The Illustrated Man

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Authors: Ray Bradbury
with what appeared to be curiosity and pity.
    “Do you have any pictures of the boy before today?” asked the captain.
    After a moment a large oil portrait was carried forth, showing the son with a withered arm.
    “My dear fellow!” The captain waved it away. “Anybody can paint a picture. Paintings lie. I want a photograph of the boy.”
    There was no photograph. Photography was not a known art in their society.
    “Well,” sighed the captain, face twitching, “let me talk to a few other citizens. We’re getting nowhere.” He pointed at a woman. “You.” She hesitated. “Yes, you; come here,” ordered the captain. “Tell me about this  wonderful  man you saw yesterday.”
    The woman looked steadily at the captain. “He walked among us and was very fine and good.”
    “What color were his eyes?”
    “The color of the sun, the color of the sea, the color of a flower, the color of the mountains, the color of the night.”
    “That’ll do.” The captain threw up his hands. “See, Martin? Absolutely nothing. Some charlatan wanders through whispering sweet nothings in their ears and——”
    “Please, stop it,” said Martin.
    The captain stepped back. “What?”
    “You heard what I said,” said Martin. “I like these people. I believe what they say. You’re entitled to your opinion, but keep it to yourself, sir.”
    “You can’t talk to me this way,” shouted the captain.
    “I’ve had enough of your highhandedness,” replied Martin. “Leave these people alone. They’ve got something good and decent, and you come and foul up the nest and sneer at it. Well, I’ve talked to them too. I’ve gone through the city and seen their faces, and they’ve got something you’ll never have—a little simple faith, and they’ll move mountains with it. You, you’re boiled because someone stole your act, got here ahead and made you unimportant!”
    “I’ll give you five seconds to finish,” remarked the captain. “I understand. You’ve been under a strain, Martin. Months of traveling in space, nostalgia, loneliness. And now, with this thing happening, I sympathize, Martin. I overlook your petty insubordination.”
    “I don’t overlook your petty tyranny,” replied Martin. “I’m stepping out. I’m staying here.”
    “You can’t do that!”
    “Can’t I? Try and stop me. This is what I came looking for. I didn’t know it, but this is it. This is for me. Take your filth somewhere else and foul up other nests with your doubt and your—scientific method!” He looked swiftly about. “These people have had an experience, and you can’t seem to get it through your head that it’s really happened and we were lucky enough to almost arrive in time to be in on it.
    “People on Earth have talked about this man for twenty centuries after he walked through the old world. We’ve all wanted to see him and hear him, and never had the chance. And now, today, we just missed seeing him by a few hours.”
    Captain Hart looked at Martin’s cheeks. “You’re crying like a baby. Stop it.”
    “I don’t care.”
    “Well, I do. In front of these natives we’re to keep up a front. You’re overwrought. As I said, I forgive you.”
    “I don’t want your forgiveness."
    “You idiot. Can’t you see this is one of Burton’s tricks, to fool these people, to bilk them, to establish his oil and mineral concerns under a religious guise! You fool, Martin. You absolute fool! You should know Earthmen by now. They’ll do anything—blaspheme, lie, cheat, steal, kill, to get their ends. Anything is fine if it works; the true pragmatist, that’s Burton. You know him!”
    The captain scoffed heavily. “Come off it, Martin, admit it; this is the sort of scaly thing Burton might carry off, polish up these citizens and pluck them when they’re ripe.”
    “No,” said Martin, thinking of it.
    The captain put his hand up. “That’s Burton. That’s him. That’s his dirt, that’s his criminal way. I have to

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