A great insect has flown in through the window. It buzzes, strikes

against the rough cast, rebounds against the globe of the lamp, and

then, helpless, its wings singed by the still burning candle, drops on

the white paper.

It is an African May bug, big, black, with spots of livid gray.

I think of others, its brothers in France, the golden-brown May bugs,

which I have seen on stormy summer evenings projecting themselves like

little particles of the soil of my native countryside. It was there

that as a child I spent my vacations, and later on, my leaves. On my

last leave, through those same meadows, there wandered beside me a

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slight form, wearing a thin scarf, because of the evening air, so cool

back there. But now this memory stirs me so slightly that I scarcely

raise my eyes to that dark corner of my room where the light is dimly

reflected by the glass of an indistinct portrait. I realize of how

little consequence has become what had seemed at one time capable of

filling all my life. This plaintive mystery is of no more interest to

me. If the strolling singers of Rolla came to murmur their famous

nostalgic airs under the window of this bordj I know that I should not

listen to them, and if they became insistent I should send them on

their way.

What has been capable of causing this metamorphosis in me? A story, a

legend, perhaps, told, at any rate by one on whom rests the direst of

suspicions.

Ceghéir-ben-Cheikh has finished his cigarette. I hear him returning

with slow steps to his mat, in barrack B, to the left of the guard

post.

Our departure being scheduled for the tenth of November, the

manuscript attached to this letter was begun on Sunday, the first, and

finished on Thursday, the fifth of November, 1903.

OLIVIER FERRIÈRES, Lt. 3rd Spahis.




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