The shepherd went to fetch a small sack and poured out a heap of acorns on
the table. He began to inspect them, one by one, with great concentration,
separating the good from the bad. I smoked my pipe. I did offer to help him. He
told me that it was his job. And in fact, seeing the care he devoted to the
task, I did not insist. That was the whole of our conversation. When he had set
aside a large enough pile of good acorns he counted them out by tens, meanwhile
eliminating the small ones or those which were slightly cracked, for now he
examined them more closely. When he had thus selected one hundred perfect acorns
he stopped and we went to bed.
There was peace in being with this man. The next day I asked if I might rest
here for a day. He found it quite natural—or, to be more exact, he gave me the
impression that nothing could startle him. The rest was not absolutely
necessary, but I was interested and wished to know more about him. He opened the
pen and led his flock to pasture. Before leaving, he plunged his sack of
carefully selected and counted acorns into a pail of water.
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I noticed that he carried for a stick an iron rod as thick as my thumb and
about a yard and a half long. Resting myself by walking, I followed a path
parallel to his. His pasture was in a valley. He left the dog in charge of the
little flock and climbed toward where I stood. I was afraid that he was about
the rebuke me for my indiscretion, but it was not that at all: this was the way
he was going, and he invited me to go along if I had nothing better to do. He
climbed to the top of the ridge, about a hundred yards away.
There he began thrusting his iron rod into the earth, making a hole in which
he planted an acorn; then he refilled the hole. He was planting oak trees. I
asked him if the land belonged to him. He answered no. Did he know whose it was?
He did not. He supposed it was community property, or perhaps belonged to people
who cared nothing about it. He was not interested in finding out whose it was.
He planted his hundred acorns with the greatest care.
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