登陆注册
14726500000184

第184章

The troop had added their ration of parched corn and side meat to the supper of dried peas, stewed dried apples and peanuts which Mammy set before them and they declared it was the best meal they had had in months. Scarlett watched them eat and she was uneasy. She not only begrudged them every mouthful they ate but she was on tenterhooks lest they discover somehow that Pork had slaughtered one of the shoats the day before. It now hung in the pantry and she had grimly promised her household that she would scratch out the eyes of anyone who mentioned the shoat to their guests or the presence of the dead pig’s sisters and brothers, safe in their pen in the swamp. These hungry men could devour the whole shoat at one meal and, if they knew of the live hogs, they could commandeer them for the army. She was alarmed, too, for the cow and the horse and wished they were hidden in the swamp, instead of tied in the woods at the bottom of the pasture. If the commissary took her stock, Tara could not possibly live through the winter. There would be no way of replacing them. As to what this army would eat, she did not care. Let the army feed the army—if it could. It was hard enough for her to feed her own.

The men added as dessert some “ramrod rolls” from their knapsacks, and this was the first time Scarlett had ever seen this Confederate article of diet about which there were almost as many jokes as about lice. They were charred spirals of what appeared to be wood. The men dared her to take a bite and, when she did, she discovered that beneath the smoke-blackened surface was unsalted corn bread. The soldiers mixed their ration of corn meal with water, and salt too when they could get it, wrapped the thick paste about their ramrods and roasted the mess over camp fires. It was as hard as rock candy and as tasteless as sawdust and after one bite Scarlett hastily handed it back amid roars of laughter. She met Melanie’s eyes and the same thought was plain in both faces. ... “How can they go on fighting if they have only this stuff to eat?”

The meal was gay enough and even Gerald, presiding absently at the head of the table, managed to evoke from the back of his dim mind some of the manner of a host and an uncertain smile. The men talked, the women smiled and flattered—but Scarlett turning suddenly to Frank Kennedy to ask him news of Miss Pittypat, caught an expression on his face which made her forget what she intended to say.

His eyes had left Suellen’s and were wandering about the room, to Gerald’s childlike puzzled eyes, to the floor, bare of rugs, to the mantelpiece denuded of its ornaments, the sagging springs and torn upholstery into which Yankee bayonets had ripped, the cracked mirror above the sideboard, the unfaded squares on the wall where pictures had hung before the looters came, the scant table service, the decently mended but old dresses of the girls, the flour sack which had been made into a kilt for Wade.

Frank was remembering the Tara he had known before the war and on his face was a hurt look, a look of tired impotent anger. He loved Suellen, liked her sisters, respected Gerald and had a genuine fondness for the plantation. Since Sherman had swept through Georgia, Frank had seen many appalling sights as he rode about the state trying to collect supplies, but nothing had gone to his heart as Tara did now. He wanted to do something for the O’Haras, especially Suellen, and there was nothing he could do. He was unconsciously wagging his whiskered head in pity and clicking his tongue against his teeth when Scarlett caught his eye. He saw the flame of indignant pride in them and he dropped his gaze quickly to his plate in embarrassment.

The girls were hungry for news. There had been no mail service since Atlanta fell, now four months past, and they were in complete ignorance as to where the Yankees were, how the Confederate Army was faring, what had happened to Atlanta and to old friends. Frank, whose work took him all over the section, was as good as a newspaper, better even, for he was kin to or knew almost everyone from Macon north to Atlanta, and he could supply bits of interesting personal gossip which the papers always omitted. To cover his embarrassment at being caught by Scarlett, he plunged hastily into a recital of news. The Confederates, he told them, had retaken Atlanta after Sherman marched out, but it was a valueless prize as Sherman had burned it completely.

“But I thought Atlanta burned the night I left,” cried Scarlett, bewildered. “I thought our boys burned it!”

“Oh, no, Miss Scarlett!” cried Frank, shocked. “We’d never burn one of our own towns with our own folks in it! What you saw burning was the warehouses and the supplies we didn’t want the Yankees to capture and the foundries and the ammunition. But that was all. When Sherman took the town the houses and stores were standing there as pretty as you please. And he quartered his men in them.”

“But what happened to the people? Did he—did he kill them?”

“He killed some—but not with bullets,” said the one-eyed soldier grimly. “Soon’s he marched into Atlanta he told the mayor that all the people in town would have to move out, every living soul. And there were plenty of old folks that couldn’t stand the trip and sick folks that ought not to have been moved and ladies who were—well, ladies who hadn’t ought to be moved either. And he moved them out in the biggest rainstorm you ever saw, hundreds and hundreds of them, and dumped them in the woods near Rough and Ready and sent word to General Hood to come and get them. And a plenty of the folks died of pneumonia and not being able to stand that sort of treatment.”

“Oh, but why did he do that? They couldn’t have done him any harm,” cried Melanie.

“He said he wanted the town to rest his men and horses in,” said Frank. “And he rested them there till the middle of November and then he lit out. And he set fire to the whole town when he left and burned everything.”

“Oh, surely not everything!” cried the girls in dismay.

同类推荐
  • beyond the city

    beyond the city

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • The Countess of Saint Geran

    The Countess of Saint Geran

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 鬼谷子

    鬼谷子

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 送苗七求职

    送苗七求职

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 经效产宝

    经效产宝

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 强势唤忆,总裁请自重

    强势唤忆,总裁请自重

    他在她生死攸关的时候救了她,她在他洗澡时看光了他的全身。她许诺要嫁给他却在结婚当日失踪,两年后进入他的公司,她这样说:“总裁,还请自重我不是什么林清雪,我叫林潇。”“呵呵,是吗?”他总有一天会让她知道她是林清雪,不是什么林潇!
  • 主公!快回来

    主公!快回来

    人人皆知的废柴、死缠烂打的疯丫头,从来都是她的代名词.可自从那天开始,她变了…
  • 传说救世主

    传说救世主

    一个平凡的中学生,在一次机缘巧合之下得到了救世主的传承,从此他的人生不再平凡,经历了无数次生死之间的徘徊……
  • 超能进化者

    超能进化者

    最近有一小部分人展现出了所谓的特殊能力虽然他们还没有意识到,他们不仅能拯救世界,还会永远改变世界。从平凡到非凡的转变都不会转瞬发生。每个故事都有开端,而他们的事迹将从这里开始……
  • 爱错了时光

    爱错了时光

    简介“到底应该和自己爱的人还是爱自己的人在一起”这或许是所有人都困惑的问题。三年前的林清染毫不犹豫地选择自己爱的人,在她看来,没有感情的婚姻不会幸福。于是,她对箫祁展开了疯狂的追求,但,生死存亡的那一刻,却换来他冷漠的背影。是,她醒了,一段永远没有结果的单恋何必执着下去,于是她走出他的世界,他却感觉失去了什么最珍贵的东西。三年后,她华丽回归,他却死缠烂打,撒娇卖萌打滚求收留!她嗤笑一声:“你好歹是拥有上亿身价的箫氏集团的总裁,何须我收留。”
  • 女尊:泽青吾爱

    女尊:泽青吾爱

    没有什么大波大浪,也没有什么虐身虐心,一条路走到底,只有淡淡的温馨。君雅,一位淡雅冷清的女子,身份成迷,高贵非凡,却独独只爱上了泽青,这个性格温和的像是白开水的男人……女尊一对一,感兴趣的可以进来看一看,不喜欢的请你绕路。—。—勿喷,谢谢。
  • 王俊凯感谢认识你

    王俊凯感谢认识你

    她,无意间喜欢上了他,她没有把他当偶像,她把他当做朋友看待,而他,也一样
  • 另类枭雄

    另类枭雄

    他本是高高在上的少爷,一次偶然的邂逅,让他跌落人生的谷底,最后却又凭着自己的努力,再次攀上世界最顶端!
  • 喂我追你吧

    喂我追你吧

    少年时的一场大火带走了他的最爱,犹如白莲花的他从此踏上复仇的道路,手上沾满鲜血,如地狱里的修罗。有人说,一眼万年,小沫的心只因看了萧一眼便沦陷,完美的女追男,面对男生的屡屡拒绝,小沫是否会放弃,当她知道真相后又该如何选择,是继续爱还是放手?“郁辰萧,我单兮沫欠你的,现在还你。”说完匕首插入左心房。“不要!”萧绝望的看着那匕首插入小沫的身体,鲜血直流,克又无可奈何。“咳咳,郁辰萧,我这辈子不会再欠你了,你也替上官晴报了仇。”“不要离开我...”撕心裂肺的喊叫却再也唤不回小沫的笑容,她,闭上了眼睛。
  • 新大学

    新大学

    临近毕业的我,接触了太多的陌生,此书献给所有在毕业路上迷茫,颓废的大四学生。