THE CAMP OF THE SAINTS (Le Camp des Saints) By Jean Raspail CHAPTER THREE
Three
Now, all at once, with his mind at ease, the professor’s stomach began to feel great pangs of hunger. And suddenly he remembered
other ravenous flashes, especially those colossal appetites that man falls prey to after nights of well-requited love. Those distant passions
were nothing but vague sensations now, recalled without regret. But the meals that had followed in their wake—improvised meals for
two, consumed on this very spot—still stood out in his memory, sharp and clear. Great, flat slices of country bread, dark-smoked ham
from up the mountain, dried goat cheese from the village, olives from the terraced groves, apricots from the garden, steeped in sunlight,
and that wine from the rocky slopes, just a little too tart. It was all still there in the house, all right within reach: the bread, in the
cupboard with the cross carved into its lid; the olives, in a stoneware pot; the ham, hanging from the beams in the kitchen; the wine and
cheese, outside, under the stairs, like rows of books lined up on dimly lit shelves. … In no time at all it was set out, spread over the
massive table. For a moment the cork in the bottle held fast. When it finally let go, with a sharp little pop, the familiar sound filled the
room with a kind of sensual joy. And it occurred to the old professor that once again, tonight, he was celebrating an act of love.
He poured himself some wine, one hearty glass for his thirst, then one for his pleasure, smacking his lips with a touch of ostentation
at the obvious excess. He cut up the ham into fine, thin slices, arranged them neatly on a pewter plate, put out a few olives, laid the
cheese on a bed of grape leaves and the fruit on a large, flat basket. Then he sat down before his supper and smiled a contented smile. He
was in love. And like any successful suitor, he found himself face to face now with the one he loved, alone. Yet tonight that one was no
woman, no living creature at all, but a myriad kindred images formed into a kind of projection of his own inner being. Like that silver
fork, for example, with the well-worn prongs, and some maternal ancestor’s initials, now rubbed almost smooth. A curious object,
really, when you think that the Western World invented it for propriety’s sake, though a third of the human race still grubs up its food
with its fingers. And the crystal, always set out in a row of four, so utterly useless. Well, why not? Why do without glasses, like boors
Why stop setting them out, simply because the Brazilian backwood was dying of thirst, or because India was gulping down typhus with
every swallow of muck from its dried-up wells? Let the cuckold come pound at the door with their threats of revenge. There’s no
sharing in love. The rest of the world can go hang. They don’t even exist. So what if those thousands were all on the march, cuckolded
out of the pleasures of life? All the better! … And so, the professor set out the four glasses, lined them up in a row. Then he moved the
lamp a little to give more light, and they sparkled like stars. Further over, a rustic chest, huge and immovable. Three centuries, father to
son, as the young man said, and so sure of it all. And in that chest such an endless store of tablecloths and napkins, of pillow slips and
sheets, of dustcloths and fine linen, product of another age, linen that would last forever, in great thick piles, so tightly packed on the
outside alone that he never had to use the other household treasures hidden behind them, all lavender-scented, that his mother, or hers,
had stacked away so very long ago, never parting with a stitch for their poor until it was worn out and decently patched, but with lots of
good use in it yet, convinced—dear, prudent souls that they were—that unbridled charity is, after all, a sin against oneself. Then, after a
while, there were too many poor. Altogether too many. Folk you didn’t even know. Not even from here. Just nameless people.
Swarming all over. And so terribly clever! Spreading through cities, and houses, and homes. Worming their way by the thousands, in
thousands of foolproof ways. Through the slits in your mailboxes, begging for help, with their frightful pictures bursting from envelopes
day after day, claiming their due in the name of some organization or other. Slithering in. Through newspapers, radio, churches, through
this faction or that, until they were all around you, wherever you looked. Whole countries full, bristling with poignant appeals, pleas that
seemed more like threats, and not begging now for linen, but for checks to their account. And in time it got worse. Soon you saw them
on television, hordes of them, churning up, dying by the thousands, and nameless butchery became a feature, a continuous show, with its
masters of ceremonies and its full-time hucksters. The poor had overrun the earth. Self-reproach was the order of the day; happiness, a
sign of decadence. Any pleasure? Beneath discussion. Even in Monsieur Calgues’s own village, if you did try to give some good linen
away, they would just think you were being condescending. No, charity couldn’t allay your guilt. It could only make you feel meaner
and more ashamed. And so, on that day he remembered so well, the professor had shut up his cupboards and chests, his cellar and larder,
closed them once and for all to the outside world. The very same day that the last pope had sold out the Vatican. Treasures, library,
paintings, frescoes, tiara, furniture, statues—yes, the pontiff had sold it all, as Christendom cheered, and the most high-strung among
them, caught up in the contagion, had wondered if they shouldn’t go do likewise, and turn into paupers as well. Useless heroics in the
Camp of the Saints 7
eternal scheme of things. He had thrown it all into a bottomless pit: it didn’t take care of so much as the rural budget of Pakistan for a
single year! Morally, he had only proved how rich he really was, like some maharaja dispossessed by official decree. The Third World
was quick to throw it up to him, and in no time at all he had fallen from grace. From that moment on, His Holiness had rattled around in
a shabby, deserted palace, stripped to the walls by his own design. And he died, at length, in his empty chambers, in a plain iron bed,
between a kitchen table and three wicker chairs, like any simple priest from the outskirts of town. Too bad, no crucifixion on demand
before an assembled throng. The new pope had been elected at about the time Monsieur Calgues retired. One man, wistfully taking his
place on the Vatican’s throne of straw. The other one, back in his village to stay, with only one thought: to enjoy to the fullest his earthly
possessions, here in the setting that suited him best … So thank God for the tender ham, and the fragrant bread, and the lightly chilled
wine! And let’s drink to the bygone world, and to those who can still feel at home in it all!
While the old man sat there, eating and drinking, savoring swallow after swallow, he set his eyes wandering over the spacious room.
A time-consuming task, since his glance stopped to linger on everything it touched, and since every confrontation was a new act of love.
Now and then his eyes would fill with tears, but they were tears of joy. Each object in this house proclaimed the dignity of those who
had lived here—their discretion, their propriety, their reserve, their taste for those solid traditions that one generation can pass on to the
next, so long as it still takes pride in itself. And the old man’s soul was in everything, too. In the fine old bindings, the rustic benches, the
Virgin carved in wood, the big cane chairs, the hexagonal tiles, the beams in the ceiling, the ivory crucifix with its sprig of dried
boxwood, and a hundred other things as well … It’s man’s things that really define him, far more than the play of ideas; which is why
the Western World had come to lose its self-respect, and why it was clogging the highways at that very moment, fleeing north in droves,
no doubt vaguely aware that it was already doomed, done in by its over-secretion, as it were, of ugly monstrosities no longer worth
defending. Could that, perhaps, have been one explanation? …
At eleven o’clock that night an announcer on the national chain read a new communiquĂ©:
“Government sources note with some dismay the mass exodus of population currently under way throughout the south. While they
view this movement with concern, they do not feel justified in advising against it, given the unprecedented nature of the situation. Army
and police have been put on maximum alert to help maintain order, and to see to it that the migration does not interfere with the flow of
essential military materiel en route from the north. A state of emergency has been declared in the four departments bordering the coast,
under the command of the undersecretary, Monsieur Jean Perret, personal representative of the President of the Republic. The army will
make every effort to protect all property left behind, insofar as its other duties permit. Government sources confirm that the President of
the Republic will address the nation at midnight, tonight, with a message of grave concern …”
And again, that was all. In a world long exposed to verbal frenzy, such terseness was most impressive. “Do windbags always die
without a word?” the professor mused. Then he picked out a book, poured himself a drink, lit up his pipe, and waited for midnight …
Comments
Post a Comment