‘Your wish, dear lady, my command. Please pass the salt.’
   But he did not remember the names of the books. The long evening passed and she looked at her hands, biting her lips.
   Promptly at eight o’clock, she jumped up, crying out, ‘I remember!’
   In a matter of instants she was in their car, driving down the dark streets to town, into a bookstore where, laughing, she bought ten books.
   ‘Thank you!’ said the book dealer. ‘Good night!’
   The door slammed with a tinkle of bells.
   Charlie read late at night, sometimes fumbling to bed, blind with literature, at three in the morning.
   Now, at ten o’clock, before retiring, Marie slipped into the library, laid the ten books quietly next to Charlie, and tiptoed out.
   She watched through the library keyhole, her heart beating loudly in her. She was in a perfect fever.
   After a time, Charlie glanced up at the desk. He blinked at the new books. Hesitantly, he closed his copy of Samuel Johnson, and sat there.
   ‘Go on,’ whispered Marie through the keyhole. ‘Go on!’ Her breath came and went in her mouth.
   Charlie licked his lips thoughtfully and then, slowly, he put out his hand. Taking one of the new books, he opened it, settled down, and began reading.
   Singing softly, Marie walked off to bed.
   He bounded into the kitchen the next morning with a glad cry. ‘Hello, beautiful woman! Hello, lovely, wonderful, kind, understanding creature, living in this great wide sweet world!’
   She looked at him happily. ‘Saroyan?’ she said.
   ‘Saroyan!’ he cried, and they had breakfast.
   America
   We are the dream that other people dream.
   The land where other people land.
   When late at night
   They think on flight
   And, flying, here arrive
   Where we fools dumbly thrive ourselves.
   Refuse to see
   We be what all the world would like to be.
   Because we hive within this scheme
   The obvious dream is blind to us.
   We do not mind the miracle we are,
   So stop our mouths with curses.
   While all the world rehearses
   Coming here to stay.
   We busily make plans to go away.
   How dumb! newcomers cry, arrived from Chad.
   You’re mad! Iraqis shout.
   We’d sell our souls if we could be you.
   How come you cannot see the way we see you?
   You tread a freedom forest as you please.
   But, damn! You miss the forest for the trees.
   Ten thousand wanderers a week
   Engulf your shore,
   You wonder what their shouting’s for,
   And why so glad?
   Run warm those souls: America is bad?
   Sit down, stare in their faces, see!
   You be the hoped-for thing a hopeless world would be.
   In tides of immigrants that this year flow
   You still remain the beckoning hearth they’d know.
   In midnight beds with blueprint, plan and scheme
   You are the dream that other people dream.
   About the Author
   One of the greatest writers of science fiction and fantasy in the world today, Ray Bradbury was born in Waukegan, Illinois, in 1920. He moved with his family to Los Angeles in 1934. He has published some 500 short stories, novels, plays, scripts and poems since his first story appeared in Weird Tales when he was twenty years old. Ray Bradbury lives in Los Angeles.
   Visit www.AuthorTracker.com for exclusive information on your favorite HarperCollins author.
   By Ray Bradbury
   Ahmed and the Oblivion Machines
   The Anthem Sprinters
   Bradbury Speaks
   The Cat’s Pajamas
   Dandelion Wine
   Dark Carnival
   The Day it Rained Forever
   Death is a Lonely Business
   Driving Blind
   Fahrenheit 451
   Farewell Summer
   From the Dust Returned
   The Golden Apples of the Sun
   A Graveyard for Lunatics
   Green Shadows, White Whale
   The Halloween Tree
   I Sing the Body Electric!
   The Illustrated Man
   Let’s All Kill Constance
   Long After Midnight
   The Machineries of Joy
   The Martian Chronicles
   A Medicine for Melancholy
   Moby Dick (screenplay)
   Now and Forever
   The October Country
   One More for the Road
   Quicker Than the Eye
   R is for Rocket
   Ray Bradbury Stories Volume 1
   Ray Bradbury Stories Volume 2
   S is for Space
   The Small Assassin
   Something Wicked this Way Comes
   A Sound of Thunder
   The Toynbee Convector
   When Elephants Last in the Dooryard Bloomed
   Where Robot Mice and Robot Men Run Round in Robot Town
   The Wonderful Ice Cream Suit
   We’ll Always Have Paris
   Yestermorrow
   Zen in the Art of Writing   
    
   Ray Bradbury, We'll Always Have Paris: Stories  
     (Series:  # ) 
    
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