The Nobel Prize in Literature 1982
Gabriel García Márquez
An excerpt from the first 2 pages of this wonderful story:
Many years later, as he faced the
firing squad, Colonel Aureliano Buendía was to remember that distant afternoon
when his father took him to discover ice. At that time Macondo was a village of
twenty adobe houses, built on the bank of a river of clear water that ran along
a bed of polished stones, which were white and enormous, like prehistoric eggs.
The world was so recent that many things lacked names, and in order to indicate
them it was necessary to point.
Every year during the month of
March a family of ragged gypsies would set up their tents near the village, and
with a great uproar of pipes and kettledrums they would display new inventions.
First they brought the magnet.
A heavy gypsy with an untamed
beard and sparrow hands, who introduced himself as Melquíades, put on a bold
public demonstration of what he himself called the eighth wonder of the learned
alchemists of Macedonia. He went from house to house dragging two metal ingots
and everybody was amazed to see pots, pans, tongs and braziers tumble down from
their places and beams creak from the desperation of nails and screws trying to
emerge, and even objects that had been lost for a long time appeared from where
they had been searched for most and went dragging along in turbulent confusion
behind Melquíades' magical irons. 'Things have a life of their own,' the gypsy
proclaimed with a harsh accent. 'It's simply a matter of waking up their
souls.'
José Arcadio Buendía, whose
unbridled imagination always went beyond the genius of nature and even beyond
miracles and magic, thought that it would be possible to make use of that
useless invention to extract gold from the bowels of the earth. Melquíades, who
was an honest man, warned him: 'It won't work for that.' But José Arcadio
Buendía at that time did not believe in the honesty of gypsies, so he traded
his mule and a pair of goats for the two magnetized ingots. Úrsula Iguarán, his
wife, who relied on those animals to increase their poor domestic holdings, was
unable to dissuade him. 'Very soon we'll have gold enough and more to pave the
floors of the house,' her husband replied.
For several months he worked hard
to demonstrate the truth of his idea. He explored every inch of the region,
even the riverbed, dragging the two iron ingots along and reciting Melquíades'
incantation aloud. The only thing he succeeded in doing was to unearth a suit
of fifteenth-century armour which had all of its pieces soldered together with
rust and inside of which there was the hollow resonance of an enormous
stone-filled gourd. When José Arcadio Buendía and the four men of his
expedition managed to take the armour apart, they found inside a calcified
skeleton with a copper locket containing a woman's hair around its neck.
In March the gypsies returned.
This time they brought a telescope and a magnifying glass the size of a drum,
which they exhibited as the latest discovery of the Jews of Amsterdam. They
placed a gypsy woman at one end of the village and set up the telescope at the
entrance to the tent. For the price of five reales, people could look into the
telescope and see the gypsy woman an arm's length away. 'Science has eliminated
distance,' Melquíades proclaimed. 'In a short time, man will be able to see
what is happening in any place in the world without leaving his own house.'
A burning noonday sun brought out
a startling demonstration with the gigantic magnifying glass: they put a pile
of dry hay in the middle of the street and set it on fire by concentrating the
sun's rays.
José Arcadio Buendía, who had
still not been consoled for the failure of his magnets, conceived the idea of
using that invention as a weapon of war. Again Melquíades tried to dissuade
him, but he finally accepted the two magnetized ingots and three colonial coins
in exchange for the magnifying glass. Úrsula wept in consternation. That money
was from a chest of gold coins that her father had put together over an entire
life of privation and that she had buried underneath her bed in hopes of a
proper occasion to make use of it. José Arcadio Buendía made no attempt to
console her, completely absorbed in his tactical experiments with the
abnegation of a scientist and even at the risk of his own life.
In an attempt to show the effects
of the glass on enemy troops, he exposed himself to the concentration of the
sun's rays and suffered burns which turned into sores that took a long time to
heal. Over the protests of his wife, who was alarmed at such a dangerous
invention, at one point he was ready to set the house on fire. He would spend
hours on end in his room, calculating the strategic possibilities of his novel
weapon until he succeeded in putting together a manual of startling
instructional clarity and an irresistible power of conviction.
He sent it to the government,
accompanied by numerous descriptions of his experiments and several pages of
explanatory sketches, by a messenger who crossed the mountains, got lost in
measureless swamps, forded stormy rivers, and was on the point of perishing
under the lash of despair, plague, and wild beasts until he found a route that
joined the one used by the mules that carried the mail. In spite of the fact
that a trip to the capital was little less than impossible at that time, José
Arcadio Buendía promised to undertake it as soon as the government ordered him
to so that he could put on some practical demonstrations of his invention for
the military authorities and could train them himself in the complicated art of
solar war.
For several years he waited for
an answer. Finally, tired of waiting, he bemoaned to Melquíades the failure of
his project and the gypsy then gave him a convincing proof of his honesty: he
gave him back the doubloons in exchange for the magnifying glass, and he left
him in addition some Portugues maps and several instruments of navigation. In
his own handwriting he set down a concise synthesis of the studies by Monk
Hermann, which he left José Arcadio so that he would be able to make use of the
astrolabe, the compass, and the sextant.
José Arcadio Buendía spent the
long months of the rainy season shut up in a small room that he had built in
the rear of the house so that no one would disturb his experiments. Having completely
abandoned his domestic obligations, he spent entire nights in the courtyard
watching the course of the stars and he almost contracted sunstroke from trying
to establish an exact method to ascertain noon. When he became an expert in the
use and manipulation of his instruments, he conceived a notion of space that
allowed him to navigate across unknown seas, to visit uninhabited territories,
and to establish relations with splendid beings without having to leave his
study.
That was the period in which he
acquired the habit of talking to himself, of walking through the house without
paying attention to anyone, as Úrsula and the children broke their backs in the
garden, growing banana and caladium, cassava and yams, ahuyama roots and
eggplants.
Suddenly, without warning, his
feverish activity was interrupted and was replaced by a kind of fascination. He
spent several days as if he were bewitched, softly repeating to himself a
string of fearful conjectures without giving credit to his own understanding. Finally,
one Tuesday in December, at lunchtime, all at once he released the whole weight
of his torment. The children would remember for the rest of their lives the
august solemnity with which their father, devastated by his prolonged vigil and
by the wrath of his imagination, revealed his discovery to them:
'The earth is round, like an
orange.'
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If you're interested in getting a copy of the book and reading more here's a place to start looking. Or you might visit a public library check if you might borrow a copy.

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