您的位置 : 首页 > 英文著作
Penguin Island
BOOK VIII - FUTURE TIMES   BOOK VIII - FUTURE TIMES - CHAPTER S4
Anatole France
下载:Penguin Island.txt
本书全文检索:
       _ The other towns of the federation also suffered from disturbances and outbreaks, and then order was restored. Reforms were introduced into institutions and great changes took place in habits and customs, but the country never recovered the loss of its capital, and never regained its former prosperity. Commerce and industry dwindled away, and civilization abandoned those countries which for so long it bad preferred to all others. They became insalubrious and sterile; the territory that had supported so many millions of men became nothing more than a desert. On the hill of Fort St. Michel wild horses cropped the coarse grass.
       Days flowed by like water from the fountains, and the centuries passed like drops falling from the ends of stalactites. Hunters came to chase the bears upon the hills that covered the forgotten city; shepherds led their flocks upon them; labourers turned up the soil with their ploughs; gardeners cultivated their lettuces and grafted their pear trees. They were not rich, and they had no arts. The walls of their cabins were covered with old vines and roses, A goat-skin clothed their tanned limbs, while their wives dressed themselves with the wool that they themselves had spun. The goat-herds moulded little figures of men and animals out of clay, or sang songs about the young girl who follows her lover through woods or among the browsing goats while the pine trees whisper together and the water utters its murmuring sound. The master of the house grew angry with the beetles who devoured his figs; he planned snares to protect his fowls from the velvet-tailed fox, and he poured out wine for his neighbours saying:
       "Drink! The flies have not spoilt my vintage; the vines were dry before they came."
       Then in the course of ages the wealth of the villages and the corn that filled the fields were pillaged by barbarian invaders. The country changed its masters several times. The conquerors built castles upon the hills; cultivation increased; mills, forges) tanneries, and looms were established; roads were opened through the woods and over the marshes; the river was covered with boats. The hamlets became large villages and joining together formed a town which protected itself by deep trenches and lofty walls. Later, becoming the capital of a great State, it found itself straitened within its now useless ramparts and it converted them into grass-covered walks.
       It grew very rich and large beyond measure. The houses were never high enough to satisfy the people; they kept on making them still higher and built them of thirty or forty storeys, with offices, shops, banks, societies one above another; they dug cellars and tunnels ever deeper downwards. Fifteen millions of men laboured in the giant town.
        
       [THE END.]
       Penguin Island, a novel by Anatole France. _
用户中心

本站图书检索

本书目录

BOOK I - THE BEGINNINGS
   BOOK I - THE BEGINNINGS - CHAPTER I - LIFE OF SAINT MAEL
   BOOK I - THE BEGINNINGS - CHAPTER II - THE APOSTOLICAL VOCATION OF SAINT MAEL
   BOOK I - THE BEGINNINGS - CHAPTER III - THE TEMPTATION OF SAINT MAEL
   BOOK I - THE BEGINNINGS - CHAPTER IV - ST. MAEL'S NAVIGATION ON THE OCEAN OF ICE
   BOOK I - THE BEGINNINGS - CHAPTER V - THE BAPTISM OF THE PENGUINS
   BOOK I - THE BEGINNINGS - CHAPTER VI - AN ASSEMBLY IN PARADISE
   BOOK I - THE BEGINNINGS - CHAPTER VII - AN ASSEMBLY IN PARADISE
   BOOK I - THE BEGINNINGS - CHAPTER VIII - METAMORPHOSIS OF THE PENGUINS
BOOK II - THE ANCIENT TIMES
   BOOK II - THE ANCIENT TIMES - CHAPTER I - THE FIRST CLOTHES
   BOOK II - THE ANCIENT TIMES - CHAPTER II - THE FIRST CLOTHES (Continuation and End)
   BOOK II - THE ANCIENT TIMES - CHAPTER III - SETTING BOUNDS TO THE FIELDS AND THE ORIGIN OF PROPERTY
   BOOK II - THE ANCIENT TIMES - CHAPTER IV - THE FIRST ASSEMBLY OF THE ESTATES OF PENGUINIA
   BOOK II - THE ANCIENT TIMES - CHAPTER V - THE MARRIAGE OF KRAKEN AND ORBEROSIA
   BOOK II - THE ANCIENT TIMES - CHAPTER VI - THE DRAGON OF ALCA
   BOOK II - THE ANCIENT TIMES - CHAPTER VII - THE DRAGON OF ALCA (Continuation)
   BOOK II - THE ANCIENT TIMES - CHAPTER VIII - THE DRAGON OF ALCA (Continuation)
   BOOK II - THE ANCIENT TIMES - CHAPTER IX - THE DRAGON OF ALCA (Continuation)
   BOOK II - THE ANCIENT TIMES - CHAPTER X - THE DRAGON OF ALCA (Continuation)
   BOOK II - THE ANCIENT TIMES - CHAPTER XI - THE DRAGON OF ALCA (Continuation)
   BOOK II - THE ANCIENT TIMES - CHAPTER XII - THE DRAGON OF ALCA (Continuation)
   BOOK II - THE ANCIENT TIMES - CHAPTER XIII - THE DRAGON OF ALCA (Continuation and End)
BOOK III - THE MIDDLE AGES AND THE RENAISSANCE
   BOOK III - THE MIDDLE AGES AND THE RENAISSANCE - CHAPTER I - BRIAN THE GOOD AND QUEEN GLAMORGAN
   BOOK III - THE MIDDLE AGES AND THE RENAISSANCE - CHAPTER II - DRACO THE GREAT (Translation of the Relics of St - Orberosia)
   BOOK III - THE MIDDLE AGES AND THE RENAISSANCE - CHAPTER III - QUEEN CRUCHA
   BOOK III - THE MIDDLE AGES AND THE RENAISSANCE - CHAPTER IV - LETTERS: JOHANNES TALPA
   BOOK III - THE MIDDLE AGES AND THE RENAISSANCE - CHAPTER V - THE ARTS: THE PRIMITIVES OF PENGUIN PAINTING
   BOOK III - THE MIDDLE AGES AND THE RENAISSANCE - CHAPTER VI - MARGARITONE'S VISION
   BOOK III - THE MIDDLE AGES AND THE RENAISSANCE - CHAPTER VII - MARBODIUS
   BOOK III - THE MIDDLE AGES AND THE RENAISSANCE - CHAPTER VIII - THE DESCENT OF MARBODIUS INTO HELL
   BOOK III - THE MIDDLE AGES AND THE RENAISSANCE - CHAPTER IX - SIGNS IN THE MOON
BOOK IV - MODERN TIMES: TRINCO
   BOOK IV - MODERN TIMES: TRINCO - CHAPTER I - MOTHER ROUQUIN
   BOOK IV - MODERN TIMES: TRINCO - CHAPTER II - TRINCO
   BOOK IV - MODERN TIMES: TRINCO - CHAPTER III - ACCOUNT OF THE TRAVELS OF YOUNG DJAMBI IN PENGUINIA
   BOOK IV - MODERN TIMES: TRINCO - CHAPTER IV - THE JOURNEY OF DOCTOR OBNUBILE
BOOK V - MODERN TIMES: CHATILLON
   BOOK V - MODERN TIMES: CHATILLON - CHAPTER I - THE REVEREND FATHERS AGARIC AND CORNEMUSE
   BOOK V - MODERN TIMES: CHATILLON - CHAPTER II - PRINCE CRUCHO
   BOOK V - MODERN TIMES: CHATILLON - CHAPTER III - THE CABAL
   BOOK V - MODERN TIMES: CHATILLON - CHAPTER IV - VISCOUNTESS OLIVE
   BOOK V - MODERN TIMES: CHATILLON - CHAPTER V - THE PRINCE DES BOSCENOS
   BOOK V - MODERN TIMES: CHATILLON - CHAPTER VI - THE EMIRAL'S FALL
   BOOK V - MODERN TIMES: CHATILLON - CHAPTER VII - CONCLUSION
BOOK VI - MODERN TIMES
   BOOK VI - MODERN TIMES - CHAPTER I - GENERAL GREATAUK, DUKE OF SKULL
   BOOK VI - MODERN TIMES - CHAPTER II - PYROT
   BOOK VI - MODERN TIMES - CHAPTER III - COUNT DE MAUBEC DE LA DENTDULYNX
   BOOK VI - MODERN TIMES - CHAPTER IV - COLOMBAN
   BOOK VI - MODERN TIMES - CHAPTER V - THE REVEREND FATHERS AGARIC AND CORNEMUSE
   BOOK VI - MODERN TIMES - CHAPTER VI - THE SEVEN HUNDRED PYROTISTS
   BOOK VI - MODERN TIMES - CHAPTER VII - BIDAULT-COQUILLE AND MANIFLORE, THE SOCIALISTS
   BOOK VI - MODERN TIMES - CHAPTER VIII - THE COLOMBAN TRIAL
   BOOK VI - MODERN TIMES - CHAPTER IX - FATHER DOUILLARD
   BOOK VI - MODERN TIMES - CHAPTER X - MR. JUSTICE CHAUSSEPIED
   BOOK VI - MODERN TIMES - CHAPTER XI - CONCLUSION
BOOK VII - MODERN TIMES
   BOOK VII - MODERN TIMES - CHAPTER I - MADAME CLARENCE'S DRAWING-ROOM
   BOOK VII - MODERN TIMES - CHAPTER II - THE CHARITY OF ST. ORBEROSIA
   BOOK VII - MODERN TIMES - CHAPTER III - HIPPOLYTE CERES
   BOOK VII - MODERN TIMES - CHAPTER IV - A POLITICIAN'S MARRIAGE
   BOOK VII - MODERN TIMES - CHAPTER V - THE VISIRE CABINET
   BOOK VII - MODERN TIMES - CHAPTER VI - THE SOFA OF THE FAVOURITE
   BOOK VII - MODERN TIMES - CHAPTER VII - THE FIRST CONSEQUENCES
   BOOK VII - MODERN TIMES - CHAPTER VIII - FURTHER CONSEQUENCES
   BOOK VII - MODERN TIMES - CHAPTER IX - THE FINAL CONSEQUENCES
   BOOK VII - MODERN TIMES - CHAPTER X - THE ZENITH OF PENGUIN CIVILIZATION
BOOK VIII - FUTURE TIMES
   BOOK VIII - FUTURE TIMES - CHAPTER S1
   BOOK VIII - FUTURE TIMES - CHAPTER S2
   BOOK VIII - FUTURE TIMES - CHAPTER S3
   BOOK VIII - FUTURE TIMES - CHAPTER S4