Gemini Read Online
I |
The Pierres Sonnantes |
9 |
II |
The Anointing of Alexandre |
24 |
III |
The Hill of the Innocents |
41 |
IV |
The Quarry’s Quarry |
63 |
V |
Heaven and Hell |
87 |
VI |
The Identical Twins |
119 |
VII |
The Philippine Pearls |
I45 |
VIII |
Wild Strawberries |
189 |
IX |
Fur and Feather |
207 |
X |
Almond Turnovers |
221 |
XI |
The Saint-Escobille Train |
235 |
XII |
The Breaking of Stones |
251 |
XIII |
Death of a Hunter |
265 |
XIV |
Misadventure |
279 |
XV |
Venetian Mirrors |
305 |
XVI |
The Island of the Lotus Eaters |
333 |
XVII |
Icelandic Pentecost |
357 |
XVIII |
Japanese Gardens |
371 |
XIX |
The Vancouver Seal |
393 |
XX |
The Prairie Surveyors |
403 |
XXI |
Behind the Berlin Wall |
417 |
XXII |
The Extended Soul |
437 |
GEMINI
Table of Contents
CHAPTER I The Pierres Sonnantes
CHAPTER II The Anointing of Alexandre
CHAPTER III The Hill of the Innocents
CHAPTER IV The Quarry’s Quarry
CHAPTER VI The Identical Twins
CHAPTER VII The Philippine Pearls
CHAPTER VIII Wild Strawberries
CHAPTER XI The Saint-Escobille Train
CHAPTER XII The Breaking of the Stones
CHAPTER XIII Death of a Hunter
CHAPTER XVI The Island of the Lotus Eaters
CHAPTER XVII Icelandic Pentecost
CHAPTER XVIII Japanese Gardens
CHAPTER XIX The Vancouver Seal
CHAPTER XX The Prairie Surveyors
CHAPTER XXI Behind the Berlin Wall
CHAPTER XXII The Extended Soul
CHAPTER I
The Pierres Sonnantes
On the twenty-fifth of September 1937, a depression moving from Newfoundland to the Baltic sent masses of warm, moist oceanic air into the corridor of the English Channel. At 5:19 p.m. a gust of wind from the west-southwest uncovered the petticoat of old Henriette Puysoux, who was picking up potatoes in her field; slapped the sun blind of the Café des Amis in Plancoët; banged a shutter on the house belonging to Dr. Bottereau alongside the wood of La Hunaudaie; turned over eight pages of Aristotle’s Meteorologica, which Michel Tournier was reading on the beach at Saint-Jacut; raised a cloud of dust and bits of straw on the road to Plélan; blew wet spray in the face of Jean Chauvé as he was putting his boat out in the Bay of Arguenon; set the Pallet family’s underclothes bellying and dancing on the line where they were drying; started the wind pump racing at the Ferine des Mottes; and snatched a handful of gilded leaves off the silver birches in the garden of La Cassine.
The sun was already dipping down behind the hill where the children of St Brigitte’s were picking Michaelmas daisies and chicory flowers to heap in untidy bunches at the feet of their patron saint’s statue on the eighth of October. This side of the Bay of Arguenon, facing east, got the sea wind only overland; and in among the salty brume of the September tides Maria-Barbara caught the acrid smell of the stubble burning everywhere inland. She threw a shawl over the twins lying curled up together in one hammock.
How old are they? Five? No, six at least. No, they are seven. How hard it is to remember children’s ages! How can one recollect a thing that is forever changing? Especially with these two, so puny and immature. In any case, this immaturity, this backwardness in her two youngest soothes and comforts Maria-Barbara. She breast-fed them longer than any of her other children. She was thrilled to read one day that Eskimo mothers suckled their children until they were capable of chewing smoked meat and frozen fish—which meant to three or four years old. For them at least, learning to walk did not inevitably take them away from their mothers. She has always dreamed of a child that would come to her, upright on its small legs, and deliberately, with its own hands, undo her bodice and take out the gourd of flesh and drink, like a man at the bottle. The truth is that she has never been able to distinguish very clearly between the nursling and the man, the husband, the lover.
Her children … A mother so many times over that she does not really know how many there are.
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