowds of crazy men. We boarded a car marked something. The conductress, a strong, pink-cheeked, rather beautiful girl in black, pulled my baggage in for me with a gesture which filled all of me with joy. I thanked her, and she smiled at me. The car moved along |
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