登陆注册
19405900000043

第43章

Yet even Sybil was startled as she rode through the gate and found herself suddenly met by the long white ranks of head-stones, stretching up and down the hill-sides by thousands, in order of baffle; as though Cadmus had reversed his myth, and had sown living men, to come up dragons' teeth. She drew in her horse with a shiver and a sudden impulse to cry. Here was something new to her. This was war--wounds, disease, death. She dropped her voice and with a look almost as serious as Carrington's, asked what all these graves meant. When Carrington told her, she began for the first time to catch some dim notion why his face was not quite as gay as her own. Even now this idea was not very precise, for he said little about himself, but at least she grappled with the fact that he had actually, year after year, carried arms against these men who lay at her feet and who had given their lives for her cause. It suddenly occurred to her as a new thought that perhaps he himself might have killed one of them with his own hand. There was a strange shock in this idea. She felt that Carrington was further from her. He gained dignity in his rebel isolation. She wanted to ask him how he could have been a traitor, and she did not dare.

Carrington a traitor!

Carrington killing her friends! The idea was too large to grasp. She fell back on the simpler task of wondering how he had looked in his rebel uniform.

They rode slowly round to the door of the house and dismounted, after he had with some difficulty found a man to hold their horses.

From the heavy brick porch they looked across the superb river to the raw and incoherent ugliness of the city, idealised into dreamy beauty by the atmosphere, and the soft background of purple hills behind. Opposite them, with its crude "thus saith the law" stamped on white dome and fortress-like walls, rose the Capitol.

Carrington stood with her a short time while they looked at the view; then said he would rather not go into the house himself, and sat down on the steps while she strolled alone through the rooms.

These were bare and gaunt, so that she, with her feminine sense of fitness, of course considered what she would do to make them habitable. She had a neat fancy for furniture, and distributed her tones and half tones and bits of colour freely about the walls and ceilings, with a high-backed chair here, a spindle-legged sofa there, and a claw-footed table in the centre, until her eye was caught by a very dirty deal desk, on which stood an open book, with an inkstand and some pens. On the leaf she read the last entry: "Eli M. Grow and lady, Thermopyle Centre." Not even the graves outside had brought the horrors of war so near.

What a scourge it was! This respectable family turned out of such a lovely house, and all the pretty old furniture swept away before a horde of coarse invaders "with ladies." Did the hosts of Attila write their names on visiting books in the temple of Vesta and the house of Sallust? What a new terror they would have added to the name of the scourge of God! Sybil returned to the portico and sat down by Carrington on the steps.

"How awfully sad it is!" said she; "I suppose the house was prettily furnished when the Lees lived here? Did you ever see it then?"

Sybil was not very profound, but she had sympathy, and at this moment Carrington felt sorely in need of comfort. He wanted some one to share his feelings, and he turned towards her hungry for companionship.

"The Lees were old family friends of mine," said he. "I used to stay here when I was a boy, even as late as the spring of 1861. The last time I sat here, it was with them. We were wild about disunion and talked of nothing else. I have been trying to recall what was said then. We never thought there would be war, and as for coercion, it was nonsense. Coercion, indeed!

The idea was ridiculous. I thought so, too, though I was a Union man and did not want the State to go out. But though I felt sure that Virginia must suffer, I never thought we could be beaten. Yet now I am sitting here a pardoned rebel, and the poor Lees are driven away and their place is a grave-yard."

Sybil became at once absorbed in the Lees and asked many questions, all which Carrington gladly answered. He told her how he had admired and followed General Lee through the war. "We thought he was to be our Washington, you know; and perhaps he had some such idea himself;" and then, when Sybil wanted to hear about the baffles and the fighting, he drew a rough map on the gravel path to show her how the two lines had run, only a few miles away; then he told her how he had carried his musket day after day over all this country, and where he had seen his battles.

Sybil had everything to learn; the story came to her with all the animation of real life, for here under her eyes were the graves of her own champions, and by her side was a rebel who had stood under our fire at Malvern Hill and at South Mountain, and who was telling her how men looked and what they thought in face of death. She listened with breathless interest, and at last summoned courage to ask in an awestruck tone whether Carrington had ever killed any one himself. She was relieved, although a little disappointed, when he said that he believed not; he hoped not; though no private who has discharged a musket in baffle can be quite sure where the bullet went. "I never tried to kill any one," said he, "though they tried to kill me incessantly." Then Sybil begged to know how they had tried to kill him, and he told her one or two of those experiences, such as most soldiers have had, when he had been fired upon and the balls had torn his clothes or drawn blood. Poor Sybil was quite overcome, and found a deadly fascination in the horror. As they sat together on the steps with the glorious view spread before them, her attention was so closely fixed on his story that she saw neither the view nor even the carriages of tourists who drove up, looked about, and departed, envying Carrington his occupation with the lovely girl.

同类推荐
  • Captains of the Civil War

    Captains of the Civil War

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 洞真太上上皇民籍定真玉箓

    洞真太上上皇民籍定真玉箓

    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。
  • 昭公

    昭公

    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。
  • 云南风土记

    云南风土记

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 佛说大净法门经

    佛说大净法门经

    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
  • 乱世浮生缘

    乱世浮生缘

    她曾是卑微低下的乞儿,他也许是某个落魄公子,他在她饥寒之时施予一顿饭,她笑言十年后定报此恩。十年后,她是仙门学徒,早已修得半仙身躯,他却堕落入魔,十年约定之日,相聚之刻他与她又该何去何从?仙宗异变突生,乱世当道,妖魔肆虐。这,该如何救赎?
  • 绝对王者

    绝对王者

    父母被一群杀手所杀,冰羽魂魄离体,在新的大陆上一样的情形,一样的痛苦。他握紧拳头,接受了父亲的传承,他觉得冷,真的很冷。当这一切都发生在他身上时,才六岁的他,要走出一条让人敬畏的路!他要面带笑容的告诉那些杀了他父母的人:谢谢你们在我那么小的时候给我这么大的刺激,我为父母报仇来了。
  • 新婚密爱:首席势不可挡

    新婚密爱:首席势不可挡

    ##正文第一次相亲就让她感觉这世界充满了恶意刚一坐下…“苏小姐,我们约好的见面时间是九点,现在已经九点二十一分了,你整整迟到了二十一分钟,这是对我的不尊重。”用餐中…苏小姐,你要知道这个世界上想做褚太太的人很多,然而并不是每个人都有这种机会,我希望你能够认清楚现实,不要高估了自己。”
  • 泰山复仇(人猿泰山系列)

    泰山复仇(人猿泰山系列)

    人猿泰山系列是一部让中小学生开阔眼界、丰富想象力的书,是一部教给孩子动物是朋友、大自然是家园的温情冒险小说,是一部中小学图书馆和孩子的书架上不得不放的书,是父母与孩子共同阅读的睡前故事。小说情节奇谲精彩,主人公强悍而无畏,为孩子们打开了一扇充满着浪漫英雄主义的丛林世界大门。译者的话:上世纪四十年代,我们在读初中时,《人猿泰山》作为世界名著,曾经风靡一时。每逢课间十分钟,同学们几乎满教室争说泰山。当时,这部奇趣曼妙的小说,已经在我们心里扎根了。1988年,我俩六十岁退休后,曾到各地旅游,顺便到各省大图书馆、大学图书馆查询此书,不但译本遍寻不得,连原文本也没有了。
  • 一生拥有的美丽

    一生拥有的美丽

    周萌是我的闺中密友。她婚姻美满,家庭幸福。但她的心里埋藏着一个秘密,上了锁已封存的秘密。唯一知情者便是我。她时常告诉我:理想总比现实好得多,我永远珍藏这段美丽。它永远不会成为现实,否则美丽便被破坏了。
  • 天极武神

    天极武神

    上古凶兵化魂,再造铁血战神!匡正除邪,笑傲苍穹!阵阵狂风笑看黄沙走,逍遥怒吼黄沙塞满口。目空心空端起一碗酒,飘飘悠悠一去不回头。
  • 探索之相识

    探索之相识

    星球往上,是子星系,在往上,是星系,星系形成星群,星群边缘有着域镜,不破开域镜继续过去就是不同时段的星群,在继续越过那个星群,就又是另一个时间段的星群,长此下去无尽循环,难道,这就是探索的终点了吗?不!破开域镜!那里,才是真正的另一个世界!
  • 圣经中的人生智慧

    圣经中的人生智慧

    本书作者从《圣经》中选出一些充满人生智慧的“论语”式的句子,并给出其个人的理解与感悟。本书分为家庭篇、人生篇、处事篇、公义篇。
  • 火灭纪

    火灭纪

    前世耀世带领人族修仙者对抗魔界对抗失败后为了世界和平,荣耀牺牲自己封印了魔族一千年千年后,耀世重新转世,名为李荣耀再次完成千年前封印魔界的使命!
  • 背刀剑客

    背刀剑客

    剑横大陆,一个剑客纵横的大陆!而他,易凡,出生了之后,却面临着剑灵不能入体的“问题”,身为剑皇之子,这样的情况……于是,他练身体,学刀,……踏上巅峰之路!而他,同样会是一个剑客!一个背着刀的剑客!级别划分剑:剑士,剑官,剑卫,剑豪,剑天,剑圣,剑皇,剑尊,天剑刀:刀丁,刀尉,刀杰,刀宗,刀圣,刀君,天刀