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Literature Post > Loti, Pierre > The Story of a Child > Chapter 60

The Story of a Child by Loti, Pierre - Chapter 60

CHAPTER LIX.



The return that spring of little Jeanne's father from a sea voyage
interested me greatly. For several days her house was topsy-turvy with
preparation, and one could guess the joy they felt over his
approaching arrival. The frigate that he commanded reached port a
little earlier than his family expected it, and from my window I saw
him, one fine evening, hurrying along the street alone, on his way
home to surprise his people. He had arrived from I know not which
distant colony after an absence of two or three years, but it did not
seem to me that he was the least altered in appearance. . . . One
could then return to his home unchanged? They did come to an end after
all, those years of exile, which now I find, in truth, much shorter
than they seemed in those days! My brother himself was to return the
following autumn, and it would doubtless then seem as if he had never
been away from us.

And what joyous events those home-comings were! And what a distinction
surrounded those who had but newly returned from so great a distance!

The next day in Jeanne's yard I watched them unpack the enormous
wooden boxes that her father had brought from strange countries; some
of them were covered with tarpaulin cloth,--pieces of sails no doubt,
that were impregnated with the agreeable odor of the ship and the sea;
two sailors wearing large blue collars were busy uncording and
unscrewing them; and they took from them strange looking objects that
had an odor of the "colonies;" straw mats, water jars and Chinese
vases; even cocoanuts and other tropical fruits.

Jeanne's grandfather, himself an old seaman, was standing near me
watching from the corner of his eye the process of unpacking;
suddenly, from between the boards of a case that was being broken open
with a hatchet, there crawled out hastily some ugly little brown
insects that the sailors jumped on with their feet and destroyed.

"Cockroaches are they not, Captain?" I inquired of the grandfather.

"Ha! How do you know that, you little landlubber?" he laughingly
responded.

To tell the truth, I had never seen any such insects before; but
uncles who had lived in the tropics often spoke of them. And I was
delighted to make the acquaintance of these tiny creatures that are
peculiar to ships and to warm countries.