Chapter 12
DAZZLED BY SO MANY and such marvelous inventions, the people of Macondo did not know where their amazement began. They stayed up all night looking at the pale electric bulbs fed by the plant that Aureliano Triste had brought back when the train made its second trip, and it took time and effort for them to grow accustomed to its obsessive toom-toom. They be. came indignant over the living images that the prosperous merchant Bruno Crespi projected in the theater with the lion-head ticket windows, for the character who had died and was buried in one film and for whose misfortune tears of affliction had been shed would reappear alive and transformed into an Arab in the next one. The audience, who paid two cents apiece to share the difficulties of the actors, would not tolerate that outlandish fraud and they broke up the seats. The mayor, at the urging of Bruno Crespi, explained in a proclamation that the cinema was a machine of illusions that did not merit the emotional outbursts of the audience. With that discouraging explanation many felt that they had been the victims of some new and showy gypsy business and they decided not to return to the movies, considering that they already had too many troubles of their own to weep over the acted-out misfortunes of imaginary beings. Something similar happened with the cylinder phonographs that the merry matrons from France brought with them as a substitute for the antiquated hand organs and that for a time had serious effects on the livelihood of the band of musicians. At first curiosity increased the clientele on the forbidden street and there was even word of respectable ladies who disguised themselves as workers in order to observe the novelty of the phonograph from first hand, but from so much and such close observation they soon reached the conclusion that it was not an enchanted mill as everyone had thought and as the matrons had said, but a mechanical trick that could not be compared with something so moving, so human, and so full of everyday truth as a band of musicians. It was such a serious disappointment that when phonographs became so popular that there was one in every house they were not considered objects for amusement for adults but as something good for children to take apart. On the other hand, when someone from the town had the opportunity to test the crude reality of the telephone installed in the railroad station, which was thought to be a rudimentary version of the phonograph because of its crank, even the most incredulous were upset. It was as if God had decided to put to the test every capacity for surprise and was keeping the inhabitants of Macondo in a permanent alternation between excitement and disappointment, doubt and revelation, to such an extreme that no one knew for certain where the limits of reality lay. It was an intricate stew of truths and mirages that convulsed the ghost of Jos?Arcadio Buendía under the chestnut tree with impatience and made him wander all through the house even in broad daylight. Ever since the railroad had been officially inaugurated and had begun to arrive with regularity on Wednesdays at eleven o’clock and the primitive wooden station with a desk, a telephone, and a ticket window had been built, on the streets of Macondo men and women were seen who had adopted everyday and normal customs and manners but who really looked like people out of a circus. In a town that had chafed under the tricks of the gypsies there was no future for those ambulatory acrobats of commerce who with equal effrontery offered a whistling kettle and a daily regime that would assure the salvation of the soul on the seventh day; but from those who let themselves be convinced out of fatigue and the ones who were always unwary, they reaped stupendous benefits. Among those theatrical creatures, wearing riding breeches and leggings, a pith helmet and steel-rimmed glasses, with topaz eyes and the skin of a thin rooster, there arrived in Macondo on one of so many Wednesdays the chubby and smiling Mr. Herbert, who ate at the house.
- 360安全浏览器
- QQ浏览器下载
- 一个陌生女人的来信
- 七剑十三侠
- 三剑客
- 三国演义
- 三遂平妖传
- 上海鲜花店
- 东周列国志
- 东游记
- 九命奇冤
- 乾隆下江南
- 争春园
- 二刻拍案惊奇
- 二十年目睹之怪现状
- 五美缘全传
- 交际花盛衰记
- 倩女离魂
- 傲慢与偏见
- 儒林外史
- 儿女英雄传
- 元代野史
- 八段锦
- 初刻拍案惊奇
- 包法利夫人
- 北回归线
- 北游记
- 十日谈
- 千年修仙记
- 南回归线
- 双城记
- 变形记
- 合浦珠
- 名利场
- 后宋慈云走国全传
- 听月楼
- 吴江雪
- 周朝秘史
- 呼啸山庄
- 咒枣记
- 哈克贝利·费恩历险记
- 唐诗三百首
- 喧哗与骚动
- 喻世明言
- 围炉夜话
- 在人间
- 型世言
- 基督山伯爵
- 堂吉诃德
- 增广贤文
- 声律启蒙
- 大卫·科波菲尔
- 大明正德皇游江南传
- 大清三杰
- 天工开物
- 失乐园
- 女娲石
- 好逑传
- 孽海花
- 守弱学
- 安娜·卡列尼娜
- 官场现形记
- 定鼎奇闻
- 宫女卷
- 封神演义
- 小窗幽记
- 局外人
- 山海经
- 巧联珠
- 巴黎圣母院
- 平山冷燕
- 幻中游
- 幻灭
- 幼学琼林
- 幽谷百合
- 度心术
- 引凤萧
- 归莲梦
- 德伯家的苔丝
- 快士传
- 快眼看书首页
- 恨海
- 悲惨世界
- 情梦柝
- 我是猫
- 我的大学
- 战争与和平
- 断鸿零雁记
- 新编绘图今古奇观
- 日瓦戈医生
- 明心宝鉴
- 明月台
- 春阿氏谋夫案
- 智囊全集
- 智除巨阉
- 曾国藩家书
- 最后的莫希干人
- 木兰奇女传
- 李鸿章与慈禧
- 杨乃武与小白菜
- 杨家将
- 格列佛游记
- 格言联璧
- 桃花扇
- 梅兰佳话
- 梦中缘
- 欧也妮·葛朗台
- 毁灭
- 母亲
- 水浒传
- 水浒后传
- 洗冤集录
- 洛丽塔
- 济公全传
- 浮生六记
- 海上花列传
- 海游记
- 清平山堂话本
- 源氏物语
- 漂亮朋友
- 牛虻
- 物种起源
- 狐狸缘全传
- 玉娇梨
- 玉梨魂
- 理智与情感
- 生命不能承受之轻
- 生花梦
- 白痴
- 百年孤独
- 百度
- 百战奇略
- 百花野史
- 石家庄网站建设
- 禅真逸史
- 窦娥冤
- 童年
- 第一美女传
- 第二十二条军规
- 简·爱
- 素书
- 红与黑
- 红楼梦
- 约翰·克里斯朵夫
- 终须梦
- 续金瓶梅
- 绿野仙踪
- 罗织经
- 罪与罚
- 老人与海
- 老残游记
- 老残游记续集
- 花月痕
- 英云梦传
- 茶花女
- 草木春秋演义
- 荡寇志
- 荣枯鉴
- 荷马史诗
- 蕉叶帕
- 薛刚反唐
- 蝴蝶媒
- 西游记
- 西游记补
- 警世通言
- 论衡
- 说岳全传
- 贝姨
- 辛弃疾
- 这书能让你戒烟
- 这里的黎明静悄悄
- 追忆似水年华
- 道德经
- 邦斯舅舅
- 醒世姻缘传
- 醒世恒言
- 醒名花
- 醒梦骈言
- 金云翘传
- 金瓶梅传奇
- 钢铁是怎样炼成的
- 镜花缘
- 长春真人西游记
- 隋唐演义
- 雪月梅
- 雾都孤儿
- 青年近卫军
- 静静的顿河
- 韬晦术
- 风月梦
- 风月鉴
- 风流悟
- 飘
- 飞花艳想
- 飞龙全传
- 马丁·伊登
- 驻春园小史
- 高老头
- 鬼谷子
- 鲁滨逊漂流记
- 鸳鸯针
- 麦克白
- 麦田里的守望者
- 龙文鞭影
- >>更多作品