Century of Light
CONTENTS Baha'i Terms of Use FOREWORD CENTURY OF LIGHT I II III IV V VI VII VIII IX X XI XII
them, and the tops of them were polished, as if with wax, from the
children sitting on them.
The second room was quite empty. There were no tiles on the floor, and
the feet of the beds had made little holes in the beaten earth. There
was no lock to the other door either, and I went out into the garden.
There were a few winter vegetables in the beds still, and the fruit
trees were all in flower. Most of them were very old. Some of them
looked like hunchbacks, and their branches bent towards the ground, as
though they found that even the flowers were too heavy for them to
carry. At the bottom of the garden the hill ran down to an immense
plain where the cattle used to graze, and right at the end a row of
poplars made a sort of barrier which kept the sky out of the meadow
land. Little by little I recognized one place after another. There
was a little river at the bottom of the hill. I could not see the
water, but the willows looked as though they were standing on one side
to let it pass. The river disappeared behind the buildings of
Villevieille farm. There the roofs were of the same colour as the
chestnut trees, and the river went on on the other side of them. Here
and there I could see it shining between the poplar trees. Then it
plunged into the great pine wood, which looked quite black, in which
the Lost Ford was hidden. That was the road I had taken with Madame
Alphonse, when we went to her mother's house. Her brother must have
come that way that day when he found me in the shrubbery. There was
nobody on the road today. Everything was tender green, and I could see
no white smock among the clumps of trees. I tried to see the shrubbery
CONTENTS Baha'i Terms of Use FOREWORD CENTURY OF LIGHT I II III IV V VI VII VIII IX X XI XII