By Antoine De Saint-Exupery
Copyright 1943
It was either in seventh or eighth grade that my homeroom teacher
read this book to our class. We all
looked forward to the end of the day when we could set aside our school work
and listen to a story. I don’t really
remember how much I learned from the book at that time, other than the fact
that one never outgrows the ability to enjoy being read to. For some time, I’ve had the French version of
the book, but that didn’t do me much good.
Yes, I took three years of French in high school. But no, I’m not capable of understanding a
children’s book written in French.
Fortunately, last week I came across an English version in a used book
store.
The Little Prince
has come from a very, very small asteroid.
So small that by moving his chair around one day, he saw forty-four
sunsets. On a trip around the galaxy,
the little prince visits other small asteroids, remarking on the strangeness of
the adult inhabitants he meets.
Eventually coming to earth, he meets the narrator of the story, a pilot
who has crashed his airplane in the desert and is worried about dying of thirst. As the little prince tells the story of his
adventures, both he and the pilot learn many life lessons.
So much can be taken from The Little Prince. What
affected me when I read it this week?
The Little Prince notices that he loves the singular rose on
his planet more than men on earth love the thousands of roses on their bushes.
“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..”
The little prince has learned what many adults never
learn. Love is something that is felt with the heart, not seen with the eyes
or held in the hands. One can appreciate
a few simple belongings much more than a whole house overflowing with
possessions. More is not usually better.