Читаем 1984. Книга для чтения на английском языке полностью

Suddenly the whole street was in commotion. There were yells of warning from all sides. People were shooting into the doorways like rabbits. A young woman leapt out of a doorway a little ahead of Winston, grabbed up a tiny child playing in a puddle, whipped her apron round it, and leapt back again, all in one movement. At the same instant a man in a concertina-like black suit, who had emerged from a side alley, ran towards Winston, pointing excitedly to the sky.

“Steamer!” he yelled. “Look out, guv’nor! Bang over’ead! Lay down quick!”

“Steamer” was a nickname which, for some reason, the proles applied to rocket bombs. Winston promptly flung himself on his face. The proles were nearly always right when they gave you a warning of this kind. They seemed to possess some kind of instinct which told them several seconds in advance when a rocket was coming, although the rockets supposedly travelled faster than sound. Winston clasped his forearms above his head. There was a roar that seemed to make the pavement heave; a shower of light objects pattered on to his back. When he stood up he found that he was covered with fragments of glass from the nearest window.

He walked on. The bomb had demolished a group of houses 200 metres up the street. A black plume of smoke hung in the sky, and below it a cloud of plaster dust in which a crowd was already forming around the ruins. There was a little pile of plaster lying on the pavement ahead of him, and in the middle of it he could see a bright red streak. When he got up to it he saw that it was a human hand severed at the wrist. Apart from the bloody stump, the hand was so completely whitened as to resemble a plaster cast.

He kicked the thing into the gutter, and then, to avoid the crowd, turned down a side-street to the right. Within three or four minutes he was out of the area which the bomb had affected, and the sordid swarming life of the streets was going on as though nothing had happened. It was nearly twenty hours, and the drinking-shops which the proles frequented (“pubs”, they called them) were choked with customers. From their grimy swing doors, endlessly opening and shutting, there came forth a smell of urine, sawdust, and sour beer. In an angle formed by a projecting house-front three men were standing very close together, the middle one of them holding a folded-up newspaper which the other two were studying over his shoulder. Even before he was near enough to make out the expression on their faces, Winston could see absorption in every line of their bodies. It was obviously some serious piece of news that they were reading. He was a few paces away from them when suddenly the group broke up and two of the men were in violent altercation. For a moment they seemed almost on the point of blows.

“Can’t you bleeding well listen to what I say? I tell you no number ending in seven ain’t won for over fourteen months!”

“Yes, it ’as, then!”

“No, it ’as not! Back ’ome I got the ’ole lot of ’em for over two years wrote down on a piece of paper. I takes ’em down reg’lar as the clock. An’ I tell you, no number ending in seven —”

“Yes, a seven ’as won! I could pretty near tell you the bleeding number. Four oh seven, it ended in. It were in February – second week in February.”

“February your grandmother![60] I got it all down in black and white. An’ I tell you, no number —”

“Oh, pack it in![61]” said the third man.

They were talking about the Lottery. Winston looked back when he had gone thirty metres. They were still arguing, with vivid, passionate faces. The Lottery, with its weekly pay-out of enormous prizes, was the one public event to which the proles paid serious attention. It was probable that there were some millions of proles for whom the Lottery was the principal if not the only reason for remaining alive. It was their delight, their folly, their anodyne, their intellectual stimulant. Where the Lottery was concerned, even people who could barely read and write seemed capable of intricate calculations and staggering feats of memory. There was a whole tribe of men who made a living simply by selling systems, forecasts, and lucky amulets. Winston had nothing to do with the running of the Lottery, which was managed by the Ministry of Plenty, but he was aware (indeed everyone in the Party was aware) that the prizes were largely imaginary. Only small sums were actually paid out, the winners of the big prizes being non-existent persons. In the absence of any real intercommunication between one part of Oceania and another, this was not difficult to arrange.

Перейти на страницу:

Все книги серии Modern Prose

Похожие книги

И пели птицы…
И пели птицы…

«И пели птицы…» – наиболее известный роман Себастьяна Фолкса, ставший классикой современной английской литературы. С момента выхода в 1993 году он не покидает списков самых любимых британцами литературных произведений всех времен. Он включен в курсы литературы и английского языка большинства университетов. Тираж книги в одной только Великобритании составил около двух с половиной миллионов экземпляров.Это история молодого англичанина Стивена Рейсфорда, который в 1910 году приезжает в небольшой французский город Амьен, где влюбляется в Изабель Азер. Молодая женщина несчастлива в неравном браке и отвечает Стивену взаимностью. Невозможность справиться с безумной страстью заставляет их бежать из Амьена…Начинается война, Стивен уходит добровольцем на фронт, где в кровавом месиве вселенского масштаба отчаянно пытается сохранить рассудок и волю к жизни. Свои чувства и мысли он записывает в дневнике, который ведет вопреки запретам военного времени.Спустя десятилетия этот дневник попадает в руки его внучки Элизабет. Круг замыкается – прошлое встречается с настоящим.Этот роман – дань большого писателя памяти Первой мировой войны. Он о любви и смерти, о мужестве и страдании – о судьбах людей, попавших в жернова Истории.

Себастьян Фолкс

Классическая проза ХX века
Алые Паруса. Бегущая по волнам. Золотая цепь. Хроники Гринландии
Алые Паруса. Бегущая по волнам. Золотая цепь. Хроники Гринландии

Гринландия – страна, созданная фантазий замечательного русского писателя Александра Грина. Впервые в одной книге собраны наиболее известные произведения о жителях этой загадочной сказочной страны. Гринландия – полуостров, почти все города которого являются морскими портами. Там можно увидеть автомобиль и кинематограф, встретить девушку Ассоль и, конечно, пуститься в плавание на парусном корабле. Гринландией называют синтетический мир прошлого… Мир, или миф будущего… Писатель Юрий Олеша с некоторой долей зависти говорил о Грине: «Он придумывает концепции, которые могли бы быть придуманы народом. Это человек, придумывающий самое удивительное, нежное и простое, что есть в литературе, – сказки».

Александр Степанович Грин

Классическая проза ХX века / Прочее / Классическая литература