Erich Maria Remarque Fullscreen On the Western Front without change (1928)

Pause

Unobserved, we arrive again at our sacks of straw.

I am called to the Orderly Room.

The Company Commander gives me a leave-pass and a travel-pass and wishes me a good journey.

I look to see how much leave I have got.

Seventeen days—fourteen days leave and three days for travelling.

It is not enough and I ask whether I cannot have five days for travelling.

Bertinck points to my pass.

There I see that I am not to return to the front immediately.

After my leave I have to report for a course of training to a camp on the moors.

The others envy me.

Kat gives me good advice, and tells me I ought to try to get a base-job.

"If you're smart, you'll hang on to it."

I would rather not have gone for another eight days; we are to stay here that much longer and it is good here.

Naturally I have to stand the others drinks at the canteen.

We are all a little bit drunk.

I become gloomy: I will be away for six weeks—that is lucky, of course, but what may happen before I get back?

Shall I meet all these fellows again?

Already Haie and Kemmerich have gone—who will the next be?

As we drink, I look at each of them in turn.

Albert sits beside me and smokes, he is cheerful, we have always been together;—opposite squats Kat, with his drooping shoulders, his broad thumb, and calm voice— Muller with the projecting teeth and the booming laugh; Tjaden with his mousey eyes;—Leer who has grown a full beard and looks at least forty.

Over us hangs a dense cloud of smoke.

Where would a soldier be without tobacco?

The canteen is his refuge, and beer is far more than a drink, it is a token that a man can move his limbs and stretch in safety.

We do it ceremonially, we stretch our legs out in front of us and spit deliberately, that is the only way.

How it all rises up before a man when he is going away the next morning!

At night we go again to the other side of the canal.

I am almost afraid to tell the little brunette that I am going away, and when I return we will be far from here; we will never see one another again.

But she merely nods and takes no special notice.

At first I am at a loss to understand, then it suddenly dawns on me.

Yes, Leer is right: if I were going up to the front, then she would have called me again "pauvre garcon"; but merely going on leave—she does not want to hear about that, that is not nearly so interesting.

May she go to the devil with her chattering talk.

A man dreams of a miracle and wakes up to loaves of bread.

Next morning, after I have been de-loused, I go to the rail head.

Albert and Kat come with me.

At the halt we learn that it will be a couple of hours yet before the train leaves.

The other two have to go back to duty.

We take leave of one another.

"Good luck, Kat: good luck, Albert."

They go off and wave once or twice.

Their figures dwindle.

I know their every step and movement; I would recognize them at any distance.

Then they disappear.

I sit down on my pack and wait.

Suddenly I become filled with a consuming impatience to be gone.

I lie down on many a station platform; I stand before many a soup-kitchen; I squat on many a bench; —then at last the landscape becomes disturbing, mysterious, and familiar.

It glides past the western windows with its villages, their thatched roofs like caps, pulled over the whitewashed, half-timbered houses, its corn-fields, gleaming like mother-ofpearl in the slanting light, its orchards, its barns and old lime trees.

The names of the stations begin to take on meaning and my heart trembles.

The train stamps and stamps onward. I stand at the window and hold on to the frame.

These names mark the boundaries of my youth.

Smooth meadows, fields, farm-yards; a solitary team moves against the sky-line along the road that runs parallel to the horizon—a barrier, before which peasants stand waiting, girls waving, children playing on the embankment, roads, leading into the country, smooth roads without artillery.