CHAPTER 1
Once when I was six years old I saw a magnificent picture in a book, called True Stories from Nature, about the primeval forest. It was a picture of a boa constrictor in the act of swallowing an animal. Here is a copy of the drawing.
In the book it said: "Boa constrictors swallow their
prey whole, without chewing it. After that they are not able to move, and they
sleep through the six months that they need for digestion."
I pondered deeply, then, over the adventures of the jungle.
And after some work with a colored pencil I succeeded in making my first drawing.
My Drawing Number One. It looked something like this:
I showed my masterpiece to the grown-ups, and asked them
whether the drawing frightened them.
But they answered: "Frighten? Why should any one be
frightened by a hat?"
My drawing was not a picture of a hat. It was a picture of a
boa constrictor digesting an elephant. But since the grown-ups were not able to
understand it, I made another drawing: I drew the inside of a boa constrictor,
so that the grown-ups could see it clearly. They always need to have things
explained. My Drawing Number Two looked like this:
The grown-ups' response, this time, was to advise me to lay
aside my drawings of boa constrictors, whether from the inside or the outside,
and devote myself instead to geography, history, arithmetic, and grammar. That
is why, at the age of six, I gave up what might have been a magnificent career
as a painter. I had been disheartened by the failure of my Drawing Number One
and my Drawing Number Two. Grown-ups never understand anything by themselves,
and it is tiresome for children to be always and forever explaining things to
them.
So then I chose another profession, and learned to pilot
airplanes. I have flown a little over all parts of the world; and it is true
that geography has been very useful to me. At a glance I can distinguish China
from Arizona. If one gets lost in the night, such knowledge is valuable.
In the course of this life I have had a great many encounters
with a great many people who have been concerned with matters of consequence. I
have lived a great deal among grown-ups. I have seen them intimately, close at
hand. And that hasn't much improved my opinion of them.
Whenever I met one of them who seemed to me at all clear-sighted,
I tried the experiment of showing him my Drawing Number One, which I have always
kept. I would try to find out, so, if this was a person of true understanding.
But, whoever it was, he, or she, would always say:
"That is a hat."
Then I would never talk to that person about boa constrictors,
or primeval forests, or stars. I would bring myself down to his level. I would
talk to him about bridge, and golf, and politics, and neckties. And the grown-up
would be greatly pleased to have met such a sensible man.
CHAPTER 2
CHAPTER 2
So I lived my life alone, without anyone that I could really
talk to, until I had an accident with my plane in the Desert of Sahara, six
years ago. Something was broken in my engine. And as I had with me neither a
mechanic nor any passengers, I set myself to attempt the difficult repairs all
alone. It was a question of life or death for me: I had scarcely enough drinking
water to last a week.
The first night, then, I went to sleep on the sand, a
thousand miles from any human habitation. I was more isolated than a shipwrecked
sailor on a raft in the middle of the ocean. Thus you can imagine my amazement,
at sunrise, when I was awakened by an odd little voice. It said:
"If you please--draw me a sheep!"
"What!"
"Draw me a sheep!"
I jumped to my feet, completely thunderstruck. I blinked my
eyes hard. I looked carefully all around me. And I saw a most extraordinary
small person, who stood there examining me with great seriousness. Here you may
see the best portrait that, later, I was able to make of him. But my drawing is
certainly very much less charming than its model.
That, however, is not my fault. The grown-ups discouraged me
in my painter's career when I was six years old, and I never learned to draw
anything, except boas from the outside and boas from the inside.
Now I stared at this sudden apparition with my eyes fairly
starting out of my head in astonishment. Remember, I had crashed in the desert a
thousand miles from any inhabited region. And yet my little man seemed neither
to be straying uncertainly among the sands, nor to be fainting from fatigue or
hunger or thirst or fear. Nothing about him gave any suggestion of a child lost
in the middle of the desert, a thousand miles from any human habitation. When at
last I was able to speak, I said to him:
"But--what are you doing here?"
And in answer he repeated, very slowly, as if he were
speaking of a matter of great consequence:
"If you please--draw me a sheep . . ."
When a mystery is too overpowering, one dare not disobey.
Absurd as it might seem to me, a thousand miles from any human habitation and in
danger of death, I took out of my pocket a sheet of paper and my fountain-pen.
But then I remembered how my studies had been concentrated on geography, history,
arithmetic and grammar, and I told the little chap (a little crossly, too) that
I did not know how to draw. He answered me:
"That doesn't matter. Draw me a sheep . . ."
But I had never drawn a sheep. So I drew for him one of the
two pictures I had drawn so often. It was that of the boa constrictor from the
outside. And I was astounded to hear the little fellow greet it with:
"No, no, no! I do not want an elephant inside a boa
constrictor. A boa constrictor is a very dangerous creature, and an elephant is
very cumbersome. Where I live, everything is very small. What I need is a sheep.
Draw me a sheep."
So then I made a drawing.
He looked at it carefully, then he said:
"No. This sheep is already very sickly. Make me another."
So I made another drawing.
My friend smiled gently and indulgently.
"You see yourself," he said, "that this is not
a sheep. This is a ram. It has horns."
So then I did my drawing over once more.
But it was rejected too, just like the others.
"This one is too old. I want a sheep that will live a long time."
By this time my patience was exhausted, because I was in a
hurry to start taking my engine apart. So I tossed off this drawing.
And I threw out an explanation with it.
"This is only his box. The sheep you asked for is inside."
I was very surprised to see a light break over the face of my
young judge:
"That is exactly the way I wanted it! Do you think that
this sheep will have to have a great deal of grass?"
"Why?"
"Because where I live everything is very small . . ."
"There will surely be enough grass for him," I said.
"It is a very small sheep that I have given you."
He bent his head over the drawing.
"Not so small that--Look! He has gone to sleep . . ."
And that is how I made the acquaintance of the little prince.
CHAPTER 3
It took me a long time to learn where he came from. The little prince, who asked me so many questions, never seemed to hear the ones I asked him. It was from words dropped by chance that, little by little, everything was revealed to me.
The first time he saw my airplane, for instance (I shall not
draw my airplane; that would be much too complicated for me), he asked me:
"What is that object?"
"That is not an object. It flies. It is an airplane. It
is my airplane."
And I was proud to have him learn that I could fly.
He cried out, then:
"What! You dropped down from the sky?"
"Yes," I answered, modestly.
"Oh! That is funny!"
And the little prince broke into a lovely peal of laughter,
which irritated me very much. I like my misfortunes to be taken seriously.
Then he added:
"So you, too, come from the sky! Which is your planet?"
At that moment I caught a gleam of light in the impenetrable
mystery of his presence; and I demanded, abruptly:
"Do you come from another planet?"
But he did not reply. He tossed his head gently, without
taking his eyes from my plane:
"It is true that on that you can't have come from very
far away . . ."
And he sank into a reverie, which lasted a long time. Then,
taking my sheep out of his pocket, he buried himself in the contemplation of his
treasure.
You can imagine how my curiosity was aroused by this half-confidence
about the "other planets." I made a great effort, therefore, to find
out more on this subject.
"My little man, where do you come from? What is this 'where
I live,' of which you speak? Where do you want to take your sheep?"
After a reflective silence he answered:
"The thing that is so good about the box you have given
me is that at night he can use it as his house."
"That is so. And if you are good I will give you a
string, too, so that you can tie him during the day, and a post to tie him to."
But the little prince seemed shocked by this offer:
"Tie him! What a queer idea!"
"But if you don't tie him," I said, "he will
wander off somewhere, and get lost."
My friend broke into another peal of laughter:
"But where do you think he would go?"
"Anywhere. Straight ahead of him."
Then the little prince said, earnestly:
"That doesn't matter. Where I live, everything is so
small!"
And, with perhaps a hint of sadness, he added:
"Straight ahead of him, nobody can go very far . . ."
CHAPTER 4
I had thus learned a second fact of great importance: this was that the planet the little prince came from was scarcely any larger than a house!
But that did not really surprise me much. I knew very well
that in addition to the great planets--such as the Earth, Jupiter, Mars, Venus--to
which we have given names, there are also hundreds of others, some of which are
so small that one has a hard time seeing them through the telescope. When an
astronomer discovers one of these he does not give it a name, but only a number.
He might call it, for example, "Asteroid 325".
I have serious reason to believe that the planet from which
the little prince came is the asteroid known as B-612.
This asteroid has only once been seen through the telescope.
That was by a Turkish astronomer, in 1909.
On making his discovery, the astronomer had presented it to
the International Astronomical Congress, in a great demonstration. But he was in
Turkish costume, and so nobody would believe what he said.
Grown-ups are like that . . .
Fortunately, however, for the reputation of Asteroid B-612, a
Turkish dictator made a law that his subjects, under pain of death, should
change to European costume. So in 1920 the astronomer gave his demonstration all
over again, dressed with impressive style and elegance. And this time everybody
accepted his report.
If I have told you these details about the asteroid, and made
a note of its number for you, it is on account of the grown-ups and their ways.
When you tell them that you have made a new friend, they never ask you any
questions about essential matters. They never say to you, "What does his
voice sound like? What games does he love best? Does he collect butterflies?"
Instead, they demand: "How old is he? How many brothers has he? How much
does he weigh? How much money does his father make?" Only from these
figures do they think they have learned anything about him.
If you were to say to the grown-ups: "I saw a beautiful
house made of rosy brick, with geraniums in the windows and doves on the roof,"
they would not be able to get any idea of that house at all. You would have to
say to them: "I saw a house that cost $20,000." Then they would
exclaim: "Oh, what a pretty house that is!"
Just so, you might say to them: "The proof that the
little prince existed is that he was charming, that he laughed, and that he was
looking for a sheep. If anybody wants a sheep, that is a proof that he exists."
And what good would it do to tell them that? They would shrug their shoulders,
and treat you like a child. But if you said to them: "The planet he came
from is Asteroid B-612," then they would be convinced, and leave you in
peace from their questions.
They are like that. One must not hold it against them.
Children should always show great forbearance toward grown-up people.
But certainly, for us who understand life, figures are a
matter of indifference. I should have liked to begin this story in the fashion
of the fairy-tales. I should have like to say: "Once upon a time there was
a little prince who lived on a planet that was scarcely any bigger than himself,
and who had need of a sheep . . ."
To those who understand life, that would have given a much
greater air of truth to my story.
For I do not want any one to read my book carelessly. I have
suffered too much grief in setting down these memories. Six years have already
passed since my friend went away from me, with his sheep. If I try to describe
him here, it is to make sure that I shall not forget him. To forget a friend is
sad. Not every one has had a friend. And if I forget him, I may become like the
grown-ups who are no longer interested in anything but figures . . .
It is for that purpose, again, that I have bought a box of
paints and some pencils. It is hard to take up drawing again at my age, when I
have never made any pictures except those of the boa constrictor from the
outside and the boa constrictor from the inside, since I was six. I shall
certainly try to make my portraits as true to life as possible. But I am not at
all sure of success. One drawing goes along all right, and another has no
resemblance to its subject. I make some errors, too, in the little prince's
height: in one place he is too tall and in another too short. And I feel some
doubts about the color of his costume. So I fumble along as best I can, now good,
now bad, and I hope generally fair-to-middling.
In certain more important details I shall make mistakes, also.
But that is something that will not be my fault. My friend never explained
anything to me. He thought, perhaps, that I was like himself. But I, alas, do
not know how to see sheep through the walls of boxes. Perhaps I am a little like
the grown-ups. I have had to grow old.
CHAPTER 5
As each day passed I would learn, in our talk, something about the little prince's planet, his departure from it, his journey. The information would come very slowly, as it might chance to fall from his thoughts. It was in this way that I heard, on the third day, about the catastrophe of the baobabs.
This time, once more, I had the sheep to thank for it. For
the little prince asked me abruptly--as if seized by a grave doubt--"It is
true, isn't it, that sheep eat little bushes?"
"Yes, that is true."
"Ah! I am glad!"
I did not understand why it was so important that sheep
should eat little bushes. But the little prince added:
"Then it follows that they also eat baobabs?"
I pointed out to the little prince that baobabs were not
little bushes, but, on the contrary, trees as big as castles; and that even if
he took a whole herd of elephants away with him, the herd would not eat up one
single baobab.
The idea of the herd of elephants made the little prince
laugh.
"We would have to put them one on top of the other,"
he said.
But he made a wise comment:
"Before they grow so big, the baobabs start out by being
little."
"That is strictly correct," I said. "But why
do you want the sheep to eat the little baobabs?"
He answered me at once, "Oh, come, come!", as if he
were speaking of something that was self-evident. And I was obliged to make a
great mental effort to solve this problem, without any assistance.
Indeed, as I learned, there were on the planet where the
little prince lived--as on all planets--good plants and bad plants. In
consequence, there were good seeds from good plants, and bad seeds from bad
plants. But seeds are invisible. They sleep deep in the heart of the earth's
darkness, until some one among them is seized with the desire to awaken. Then
this little seed will stretch itself and begin--timidly at first--to push a
charming little sprig inoffensively upward toward the sun. If it is only a
sprout of radish or the sprig of a rose-bush, one would let it grow wherever it
might wish. But when it is a bad plant, one must destroy it as soon as possible,
the very first instant that one recognizes it.
Now there were some terrible seeds on the planet that was the
home of the little prince; and these were the seeds of the baobab. The soil of
that planet was infested with them. A baobab is something you will never, never
be able to get rid of if you attend to it too late. It spreads over the entire
planet. It bores clear through it with its roots. And if the planet is too small,
and the baobabs are too many, they split it in pieces . . .
"It is a question of discipline," the little prince
said to me later on. "When you've finished your own toilet in the morning,
then it is time to attend to the toilet of your planet, just so, with the
greatest care. You must see to it that you pull up regularly all the baobabs, at
the very first moment when they can be distinguished from the rosebushes which
they resemble so closely in their earliest youth. It is very tedious work,"
the little prince added, "but very easy."
And one day he said to me: "You ought to make a
beautiful drawing, so that the children where you live can see exactly how all
this is. That would be very useful to them if they were to travel some day.
Sometimes," he added, "there is no harm in putting off a piece of work
until another day. But when it is a matter of baobabs, that always means a
catastrophe. I knew a planet that was inhabited by a lazy man. He neglected
three little bushes . . ."
So, as the little prince described it to me, I have made a
drawing of that planet. I do not much like to take the tone of a moralist. But
the danger of the baobabs is so little understood, and such considerable risks
would be run by anyone who might get lost on an asteroid, that for once I am
breaking through my reserve. "Children," I say plainly, "watch
out for the baobabs!"
My friends, like myself, have been skirting this danger for a
long time, without ever knowing it; and so it is for them that I have worked so
hard over this drawing. The lesson which I pass on by this means is worth all
the trouble it has cost me.
The reply is simple. I have tried. But with the others I have
not been successful. When I made the drawing of the baobabs I was carried beyond
myself by the inspiring force of urgent necessity.
CHAPTER 6
Oh, little prince! Bit by bit I came to understand the secrets of your sad little life . . . For a long time you had found your only entertainment in the quiet pleasure of looking at the sunset. I learned that new detail on the morning of the fourth day, when you said to me:
"I am very fond of sunsets. Come, let us go look at a
sunset now."
"But we must wait," I said.
"Wait? For what?"
"For the sunset. We must wait until it is time."
At first you seemed to be very much surprised. And then you
laughed to yourself. You said to me:
"I am always thinking that I am at home!"
Just so. Everybody knows that when it is noon in the United
States the sun is setting over France.
If you could fly to France in one minute, you could go
straight into the sunset, right from noon. Unfortunately, France is too far away
for that. But on your tiny planet, my little prince, all you need do is move
your chair a few steps. You can see the day end and the twilight falling
whenever you like . . .
"One day," you said to me, "I saw the sunset
forty-four times!"
And a little later you added:
"You know--one loves the sunset, when one is so sad . . ."
"Were you so sad, then?" I asked, "on the day
of the forty-four sunsets?"
But the little prince made no reply.
CHAPTER 7
On the fifth day--again, as always, it was thanks to the sheep--the secret of the little prince's life was revealed to me. Abruptly, without anything to lead up to it, and as if the question had been born of long and silent meditation on his problem, he demanded:
"A sheep--if it eats little bushes, does it eat flowers, too?"
"A sheep," I answered, "eats anything it finds in its reach."
"Even flowers that have thorns?"
"Yes, even flowers that have thorns."
"Then the thorns--what use are they?"
I did not know. At that moment I was very busy trying to
unscrew a bolt that had got stuck in my engine. I was very much worried, for it
was becoming clear to me that the breakdown of my plane was extremely serious.
And I had so little drinking-water left that I had to fear for the worst.
"The thorns--what use are they?"
The little prince never let go of a question, once he had
asked it. As for me, I was upset over that bolt. And I answered with the first
thing that came into my head:
"The thorns are of no use at all. Flowers have thorns just for spite!"
"Oh!"
There was a moment of complete silence. Then the little
prince flashed back at me, with a kind of resentfulness:
"I don't believe you! Flowers are weak creatures. They
are naďve. They reassure themselves as best they can. They believe that their
thorns are terrible weapons . . ."
I did not answer. At that instant I was saying to myself:
"If this bolt still won't turn, I am going to knock it out with the hammer."
Again the little prince disturbed my thoughts:
"And you actually believe that the flowers--"
"Oh, no!" I cried. "No, no, no! I don't
believe anything. I answered you with the first thing that came into my head.
Don't you see--I am very busy with matters of consequence!"
He stared at me, thunderstruck.
"Matters of consequence!"
He looked at me there, with my hammer in my hand, my fingers
black with engine-grease, bending down over an object which seemed to him
extremely ugly . . .
"You talk just like the grown-ups!"
That made me a little ashamed. But he went on, relentlessly:
"You mix everything up together . . . You confuse
everything . . ."
He was really very angry. He tossed his golden curls in the
breeze.
"I know a planet where there is a certain red-faced
gentleman. He has never smelled a flower. He has never looked at a star. He has
never loved any one. He has never done anything in his life but add up figures.
And all day he says over and over, just like you: 'I am busy with matters of
consequence!' And that makes him swell up with pride. But he is not a man--he is
a mushroom!"
"A what?"
"A mushroom!"
The little prince was now white with rage.
"The flowers have been growing thorns for millions of
years. For millions of years the sheep have been eating them just the same. And
is it not a matter of consequence to try to understand why the flowers go to so
much trouble to grow thorns which are never of any use to them? Is the warfare
between the sheep and the flowers not important? Is this not of more consequence
than a fat red-faced gentleman's sums? And if I know--I, myself--one flower
which is unique in the world, which grows nowhere but on my planet, but which
one little sheep can destroy in a single bite some morning, without even
noticing what he is doing--Oh! You think that is not important!"
His face turned from white to red as he continued:
"If some one loves a flower, of which just one single
blossom grows in all the millions and millions of stars, it is enough to make
him happy just to look at the stars. He can say to himself, 'Somewhere, my
flower is there . . .' But if the sheep eats the flower, in one moment all his
stars will be darkened . . . And you think that is not important!"
He could not say anything more. His words were choked by
sobbing.
The night had fallen. I had let my tools drop from my hands.
Of what moment now was my hammer, my bolt, or thirst, or death? On one star, one
planet, my planet, the Earth, there was a little prince to be comforted. I took
him in my arms, and rocked him. I said to him:
"The flower that you love is not in danger. I will draw
you a muzzle for your sheep. I will draw you a railing to put around your
flower. I will--"
I did not know what to say to him. I felt awkward and
blundering. I did not know how I could reach him, where I could overtake him and
go on hand in hand with him once more.
It is such a secret place, the land of tears.
CHAPTER 8
I soon learned to know this flower better. On the little prince's planet the flowers had always been very simple. They had only one ring of petals; they took up no room at all; they were a trouble to nobody. One morning they would appear in the grass, and by night they would have faded peacefully away. But one day, from a seed blown from no one knew where, a new flower had come up; and the little prince had watched very closely over this small sprout which was not like any other small sprouts on his planet. It might, you see, have been a new kind of baobab.
The shrub soon stopped growing, and began to get ready to
produce a flower. The little prince, who was present at the first appearance of
a huge bud, felt at once that some sort of miraculous apparition must emerge
from it. But the flower was not satisfied to complete the preparations for her
beauty in the shelter of her green chamber. She chose her colors with the
greatest care. She dressed herself slowly. She adjusted her petals one by one.
She did not wish to go out into the world all rumpled, like the field poppies.
It was only in the full radiance of her beauty that she wished to appear. Oh,
yes! She was a coquettish creature! And her mysterious adornment lasted for days
and days.
Then one morning, exactly at sunrise, she suddenly showed
herself.
And, after working with all this painstaking precision, she
yawned and said:
"Ah! I am scarcely awake. I beg that you will excuse me.
My petals are still all disarranged . . ."
But the little prince could not restrain his admiration:
"Oh! How beautiful you are!"
"Am I not?" the flower responded, sweetly.
"And I was born at the same moment as the sun . . ."
The little prince could guess easily enough that she was not
any too modest--but how moving--and exciting--she was!
"I think it is time for breakfast," she added an
instant later. "If you would have the kindness to think of my needs--"
And the little prince, completely abashed, went to look for a
sprinkling-can of fresh water. So, he tended the flower.
So, too, she began very quickly to torment him with her
vanity--which was, if the truth be known, a little difficult to deal with. One
day, for instance, when she was speaking of her four thorns, she said to the
little prince:
"Let the tigers come with their claws!"
"There are no tigers on my planet," the little
prince objected. "And, anyway, tigers do not eat weeds."
"I am not a weed," the flower replied, sweetly.
"Please excuse me . . ."
"I am not at all afraid of tigers," she went on,
"but I have a horror of drafts. I suppose you wouldn't have a screen for me?"
"A horror of drafts--that is bad luck, for a plant,"
remarked the little prince, and added to himself, "This flower is a very
complex creature . . ."
"At night I want you to put me under a glass globe. It
is very cold where you live. In the place I came from--"
But she interrupted herself at that point. She had come in
the form of a seed. She could not have known anything of any other worlds.
Embarassed over having let herself be caught on the verge of such a naďve
untruth, she coughed two or three times, in order to put the little prince in
the wrong.
"The screen?"
"I was just going to look for it when you spoke to me . . ."
Then she forced her cough a little more so that he should
suffer from remorse just the same.
So the little prince, in spite of all the good will that was
inseparable from his love, had soon come to doubt her. He had taken seriously
words which were without importance, and it made him very unhappy.
"I ought not to have listened to her," he confided
to me one day. "One never ought to listen to the flowers. One should simply
look at them and breathe their fragrance. Mine perfumed all my planet. But I did
not know how to take pleasure in all her grace. This tale of claws, which
disturbed me so much, should only have filled my heart with tenderness and
pity."
And he continued his confidences:
"The fact is that I did not know how to
understand
anything! I ought to have judged by deeds and not by words. She cast her
fragrance and her radiance over me. I ought never to have run away from
her . . . I ought to have guessed all the affection that lay behind her
poor little
strategems. Flowers are so inconsistent! But I was too young to know how
to love
her …"
CHAPTER 9
I believe that for his escape he took advantage of the migration of a flock of wild birds. On the morning of his departure he put his planet in perfect order. He carefully cleaned out his active volcanoes. He possessed two active volcanoes; and they were very convenient for heating his breakfast in the morning. He also had one volcano that was extinct. But, as he said, "One never knows!" So he cleaned out the extinct volcano, too. If they are well cleaned out, volcanoes burn slowly and steadily, without any eruptions. Volcanic eruptions are like fires in a chimney.
On our earth we are obviously much too small to clean out our
volcanoes. That is why they bring no end of trouble upon us.
The little prince also pulled up, with a certain sense of
dejection, the last little shoots of the baobabs. He believed that he would
never want to return. But on this last morning all these familiar tasks seemed
very precious to him. And when he watered the flower for the last time, and
prepared to place her under the shelter of her glass globe, he realized that he
was very close to tears.
"Goodbye," he said to the flower.
But she made no answer.
"Goodbye," he said again.
The flower coughed. But it was not because she had a cold.
"I have been silly," she said to him, at last.
"I ask your forgiveness. Try to be happy . . ."
He was surprised by this absence of reproaches. He stood
there all bewildered, the glass globe held arrested in mid-air. He did not
understand this quiet sweetness.
"Of course I love you," the flower said to him.
"It is my fault that you have not known it all the while. That is of no
importance. But you--you have been just as foolish as I. Try to be happy . . .
Let the glass globe be. I don't want it any more."
"But the wind--"
"My cold is not so bad as all that . . . The cool night
air will do me good. I am a flower."
"But the animals--"
"Well, I must endure the presence of two or three
caterpillars if I wish to become acquainted with the butterflies. It seems that
they are very beautiful. And if not the butterflies--and the caterpillars--who
will call upon me? You will be far away . . . As for the large animals--I am not
at all afraid of any of them. I have my claws."
And, naďvely, she showed her four thorns. Then she added:
"Don't linger like this. You have decided to go away.
Now go!"
For she did not want him to see her crying. She was such a
proud flower.
CHAPTER 10
He found himself in the neighborhood of the asteroids 325, 326, 327, 328, 329, and 330. He began, therefore, by visiting them, in order to add to his knowledge.
The first of them was inhabited by a king. Clad in royal
purple and ermine, he was seated upon a throne which was at the same time both
simple and majestic.
"Ah! Here is a subject," exclaimed the king, when
he saw the little prince coming.
And the little prince asked himself:
"How could he recognize me when he had never seen me
before?"
He did not know how the world is simplified for kings. To
them, all men are subjects.
"Approach, so that I may see you better," said the
king, who felt consumingly proud of being at last a king over somebody.
The little prince looked everywhere to find a place to sit
down; but the entire planet was crammed and obstructed by the king's magnificent
ermine robe. So he remained standing upright, and, since he was tired, he yawned.
"It is contrary to etiquette to yawn in the presence of
a king," the monarch said to him. "I forbid you to do so."
"I can't help it. I can't stop myself," replied the
little prince, thoroughly embarrassed. "I have come on a long journey, and
I have had no sleep . . ."
"Ah, then," the king said. "I order you to
yawn. It is years since I have seen anyone yawning. Yawns, to me, are objects of
curiosity. Come, now! Yawn again! It is an order."
"That frightens me . . . I cannot, any more . . ."
murmured the little prince, now completely abashed.
"Hum! Hum!" replied the king. "Then I--I order
you sometimes to yawn and sometimes to--"
He sputtered a little, and seemed vexed.
For what the king fundamentally insisted upon was that his
authority should be respected. He tolerated no disobedience. He was an absolute
monarch. But, because he was a very good man, he made his orders reasonable.
"If I ordered a general," he would say, by way of
example, "if I ordered a general to change himself into a sea bird, and if
the general did not obey me, that would not be the fault of the general. It
would be my fault."
"May I sit down?" came now a timid inquiry from the
little prince.
"I order you to do so," the king answered him, and
majestically gathered in a fold of his ermine mantle.
But the little prince was wondering . . . The planet was tiny.
Over what could this king really rule?
"Sire," he said to him, "I beg that you will
excuse my asking you a question--"
"I order you to ask me a question," the king
hastened to assure him.
"Sire--over what do you rule?"
"Over everything," said the king, with magnificent simplicity.
"Over everything?"
The king made a gesture, which took in his planet, the other
planets, and all the stars.
"Over all that?" asked the little prince.
"Over all that," the king answered.
For his rule was not only absolute: it was also universal.
"And the stars obey you?"
"Certainly they do," the king said. "They obey
instantly. I do not permit insubordination."
Such power was a thing for the little prince to marvel at. If
he had been master of such complete authority, he would have been able to watch
the sunset, not forty-four times in one day, but seventy-two, or even a hundred,
or even two hundred times, without ever having to move his chair. And because he
felt a bit sad as he remembered his little planet which he had forsaken, he
plucked up his courage to ask the king a favor:
"I should like to see a sunset . . . Do me that kindness
. . . Order the sun to set . . ."
"If I ordered a general to fly from one flower to
another like a butterfly, or to write a tragic drama, or to change himself into
a sea bird, and if the general did not carry out the order that he had received,
which one of us would be in the wrong?" the king demanded. "The
general, or myself?"
"You," said the little prince firmly.
"Exactly. One must require from each one the duty which
each one can perform," the king went on. "Accepted authority rests
first of all on reason. If you ordered your people to go and throw themselves
into the sea, they would rise up in revolution. I have the right to require
obedience because my orders are reasonable."
"Then my sunset?" the little prince reminded him:
for he never forgot a question once he had asked it.
"You shall have your sunset. I shall command it. But,
according to my science of government, I shall wait until conditions are
favorable."
"When will that be?" inquired the little prince.
"Hum! Hum!" replied the king; and before saying
anything else he consulted a bulky almanac. "Hum! Hum! That will be about--about--that
will be this evening about twenty minutes to eight. And you will see how well I
am obeyed!"
The little prince yawned. He was regretting his lost sunset.
And then, too, he was already beginning to be a little bored.
"I have nothing more to do here," he said to the
king. "So I shall set out on my way again."
"Do not go," said the king, who was very proud of
having a subject. "Do not go. I will make you a Minister!"
"Minister of what?"
"Minster of--of Justice!"
"But there is nobody here to judge!"
"We do not know that," the king said to him.
"I have not yet made a complete tour of my kingdom. I am very old. There is
no room here for a carriage. And it tires me to walk."
"Oh, but I have looked already!" said the little
prince, turning around to give one more glance to the other side of the planet.
On that side, as on this, there was nobody at all . . .
"Then you shall judge yourself," the king answered.
"that is the most difficult thing of all. It is much more difficult to
judge oneself than to judge others. If you succeed in judging yourself rightly,
then you are indeed a man of true wisdom."
"Yes," said the little prince, "but I can
judge myself anywhere. I do not need to live on this planet."
"Hum! Hum!" said the king. "I have good reason
to believe that somewhere on my planet there is an old rat. I hear him at night.
You can judge this old rat. From time to time you will condemn him to death.
Thus his life will depend on your justice. But you will pardon him on each
occasion; for he must be treated thriftily. He is the only one we have."
"I," replied the little prince, "do not like
to condemn anyone to death. And now I think I will go on my way."
"No," said the king.
But the little prince, having now completed his preparations
for departure, had no wish to grieve the old monarch.
"If Your Majesty wishes to be promptly obeyed," he
said, "he should be able to give me a reasonable order. He should be able,
for example, to order me to be gone by the end of one minute. It seems to me
that conditions are favorable . . ."
As the king made no answer, the little prince hesitated a
moment. Then, with a sigh, he took his leave.
"I make you my Ambassador," the king called out,
hastily.
He had a magnificent air of authority.
"The grown-ups are very strange," the little prince
said to himself, as he continued on his journey.
CHAPTER 11
The second planet was inhabited by a conceited man.
"Ah! Ah! I am about to receive a visit from an admirer!"
he exclaimed from afar, when he first saw the little prince coming.
For, to conceited men, all other men are admirers.
"Good morning," said the little prince. "That
is a queer hat you are wearing."
"It is a hat for salutes," the conceited man
replied. "It is to raise in salute when people acclaim me. Unfortunately,
nobody at all ever passes this way."
"Yes?" said the little prince, who did not
understand what the conceited man was talking about.
"Clap your hands, one against the other," the
conceited man now directed him.
The little prince clapped his hands. The conceited man raised
his hat in a modest salute.
"This is more entertaining than the visit to the king,"
the little prince said to himself. And he began again to clap his hands, one
against the other. The conceited man again raised his hat in salute.
After five minutes of this exercise the little prince grew
tired of the game's monotony.
"And what should one do to make the hat come down?"
he asked.
But the conceited man did not hear him. Conceited people
never hear anything but praise.
"Do you really admire me very much?" he demanded of
the little prince.
"What does that mean--'admire'?"
"To admire means that you regard me as the handsomest,
the best-dressed, the richest, and the most intelligent man on this
planet."
"But you are the only man on your planet!"
"Do me this kindness. Admire me just the same."
"I admire you," said the little prince, shrugging
his shoulders slightly, "but what is there in that to interest you so
much?"
And the little prince went away.
"The grown-ups are certainly very odd," he said to
himself, as he continued on his journey.
CHAPTER 12
The next planet was inhabited by a tippler. This was a very short visit, but it plunged the little prince into deep dejection.
"What are you doing there?" he said to the tippler,
whom he found settled down in silence before a collection of empty bottles and
also a collection of full bottles.
"I am drinking," replied the tippler, with a
lugubrious air.
"Why are you drinking?" demanded the little prince.
"So that I may forget," replied the tippler.
"Forget what?" inquired the little prince, who
already was sorry for him.
"Forget that I am ashamed," the tippler confessed,
hanging his head.
"Ashamed of what?" insisted the little prince, who
wanted to help him.
"Ashamed of drinking!" The tipler brought his
speech to an end, and shut himself up in an impregnable silence.
And the little prince went away, puzzled.
"The grown-ups are certainly very, very odd," he
said to himself, as he continued on his journey.
CHAPTER 13
The fourth planet belonged to a businessman. This man was so much occupied that he did not even raise his head at the little prince's arrival.
"Good morning," the little prince said to him.
"Your cigarette has gone out."
"Three and two make five. Five and seven make twelve.
Twelve and three make fifteen. Good morning. FIfteen and seven make twenty-two.
Twenty-two and six make twenty-eight. I haven't time to light it again. Twenty-six
and five make thirty-one. Phew! Then that makes five-hundred-and-one million,
six-hundred-twenty-two-thousand, seven-hundred-thirty-one."
"Five hundred million what?" asked the little
prince.
"Eh? Are you still there? Five-hundred-and-one million--I
can't stop . . . I have so much to do! I am concerned with matters of
consequence. I don't amuse myself with balderdash. Two and five make seven . . ."
"Five-hundred-and-one million what?" repeated the
little prince, who never in his life had let go of a question once he had asked it.
The businessman raised his head.
"During the fifty-four years that I have inhabited this
planet, I have been disturbed only three times. The first time was twenty-two
years ago, when some giddy goose fell from goodness knows where. He made the
most frightful noise that resounded all over the place, and I made four mistakes
in my addition. The second time, eleven years ago, I was disturbed by an attack
of rheumatism. I don't get enough exercise. I have no time for loafing. The
third time--well, this is it! I was saying, then, five-hundred-and-one millions--"
"Millions of what?"
The businessman suddenly realized that there was no hope of
being left in peace until he answered this question.
"Millions of those little objects," he said, "which
one sometimes sees in the sky."
"Flies?"
"Oh, no. Little glittering objects."
"Bees?"
"Oh, no. Little golden objects that set lazy men to idle
dreaming. As for me, I am concerned with matters of consequence. There is no
time for idle dreaming in my life."
"Ah! You mean the stars?"
"Yes, that's it. The stars."
"And what do you do with five-hundred millions of stars?"
"Five-hundred-and-one million, six-hundred-twenty-two
thousand, seven-hundred-thirty-one. I am concerned with matters of consequence:
I am accurate."
"And what do you do with these stars?"
"What do I do with them?"
"Yes."
"Nothing. I own them."
"You own the stars?"
"Yes."
"But I have already seen a king who--"
"Kings do not own, they reign over. It is
a very different matter."
"And what good does it do you to own the stars?"
"It does me the good of making me rich."
"And what good does it do you to be rich?"
"It makes it possible for me to buy more stars, if any
are discovered."
"This man," the little prince said to himself,
"reasons a little like my poor tippler . . ."
Nevertheless, he still had some more questions.
"How is it possible for one to own the stars?"
"To whom do they belong?" the businessman retorted,
peevishly.
"I don't know. To nobody."
"Then they belong to me, because I was the first person
to think of it."
"Is that all that is necessary?"
"Certainly. When you find a diamond that belongs to
nobody, it is yours. When you discover an island that belongs to nobody, it is
yours. When you get an idea before any one else, you take out a patent on it: it
is yours. So with me: I own the stars, because nobody else before me ever
thought of owning them."
"Yes, that is true," said the little prince.
"And what do you do with them?"
"I administer them," replied the businessman.
"I count them and recount them. It is difficult. But I am a man who is
naturally interested in matters of consequence."
The little prince was still not satisfied.
"If I owned a silk scarf," he said, "I could
put it around my neck and take it away with me. If I owned a flower, I could
pluck that flower and take it away with me. But you cannot pluck the stars from
heaven . . ."
"No. But I can put them in the bank."
"Whatever does that mean?"
"That means that I write the number of my stars on a
little paper. And then I put this paper in a drawer and lock it with a key."
"And that is all?"
"That is enough," said the businessman.
"It is entertaining," thought the little prince.
"It is rather poetic. But it is of no great consequence."
On matters of consequence, the little prince had ideas which
were very different from those of the grown-ups.
"I myself own a flower," he continued his
conversation with the businessman, "which I water every day. I own three
volcanoes, which I clean out every week (for I also clean out the one that is
extinct; one never knows). It is of some use to my volcanoes, and it is of some
use to my flower, that I own them. But you are of no use to the stars . . ."
The businessman opened his mouth, but he found nothing to say
in answer. And the little prince went away.
"The grown-ups are certainly altogether extraordinary,"
he said simply, talking to himself as he continued on his journey.
CHAPTER 14
The fifth planet was very strange. It was the smallest of all. There was just enough room on it for a street lamp and a lamplighter. The little prince was not able to reach any explanation of the use of a street lamp and a lamplighter, somewhere in the heavens, on a planet which had no people, and not one house. But he said to himself, nevertheless:
"It may well be that this man is absurd. But he is not
so absurd as the king, the conceited man, the businessman, and the tippler. For
at least his work has some meaning. When he lights his street lamp, it is as if
he brought one more star to life, or one flower. When he puts out his lamp, he
sends the flower, or the star, to sleep. That is a beautiful occupation. And
since it is beautiful, it is truly useful."
When he arrived on the planet he respectfully saluted the
lamplighter.
"Good morning. Why have you just put out your
lamp?"
"Those are the orders," replied the lamplighter.
"Good morning."
"What are the orders?"
"The orders are that I put out my lamp. Good evening."
And he lighted his lamp again.
"But why have you just lighted it again?"
"Those are the orders," replied the lamplighter.
"I do not understand," said the little prince.
"There is nothing to understand," said the
lamplighter. "Orders are orders. Good morning."
And he put out his lamp.
Then he mopped his forehead with a handkerchief decorated
with red squares.
"I follow a terrible profession. In the old days it was
reasonable. I put the lamp out in the morning, and in the evening I lighted it
again. I had the rest of the day for relaxation and the rest of the night for
sleep."
"And the orders have been changed since that time?"
"The orders have not been changed," said the
lamplighter. "That is the tragedy! From year to year the planet has turned
more rapidly and the orders have not been changed!"
"Then what?" asked the little prince.
"Then--the planet now makes a complete turn every minute,
and I no longer have a single second for repose. Once every minute I have to
light my lamp and put it out!"
"That is very funny! A day lasts only one minute, here
where you live!"
"It is not funny at all!" said the lamplighter.
"While we have been talking together a month has gone by."
"A month?"
"Yes, a month. Thirty minutes. Thirty days. Good evening."
And he lighted his lamp again.
As the little prince watched him, he felt that he loved this
lamplighter who was so faithful to his orders. He remembered the sunsets which
he himself had gone to seek, in other days, merely by pulling up his chair; and
he wanted to help his friend.
"You know," he said, "I can tell you a way you
can rest whenever you want to. . ."
"I always want to rest," said the lamplighter.
For it is possible for a man to be faithful and lazy at the
same time.
The little prince went on with his explanation:
"Your planet is so small that three strides will take
you all the way around it. To be always in the sunshine, you need only walk
along rather slowly. When you want to rest, you will walk--and the day will last
as long as you like."
"That doesn't do me much good," said the
lamplighter. "The one thing I love in life is to sleep."
"Then you're unlucky," said the little prince.
"I am unlucky," said the lamplighter. "Good
morning."
And he put out his lamp.
"That man," said the little prince to himself, as
he continued farther on his journey, "that man would be scorned by all the
others: by the king, by the conceited man, by the tippler, by the businessman.
Nevertheless he is the only one of them all who does not seem to me ridiculous.
Perhaps that is because he is thinking of something else besides himself."
He breathed a sigh of regret, and said to himself, again:
"That man is the only one of them all whom I could have
made my friend. But his planet is indeed too small. There is no room on it for
two people. . ."
What the little prince did not dare confess was that he was
sorry most of all to leave this planet, because it was blest every day with 1440
sunsets!
CHAPTER 15
The sixth planet was ten times larger than the last one. It was inhabited by an old gentleman who wrote voluminous books.
"Oh, look! Here is an explorer!" he exclaimed to
himself when he saw the little prince coming.
The little prince sat down on the table and panted a little.
He had already traveled so much and so far!
"Where do you come from?" the old gentleman said to
him.
"What is that big book?" said the little prince.
"What are you doing?"
"I am a geographer," said the old gentleman.
"What is a geographer?" asked the little prince.
"A geographer is a scholar who knows the location of all
the seas, rivers, towns, mountains, and deserts."
"That is very interesting," said the little prince.
"Here at last is a man who has a real profession!" And he cast a look
around him at the planet of the geographer. It was the most magnificent and
stately planet that he had ever seen.
"Your planet is very beautiful," he said. "Has
it any oceans?"
"I couldn't tell you," said the geographer.
"Ah!" The little prince was disappointed. "Has
it any mountains?"
"I couldn't tell you," said the geographer.
"And towns, and rivers, and deserts?"
"I couldn't tell you that, either."
"But you are a geographer!"
"Exactly," the geographer said. "But I am not
an explorer. I haven't a single explorer on my planet. It is not the geographer
who goes out to count the towns, the rivers, the mountains, the seas, the oceans,
and the deserts. The geographer is much too important to go loafing about. He
does not leave his desk. But he receives the explorers in his study. He asks
them questions, and he notes down what they recall of their travels. And if the
recollections of any one among them seem interesting to him, the geographer
orders an inquiry into that explorer's moral character."
"Why is that?"
"Because an explorer who told lies would bring disaster
on the books of the geographer. So would an explorer who drank too much."
"Why is that?" asked the little prince.
"Because intoxicated men see double. Then the geographer
would note down two mountains in a place where there was only one."
"I know some one," said the little prince, "who
would make a bad explorer."
"That is possible. Then, when the moral character of the
explorer is shown to be good, an inquiry is ordered into his discovery."
"One goes to see it?"
"No. That would be too complicated. But one requires the
explorer to furnish proofs. For example, if the discovery in question is that of
a large mountain, one requires that large stones be brought back from it."
The geographer was suddenly stirred to excitement.
"But you--you come from far away! You are an explorer!
You shall describe your planet to me!"
And, having opened his big register, the geographer sharpened
his pencil. The recitals of explorers are put down first in pencil. One waits
until the explorer has furnished proofs, before putting them down in ink.
"Well?" said the geographer expectantly.
"Oh, where I live," said the little prince, "it
is not very interesting. It is all so small. I have three volcanoes. Two
volcanoes are active and the other is extinct. But one never knows."
"One never knows," said the geographer.
"I have also a flower."
"We do not record flowers," said the geographer.
"Why is that? The flower is the most beautiful thing on
my planet!"
"We do not record them," said the geographer,
"because they are ephemeral."
"What does that mean--'ephemeral'?"
"Geographies," said the geographer, "are the
books which, of all books, are most concerned with matters of consequence. They
never become old-fashioned. It is very rarely that a mountain changes its
position. It is very rarely that an ocean empties itself of its waters. We write
of eternal things."
"But extinct volcanoes may come to life again," the
little prince interrupted. "What does that mean-- 'ephemeral'?"
"Whether volcanoes are extinct or alive, it comes to the
same thing for us," said the geographer. "The thing that matters to us
is the mountain. It does not change."
"But what does that mean--'ephemeral'?" repeated
the little prince, who never in his life had let go of a question, once he had
asked it.
"It means, 'which is in danger of speedy disappearance.'"
"Is my flower in danger of speedy disappearance?"
"Certainly it is."
"My flower is ephemeral," the little prince said to
himself, "and she has only four thorns to defend herself against the world.
And I have left her on my planet, all alone!"
That was his first moment of regret. But he took courage once
more.
"What place would you advise me to visit now?" he
asked.
"The planet Earth," replied the geographer. "It
has a good reputation."
And the little prince went away, thinking of his flower
CHAPTER 16
So then the seventh planet was the Earth.
The Earth is not just an ordinary planet! One can count,
there, 111 kings (not forgetting, to be sure, the Negro kings among them), 7000
geographers, 900,000 businessmen, 7,500,000 tipplers, 311,000,000 conceited men--that
is to say, about 2,000,000,000 grown-ups.
To give you an idea of the size of the Earth, I will tell you
that before the invention of electricity it was necessary to maintain, over the
whole of the six continents, a veritable army of 462,511 lamplighters for the
street lamps.
Seen from a slight distance, that would make a splendid
spectacle. The movements of this army would be regulated like those of the
ballet in the opera. First would come the turn of the lamplighters of New
Zealand and Australia. Having set their lamps alight, these would go off to
sleep. Next, the lamplighters of China and Siberia would enter for their steps
in the dance, and then they too would be waved back into the wings. After that
would come the turn of the lamplighters of Russia and the Indies; then those of
Africa and Europe; then those of South America; then those of South America;
then those of North America. And never would they make a mistake in the order of
their entry upon the stage. It would be magnificent.
Only the man who was in charge of the single lamp at the
North Pole, and his colleague who was responsible for the single lamp at the
South Pole--only these two would live free from toil and care: they would be
busy twice a year.
CHAPTER 17
When one wishes to play the wit, he sometimes wanders a little from the truth. I have not been altogether honest in what I have told you about the lamplighters. And I realize that I run the risk of giving a false idea of our planet to those who do not know it. Men occupy a very small place upon the Earth. If the two billion inhabitants who people its surface were all to stand upright and somewhat crowded together, as they do for some big public assembly, they could easily be put into one public square twenty miles long and twenty miles wide. All humanity could be piled up on a small Pacific islet.
The grown-ups, to be sure, will not believe you when you tell
them that. They imagine that they fill a great deal of space. They fancy
themselves as important as the baobabs. You should advise them, then, to make
their own calculations. They adore figures, and that will please them. But do
not waste your time on this extra task. It is unnecessary. You have, I know,
confidence in me.
When the little prince arrived on the Earth, he was very much
surprised not to see any people. He was beginning to be afraid he had come to
the wrong planet, when a coil of gold, the color of the moonlight, flashed
across the sand.
"Good evening," said the little prince courteously.
"Good evening," said the snake.
"What planet is this on which I have come down?"
asked the little prince.
"This is the Earth; this is Africa," the snake
answered.
"Ah! Then there are no people on the Earth?"
"This is the desert. There are no people in the desert.
The Earth is large," said the snake.
The little prince sat down on a stone, and raised his eyes
toward the sky.
"I wonder," he said, "whether the stars are
set alight in heaven so that one day each one of us may find his own again . . .
Look at my planet. It is right there above us. But how far away it is!"
"It is beautiful," the snake said. "What has
brought you here?"
"I have been having some trouble with a flower,"
said the little prince.
"Ah!" said the snake.
And they were both silent.
"Where are the men?" the little prince at last took
up the conversation again. "It is a little lonely in the desert . . ."
"It is also lonely among men," the snake said.
The little prince gazed at him for a long time.
"You are a funny animal," he said at last. "You
are no thicker than a finger . . ."
"But I am more powerful than the finger of a king,"
said the snake.
The little prince smiled.
"You are not very powerful. You haven't even any feet.
You cannot even travel . . ."
"I can carry you farther than any ship could take you,"
said the snake.
He twined himself around the little prince's ankle, like a
golden bracelet.
"Whomever I touch, I send back to the earth from whence
he came," the snake spoke again. "But you are innocent and true, and
you come from a star . . ."
The little prince made no reply.
"You move me to pity--you are so weak on this Earth made
of granite," the snake said. "I can help you, some day, if you grow
too homesick for your own planet. I can--"
"Oh! I understand you very well," said the little
prince. "But why do you always speak in riddles?"
"I solve them all," said the snake.
And they were both silent.
CHAPTER 18
The little prince crossed the desert and met with only one flower. It was a flower with three petals, a flower of no account at all.
"Good morning," said the little prince.
"Good morning," said the flower.
"Where are the men?" the little prince asked,
politely.
The flower had once seen a caravan passing.
"Men?" she echoed. "I think there are six or
seven of them in existence. I saw them, several years ago. But one never knows
where to find them. The wind blows them away. They have no roots, and that makes
their life very difficult."
"Goodbye," said the little prince.
"Goodbye," said the flower.
CHAPTER 19
After that, the little prince climbed a high mountain. The only mountains he had ever known were the three volcanoes, which came up to his knees. And he used the extinct volcano as a footstool. "From a mountain as high as this one," he said to himself, "I shall be able to see the whole planet at one glance, and all the people . . ."
But he saw nothing, save peaks of rock that were sharpened
like needles.
"Good morning," he said courteously.
"Good morning--Good morning--Good morning,"
answered the echo.
"Who are you?" said the little prince.
"Who are you--Who are you--Who are you?" answered
the echo.
"Be my friends. I am all alone," he said.
"I am all alone--all alone--all alone," answered
the echo.
"What a queer planet!" he thought. "It is
altogether dry, and altogether pointed, and altogether harsh and forbidding. And
the people have no imagination. They repeat whatever one says to them . . . On
my planet I had a flower; she always was the first to speak . . ."
CHAPTER 20
But it happened that after walking for a long time through sand, and rocks, and snow, the little prince at last came upon a road. And all roads lead to the abodes of men.
"Good morning," he said.
He was standing before a garden, all a-bloom with roses.
"Good morning," said the roses.
The little prince gazed at them. They all looked like his
flower.
"Who are you?" he demanded, thunderstruck.
"We are roses," the roses said.
And he was overcome with sadness. His flower had told him
that she was the only one of her kind in all the universe. And here were five
thousand of them, all alike, in one single garden!
"She would be very much annoyed," he said to
himself, "if she should see that . . . She would cough most dreadfully, and
she would pretend that she was dying, to avoid being laughed at. And I should be
obliged to pretend that I was nursing her back to life--for if I did not do that,
to humble myself also, she would really allow herself to die. . ."
Then he went on with his reflections: "I thought that I
was rich, with a flower that was unique in all the world; and all I had was a
common rose. A common rose, and three volcanoes that come up to my knees--and
one of them perhaps extinct forever . . . That doesn't make me a very great
prince . . ."
And he lay down in the grass and cried.¨
CHAPTER 21
It was then that the fox appeared.
"Good morning," said the fox.
"Good morning," the little prince responded
politely, although when he turned around he saw nothing.
"I am right here," the voice said, "under the
apple tree."
"Who are you?" asked the little prince, and added,
"You are very pretty to look at."
"I am a fox," the fox said.
"Come and play with me," proposed the little
prince. "I am so unhappy."
"I cannot play with you," the fox said. "I am
not tamed."
"Ah! Please excuse me," said the little prince.
But, after some thought, he added:
"What does that mean--'tame'?"
"You do not live here," said the fox. "What is
it that you are looking for?"
"I am looking for men," said the little prince.
"What does that mean--'tame'?"
"Men," said the fox. "They have guns, and they
hunt. It is very disturbing. They also raise chickens. These are their only
interests. Are you looking for chickens?"
"No," said the little prince. "I am looking
for friends. What does that mean--'tame'?"
"It is an act too often neglected," said the fox.
"It means to establish ties."
"'To establish ties'?"
"Just that," said the fox. "To me, you are
still nothing more than a little boy who is just like a hundred thousand other
little boys. And I have no need of you. And you, on your part, have no need of
me. To you, I am nothing more than a fox like a hundred thousand other foxes.
But if you tame me, then we shall need each other. To me, you will be unique in
all the world. To you, I shall be unique in all the world . . ."
"I am beginning to understand," said the little
prince. "There is a flower . . . I think that she has tamed me . . ."
"It is possible," said the fox. "On the Earth
one sees all sorts of things."
"Oh, but this is not on the Earth!" said the little prince.
The fox seemed perplexed, and very curious.
"On another planet?"
"Yes."
"Are there hunters on that planet?"
"No."
"Ah, that is interesting! Are there chickens?"
"No."
"Nothing is perfect," sighed the fox.
But he came back to his idea.
"My life is very monotonous," the fox said. "I
hunt chickens; men hunt me. All the chickens are just alike, and all the men are
just alike. And, in consequence, I am a little bored. But if you tame me, it
will be as if the sun came to shine on my life. I shall know the sound of a step
that will be different from all the others. Other steps send me hurrying back
underneath the ground. Yours will call me, like music, out of my burrow. And
then look: you see the grain-fields down yonder? I do not eat bread. Wheat is of
no use to me. The wheat fields have nothing to say to me. And that is sad. But
you have hair that is the color of gold. Think how wonderful that will be when
you have tamed me! The grain, which is also golden, will bring me back the
thought of you. And I shall love to listen to the wind in the wheat . . ."
The fox gazed at the little prince, for a long time.
"Please--tame me!" he said.
"I want to, very much," the little prince replied.
"But I have not much time. I have friends to discover, and a great many
things to understand."
"One only understands the things that one tames,"
said the fox. "Men have no more time to understand anything. They buy
things all ready made at the shops. But there is no shop anywhere where one can
buy friendship, and so men have no friends any more. If you want a friend, tame
me . . ."
"What must I do, to tame you?" asked the little prince.
"You must be very patient," replied the fox. "First
you will sit down at a little distance from me--like that--in the grass. I shall
look at you out of the corner of my eye, and you will say nothing. Words are the
source of misunderstandings. But you will sit a little closer to me, every day . . ."
The next day the little prince came back.
"It would have been better to come back at the same hour,"
said the fox. "If, for example, you come at four o'clock in the afternoon,
then at three o'clock I shall begin to be happy. I shall feel happier and
happier as the hour advances. At four o'clock, I shall already be worrying and
jumping about. I shall show you how happy I am! But if you come at just any time,
I shall never know at what hour my heart is to be ready to greet you . . . One
must observe the proper rites . . ."
"What is a rite?" asked the little prince.
"Those also are actions too often neglected," said
the fox. "They are what make one day different from other days, one hour
from other hours. There is a rite, for example, among my hunters. Every Thursday
they dance with the village girls. So Thursday is a wonderful day for me! I can
take a walk as far as the vineyards. But if the hunters danced at just any time,
every day would be like every other day, and I should never have any vacation at
all."
So the little prince tamed the fox. And when the hour of his
departure drew near--
"Ah," said the fox, "I shall cry."
"It is your own fault," said the little prince.
"I never wished you any sort of harm; but you wanted me to tame you . . ."
"Yes, that is so," said the fox.
"But now you are going to cry!" said the little prince.
"Yes, that is so," said the fox.
"Then it has done you no good at all!"
"It has done me good," said the fox, "because
of the color of the wheat fields." And then he added:
"Go and look again at the roses. You will understand now
that yours is unique in all the world. Then come back to say goodbye to me, and
I will make you a present of a secret."
The little prince went away, to look again at the roses.
"You are not at all like my rose," he said.
"As yet you are nothing. No one has tamed you, and you have tamed no one.
You are like my fox when I first knew him. He was only a fox like a hundred
thousand other foxes. But I have made him my friend, and now he is unique in all
the world."
And the roses were very much embarassed.
"You are beautiful, but you are empty," he went on.
"One could not die for you. To be sure, an ordinary passerby would think
that my rose looked just like you--the rose that belongs to me. But in herself
alone she is more important than all the hundreds of you other roses: because it
is she that I have watered; because it is she that I have put under the glass
globe; because it is she that I have sheltered behind the screen; because it is
for her that I have killed the caterpillars (except the two or three that we
saved to become butterflies); because it is she that I have listened to, when
she grumbled, or boasted, or ever sometimes when she said nothing. Because she
is my rose.
And he went back to meet the fox.
"Goodbye," he said.
"Goodbye," said the fox. "And now here is my
secret, a very simple secret: It is only with the heart that one can see rightly;
what is essential is invisible to the eye."
"What is essential is invisible to the eye," the
little prince repeated, so that he would be sure to remember.
"It is the time you have wasted for your rose that makes
your rose so important."
"It is the time I have wasted for my rose--" said
the little prince, so that he would be sure to remember.
"Men have forgotten this truth," said the fox.
"But you must not forget it. You become responsible, forever, for what you
have tamed. You are responsible for your rose . . ."
"I am responsible for my rose," the little prince
repeated, so that he would be sure to remember.
CHAPTER 22
"Good morning," said the little prince.
"Good morning", said the railway switchman.
"What do you do here?" the little prince asked.
"I sort out travelers, in bundles of a thousand"
, said the switchman. "I send off the trains that carry them: now to the
right, now to the left."
And a brilliantly lighted express train shook the switchman's
cabin as it rushed by with a roar like thunder.
"They are in a great hurry," said the little
prince. "What are they looking for?"
"Not even the locomotive engineer knows that," said the switchman.
And a second brilliantly lighted express thundered by, in the
opposite direction.
"Are they coming back already?" demanded the little prince.
"These are not the same ones," said the switchman.
"It is an exchange."
"Were they not satisfied where they were?" asked
the little prince.
"No one is ever satisfied where he is," said the
switchman.
And they heard the roaring thunder of a third brilliantly
lighted express.
"Are they pursuing the first travelers?" demanded
the little prince.
"They are pursuing nothing at all," said the
switchman. "They are asleep in there, or if they are not asleep they are
yawning. Only the children are flattening their noses against the windowpanes."
"Only the children know what they are looking for,"
said the little prince. "They waste their time over a rag doll and it
becomes very important to them; and if anybody takes it away from them, they cry . . ."
"They are lucky," the switchman said.
CHAPTER 23
"Good morning," said the little prince.
"Good morning," said the merchant.
This was a merchant who sold pills that had been invented to
quench thirst. You need only swallow one pill a week, and you would feel no need
of anything to drink.
"Why are you selling those?" asked the little
prince.
"Because they save a tremendous amount of time,"
said the merchant. "Computations have been made by experts. With these
pills, you save fifty-three minutes in every week."
"And what do I do with those fifty-three minutes?"
"Anything you like . . ."
"As for me," said the little prince to himself,
"if I had fifty-three minutes to spend as I liked, I should walk at my
leisure toward a spring of fresh water."
CHAPTER 24
It was now the eighth day since I had had my accident in the desert, and I had listened to the story of the merchant as I was drinking the last drop of my water supply.
"Ah," I said to the little prince, "these
memories of yours are very charming; but I have not yet succeeded in repairing
my plane; I have nothing more to drink; and I, too, should be very happy if I
could walk at my leisure toward a spring of fresh water!"
"My friend the fox--" the little prince said to me.
"My dear little man, this is no longer a matter that has
anything to do with the fox!"
"Why not?"
"Because I am about to die of thirst . . ."
He did not follow my reasoning, and he answered me:
"It is a good thing to have had a friend, even if one is
about to die. I, for instance, am very glad to have had a fox as a friend . . ."
"He has no way of guessing the danger," I said to
myself. "He has never been either hungry or thirsty. A little sunshine is
all he needs . . ."
But he looked at me steadily, and replied to my thought:
"I am thirsty, too. Let us look for a well . . ."
I made a gesture of weariness. It is absurd to look for a
well, at random, in the immensity of the desert. But nevertheless we started walking.
When we had trudged along for several hours, in silence, the
darkness fell, and the stars began to come out. Thirst had made me a little
feverish, and I looked at them as if I were in a dream. The little prince's last
words came reeling back into my memory:
"Then you are thirsty, too?" I demanded.
But he did not reply to my question. He merely said to me:
"Water may also be good for the heart . . ."
I did not understand this answer, but I said nothing. I knew
very well that it was impossible to cross-examine him.
He was tired. He sat down. I sat down beside him. And, after
a little silence, he spoke again:
"The stars are beautiful, because of a flower that
cannot be seen."
I replied, "Yes, that is so." And, without saying
anything more, I looked across the ridges of sand that were stretched out before
us in the moonlight.
"The desert is beautiful," the little prince added.
And that was true. I have always loved the desert. One sits
down on a desert sand dune, sees nothing, hears nothing. Yet through the silence
something throbs, and gleams . . .
"What makes the desert beautiful," said the little
prince, "is that somewhere it hides a well . . ."
I was astonished by a sudden understanding of that mysterious
radiation of the sands. When I was a little boy I lived in an old house, and
legend told us that a treasure was buried there. To be sure, no one had ever
known how to find it; perhaps no one had ever even looked for it. But it cast an
enchantment over that house. My home was hiding a secret in the depths of its
heart . . .
"Yes," I said to the little prince. "The
house, the stars, the desert--what gives them their beauty is something that is
invisible!"
"I am glad," he said, "that you agree with my fox."
As the little prince dropped off to sleep, I took him in my
arms and set out walking once more. I felt deeply moved, and stirred. It seemed
to me that I was carrying a very fragile treasure. It seemed to me, even, that
there was nothing more fragile on all Earth. In the moonlight I looked at his
pale forehead, his closed eyes, his locks of hair that trembled in the wind, and
I said to myself: "What I see here is nothing but a shell. What is most
important is invisible . . ."
As his lips opened slightly with the suspicion of a
half-smile, I said to myself, again: "What moves me so deeply, about this
little prince who is sleeping here, is his loyalty to a flower--the image of a
rose that shines through his whole being like the flame of a lamp, even when he
is asleep . . ." And I felt him to be more fragile still. I felt the need
of protecting him, as if he himself were a flame that might be extinguished by a
little puff of wind . . .
And, as I walked on so, I found the well, at daybreak.
CHAPTER 25
"Men," said the little prince, "set out on their way in express trains, but they do not know what they are looking for. Then they rush about, and get excited, and turn round and round . . ."
And he added:
"It is not worth the trouble . . ."
The well that we had come to was not like the wells of the
Sahara. The wells of the Sahara are mere holes dug in the sand. This one was
like a well in a village. But there was no village here, and I thought I must be
dreaming . . .
"It is strange," I said to the little prince.
"Everything is ready for use: the pulley, the bucket, the rope . . ."
He laughed, touched the rope, and set the pulley to working.
And the pulley moaned, like an old weathervane which the wind has long since
forgotten.
"Do you hear?" said the little prince. "We
have wakened the well, and it is singing . . ."
I did not want him to tire himself with the rope.
"Leave it to me," I said. "It is too heavy for
you."
I hoisted the bucket slowly to the edge of the well and set
it there--happy, tired as I was, over my achievement. The song of the pulley was
still in my ears, and I could see the sunlight shimmer in the still trembling
water.
"I am thirsty for this water," said the little
prince. "Give me some of it to drink . . ."
And I understood what he had been looking for.
I raised the bucket to his lips. He drank, his eyes closed.
It was as sweet as some special festival treat. This water was indeed a
different thing from ordinary nourishment. Its sweetness was born of the walk
under the stars, the song of the pulley, the effort of my arms. It was good for
the heart, like a present. When I was a little boy, the lights of the Christmas
tree, the music of the Midnight Mass, the tenderness of smiling faces, used to
make up, so, the radiance of the gifts I received.
"The men where you live," said the little prince,
"raise five thousand roses in the same garden--and they do not find in it
what they are looking for."
"They do not find it," I replied.
"And yet what they are looking for could be found in one
single rose, or in a little water."
"Yes, that is true," I said.
And the little prince added:
"But the eyes are blind. One must look with the heart . . ."
I had drunk the water. I breathed easily. At sunrise the sand
is the color of honey. And that honey color was making me happy, too. What
brought me, then, this sense of grief?
"You must keep your promise," said the little
prince, softly, as he sat down beside me once more.
"What promise?"
"You know--a muzzle for my sheep . . . I am responsible
for this flower . . ."
I took my rough drafts of drawings out of my pocket. The
little prince looked them over, and laughed as he said:
"Your baobabs--they look a little like cabbages."
"Oh!"
I had been so proud of my baobabs!
"Your fox--his ears look a little like horns; and they
are too long."
And he laughed again.
"You are not fair, little prince," I said. "I
don't know how to draw anything except boa constrictors from the outside and boa
constrictors from the inside."
"Oh, that will be all right," he said, "children
understand."
So then I made a pencil sketch of a muzzle. And as I gave it
to him my heart was torn.
"You have plans that I do not know about," I said.
But he did not answer me. He said to me, instead:
"You know--my descent to the earth . . . Tomorrow will
be its anniversary."
Then, after a silence, he went on:
"I came down very near here."
And he flushed.
And once again, without understanding why, I had a queer
sense of sorrow. One question, however, occurred to me:
"Then it was not by chance that on the morning when I
first met you--a week ago--you were strolling along like that, all alone, a
thousand miles from any inhabited region? You were on the your back to the place
where you landed?"
The little prince flushed again.
And I added, with some hesitancy:
"Perhaps it was because of the anniversary?"
The little prince flushed once more. He never answered
questions--but when one flushes does that not mean "Yes"?
"Ah," I said to him, "I am a little frightened--"
But he interrupted me.
"Now you must work. You must return to your engine. I
will be waiting for you here. Come back tomorrow evening . . ."
But I was not reassured. I remembered the fox. One runs the
risk of weeping a little, if one lets himself be tamed . . .
CHAPTER 26
Beside the well there was the ruin of an old stone wall. When I came back from my work, the next evening, I saw from some distance away my little price sitting on top of a wall, with his feet dangling. And I heard him say:
"Then you don't remember. This is not the exact spot."
Another voice must have answered him, for he replied to it:
"Yes, yes! It is the right day, but this is not the place."
I continued my walk toward the wall. At no time did I see or
hear anyone. The little prince, however, replied once again:
"--Exactly. You will see where my track begins, in the
sand. You have nothing to do but wait for me there. I shall be there tonight."
I was only twenty meters from the wall, and I still saw nothing.
After a silence the little prince spoke again:
"You have good poison? You are sure that it will not
make me suffer too long?"
I stopped in my tracks, my heart torn asunder; but still I
did not understand.
"Now go away," said the little prince. "I want
to get down from the wall."
I dropped my eyes, then, to the foot of the wall--and I
leaped into the air. There before me, facing the little prince, was one of those
yellow snakes that take just thirty seconds to bring your life to an end. Even
as I was digging into my pocked to get out my revolver I made a running step
back. But, at the noise I made, the snake let himself flow easily across the
sand like the dying spray of a fountain, and, in no apparent hurry, disappeared,
with a light metallic sound, among the stones.
I reached the wall just in time to catch my little man in my
arms; his face was white as snow.
"What does this mean?" I demanded. "Why are
you talking with snakes?"
I had loosened the golden muffler that he always wore. I had
moistened his temples, and had given him some water to drink. And now I did not
dare ask him any more questions. He looked at me very gravely, and put his arms
around my neck. I felt his heart beating like the heart of a dying bird, shot
with someone's rifle . . .
"I am glad that you have found what was the matter with
your engine," he said. "Now you can go back home--"
"How do you know about that?"
I was just coming to tell him that my work had been
successful, beyond anything that I had dared to hope.
He made no answer to my question, but he added:
"I, too, am going back home today . . ."
Then, sadly--
"It is much farther . . . It is much more difficult . . ."
I realized clearly that something extraordinary was
happening. I was holding him close in my arms as if he were a little child; and
yet it seemed to me that he was rushing headlong toward an abyss from which I
could do nothing to restrain him . . .
His look was very serious, like some one lost far away.
"I have your sheep. And I have the sheep's box. And I
have the muzzle . . ."
And he gave me a sad smile.
I waited a long time. I could see that he was reviving little
by little.
"Dear little man," I said to him, "you are afraid . . ."
He was afraid, there was no doubt about that. But he laughed lightly.
"I shall be much more afraid this evening . . ."
Once again I felt myself frozen by the sense of something
irreparable. And I knew that I could not bear the thought of never hearing that
laughter any more. For me, it was like a spring of fresh water in the desert.
"Little man," I said, "I want to hear you laugh again."
But he said to me:
"Tonight, it will be a year . . . My star, then, can be
found right above the place where I came to the Earth, a year ago . . ."
"Little man," I said, "tell me that it is only
a bad dream--this affair of the snake, and the meeting-place, and the star . . ."
But he did not answer my plea. He said to me, instead:
"The thing that is important is the thing that is not
seen . . ."
"Yes, I know . . ."
"It is just as it is with the flower. If you love a
flower that lives on a star, it is sweet to look at the sky at night. All the
stars are a-bloom with flowers . . ."
"Yes, I know . . ."
"It is just as it is with the water. Because of the
pulley, and the rope, what you gave me to drink was like music. You remember--how
good it was."
"Yes, I know . . ."
"And at night you will look up at the stars. Where I
live everything is so small that I cannot show you where my star is to be found.
It is better, like that. My star will just be one of the stars, for you. And so
you will love to watch all the stars in the heavens . . . they will all be your
friends. And, besides, I am going to make you a present . . ."
He laughed again.
"Ah, little prince, dear little prince! I love to hear
that laughter!"
"That is my present. Just that. It will be as it was
when we drank the water . . ."
"What are you trying to say?"
"All men have the stars," he answered, "but
they are not the same things for different people. For some, who are travelers,
the stars are guides. For others they are no more than little lights in the sky.
For others, who are scholars, they are problems. For my businessman they were
wealth. But all these stars are silent. You--you alone--will have the stars as
no one else has them--"
"What are you trying to say?"
"In one of the stars I shall be living. In one of them I
shall be laughing. And so it will be as if all the stars were laughing, when you
look at the sky at night . . . You--only you--will have stars that can laugh!"
And he laughed again.
"And when your sorrow is comforted (time soothes all
sorrows) you will be content that you have known me. You will always be my
friend. You will want to laugh with me. And you will sometimes open your window,
so, for that pleasure . . . And your friends will be properly astonished to see
you laughing as you look up at the sky! Then you will say to them, 'Yes, the
stars always make me laugh!' And they will think you are crazy. It will be a
very shabby trick that I shall have played on you . . ."
And he laughed again.
"It will be as if, in place of the stars, I had given
you a great number of little bells that knew how to laugh . . ."
And he laughed again. Then he quickly became serious:
"Tonight--you know . . . Do not come."
"I shall not leave you," I said.
"I shall look as if I were suffering. I shall look a
little as if I were dying. It is like that. Do not come to see that. It is not
worth the trouble . . ."
"I shall not leave you."
But he was worried.
"I tell you--it is also because of the snake. He must
not bite you. Snakes--they are malicious creatures. This one might bite you just
for fun . . ."
"I shall not leave you."
But a thought came to reassure him:
"It is true that they have no more poison for a second
bite."
That night I did not see him set out on his way. He got away
from me without making a sound. When I succeeded in catching up with him he was
walking along with a quick and resolute step. He said to me merely:
"Ah! You are there . . ."
And he took me by the hand. But he was still worrying.
"It was wrong of you to come. You will suffer. I shall
look as if I were dead; and that will not be true . . ."
I said nothing.
"You understand . . . it is too far. I cannot carry this
body with me. It is too heavy."
I said nothing.
"But it will be like an old abandoned shell. There is
nothing sad about old shells . . ."
I said nothing.
He was a little discouraged. But he made one more effort:
"You know, it will be very nice. I, too, shall look at
the stars. All the stars will be wells with a rusty pulley. All the stars will
pour out fresh water for me to drink . . ."
I said nothing.
"That will be so amusing! You will have five hundred
million little bells, and I shall have five hundred million springs of fresh
water . . ."
And he too said nothing more, becuase he was crying . . .
"Here it is. Let me go on by myself."
And he sat down, because he was afraid. Then he said, again:
"You know--my flower . . . I am responsible for her. And
she is so weak! She is so naďve! She has four thorns, of no use at all, to
protect herself against all the world . . ."
I too sat down, because I was not able to stand up any longer.
"There now--that is all . . ."
He still hesitated a little; then he got up. He took one
step. I could not move.
There was nothing but a flash of yellow close to his ankle.
He remained motionless for an instant. He did not cry out. He fell as gently as
a tree falls. There was not even any sound, because of the sand.
CHAPTER 27
And now six years have already gone by . . . I have never yet told this story. The companions who met me on my return were well content to see me alive. I was sad, but I told them: "I am tired."
Now my sorrow is comforted a little. That is to say--not
entirely. But I know that he did go back to his planet, because I did not find
his body at daybreak. It was not such a heavy body . . . and at night I love to
listen to the stars. It is like five hundred million little bells . . .
But there is one extraordinary thing . . . when I drew the
muzzle for the little prince, I forgot to add the leather strap to it. He will
never have been able to fasten it on his sheep. So now I keep wondering: what is
happening on his planet? Perhaps the sheep has eaten the flower . . .
At one time I say to myself: "Surely not! The little
prince shuts his flower under her glass globe every night, and he watches over
his sheep very carefully . . ." Then I am happy. And there is sweetness in
the laughter of all the stars.
But at another time I say to myself: "At some moment or
other one is absent-minded, and that is enough! On some one evening he forgot
the glass globe, or the sheep got out, without making any noise, in the night .
. ." And then the little bells are changed to tears . . .
Here, then, is a great mystery. For you who also love the
little prince, and for me, nothing in the universe can be the same if somewhere,
we do not know where, a sheep that we never saw has--yes or no?--eaten a rose . . .
Look up at the sky. Ask yourselves: is it yes or no? Has the
sheep eaten the flower? And you will see how everything changes . . .
And no grown-up will ever understand that this is a matter of
so much importance!
This is, to me, the loveliest and saddest landscape in the
world. It is the same as that on the preceding page, but I have drawn it again
to impress it on your memory. It is here that the little prince appeared on
Earth, and disappeared.
Look at it carefully so that you will be sure to recognize it
in case you travel some day to the African desert. And, if you should come upon
this spot, please do not hurry on. Wait for a time, exactly under the star. Then,
if a little man appears who laughs, who has golden hair and who refuses to
answer questions, you will know who he is. If this should happen, please comfort
me. Send me word that he has come back.
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