登陆注册
14726500000027

第27章

“Give me your gown, Scarlett, I will whip the lace for you after prayers.

“Suellen, I do not like your tone, dear. Your pink gown is lovely and suitable to your complexion, Scarlett’s is to hers. But you may wear my garnet necklace tomorrow night.”

Suellen, behind her mother’s back, wrinkled her nose triumphantly at Scarlett who had been planning to beg the necklace for herself. Scarlett put out her tongue at her. Suellen was an annoying sister with her whining and selfishness, and had it not been for Ellen’s restraining hand, Scarlett would frequently have boxed her ears.

“Now, Mr. O’Hara, tell me more about what Mr. Calvert said about Charleston,” said Ellen.

Scarlett knew her mother cared nothing at all about war and politics and thought them masculine matters about which no lady could intelligently concern herself. But it gave Gerald pleasure to air his views, and Ellen was unfailingly thoughtful of her husband’s pleasure.

While Gerald launched forth on his news. Mammy set the plates before her mistress, golden-topped biscuits, breast of fried chicken and a yellow yam open and steaming, with melted butter dripping from it. Mammy pinched small Jack, and he hastened to his business of slowly swishing the paper ribbons back and forth behind Ellen. Mammy stood beside the table, watching every forkful that traveled from plate to mouth, as though she intended to force the food down Ellen’s throat should she see signs of flagging. Ellen ate diligently, but Scarlett could see that she was too tired to know what she was eating. Only Mammy’s implacable face forced her to it.

When the dish was empty and Gerald only midway in his remarks on the thievishness of Yankees who wanted to free darkies and yet offered no penny to pay for their freedom, Ellen rose.

“We’ll be having prayers?” he questioned, reluctantly.

“Yes. It is so late—why, it is actually ten o’clock,” as the clock with coughing and tinny thumps marked the hour. “Carreen should have been asleep long ago. The lamp, please. Pork, and my prayer book, Mammy.”

Prompted by Mammy’s hoarse whisper. Jack set his fly-brush in the corner and removed the dishes, while Mammy fumbled in the sideboard drawer for Ellen’s worn prayer book. Pork, tiptoeing, reached the ring in the chain and drew the lamp slowly down until the table top was brightly bathed in light and the ceiling receded into shadows. Ellen arranged her skirts and sank to the floor on her knees, laying the open prayer book on the table before her and clasping her hands upon it Gerald knelt beside her, and Scarlett and Suellen took their accustomed places on the opposite side of the table, folding their voluminous petticoats in pads under their knees, so they would ache less from contact with the hard floor. Carreen, who was small for her age, could not kneel comfortably at the table and so knelt facing a chair, her elbows on the seat. She liked this position, for she seldom failed to go to sleep during prayers and, in this posture, it escaped her mother’s notice.

The house servants shuffled and rustled in the hall to kneel by the doorway, Mammy groaning aloud as she sank down, Pork straight as a ramrod, Rosa and Teena, the maids, graceful in their spreading bright calicoes, Cookie gaunt and yellow beneath her snowy head rag, and Jack, stupid with sleep, as far away from Mammy’s pinching fingers as possible. Their dark eyes gleamed expectantly, for praying with their white folks was one of the events of the day. The old and colorful phrases of the litany with its Oriental imagery meant little to them but it satisfied something in their hearts, and they always swayed when they chanted the responses: “Lord, have mercy on us,” “Christ, have mercy on us.”

Ellen closed her eyes and began praying, her voice rising and falling, lulling and soothing. Heads bowed in the circle of yellow light as Ellen thanked God for the health and happiness of her home, her family and her negroes.

When she had finished her prayers for those beneath the roof of Tara, her father, mother, sisters, three dead babies and “all the poor souls in Purgatory,” she clasped her white beads between long fingers and began the Rosary, like the rushing of a soft wind, the responses from black throats and white throats rolled back:

“Holy Mary, Mother of God, pray for us sinners, now, and at the hour of our death.”

Despite her heartache and the pain of unshed tears, a deep sense of quiet and peace fell upon Scarlett as it always did at this hour. Some of the disappointment of the day and the dread of the morrow departed from her, leaving a feeling of hope. It was not the lifting up of her heart to God that brought this balm, for religion went no more than lip deep with her. It was the sight of her mother’s serene face upturned to the throne of God and His saints and angels, praying for blessings on those whom she loved. When Ellen intervened with Heaven, Scarlett felt certain that Heaven heard.

Ellen finished and Gerald, who could never find his beads at prayer time, began furtively counting his decade on his fingers. As his voice droned on Scarlett’s thoughts strayed, in spite of herself. She knew she should be examining her conscience. Ellen had taught her that at the end of each day it was her duty to examine her conscience thoroughly, to admit her numerous faults and pray to God for forgiveness and strength never to repeat them. But Scarlett was examining her heart.

She dropped her head upon her folded hands so that her mother could not see her face, and her thoughts went sadly back to Ashley. How could he be planning to marry Melanie when he really loved her, Scarlett? And when he knew how much she loved him? How could he deliberately break her heart?

Then, suddenly, an idea, shining and new, flashed like a comet through her brain.

“Why, Ashley hasn’t an idea that I’m in love with him!”

She almost gasped aloud in the shock of its unexpectedness. Her mind stood still as if paralyzed for a long, breathless instant, and then raced forward.

同类推荐
  • 黄庭内外景经

    黄庭内外景经

    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。
  • 漕运通志

    漕运通志

    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。
  • 道德真经广圣义

    道德真经广圣义

    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。
  • 闽事纪略

    闽事纪略

    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。
  • An Essay on Comedy

    An Essay on Comedy

    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
  • 技术创新的战略及管理:理论与实践

    技术创新的战略及管理:理论与实践

    本书分为上、下两篇,上篇论述技术创新战略,下篇论述技术创新的管理,研究的视角是研发项目集成管理。
  • 神仙大陆之魔王再降

    神仙大陆之魔王再降

    悠悠苍茫界,万古苍茫王。一念定天地,一意判生死。虽是苍茫人,心却恨苍茫。带我强大时,拔刀斩苍茫!
  • 三界修仙群

    三界修仙群

    一个单身18年的孤儿混迹在都市丛中,却意外加入一个修仙群,这个群非常奇特,分为人仙魔三个阵营.恰巧江鱼加入了天庭阵营开启了都市修真之路!
  • 抗日鹰魂

    抗日鹰魂

    六个相貌各异的汉子,六把嗜血锋利的军刀,六中几乎相同的杀敌手法,在对抗外敌侵略的战场上,仿佛刮起了六股旋风般,对于侵略我国土的敌人,给与最果断的杀伐,誓死捍卫中国的每一寸土地,用实力告诉全世界,中国已经觉醒,中国将会是任何侵略者的禁地,胆敢入侵者,不死不休。
  • 总裁校草:青梅难宠

    总裁校草:青梅难宠

    她是暗夜的帝王,却是母亲早逝,小三成继母,从此父亲不疼,家人不爱。被独自送到国外,好好的青梅竹马从此被拆散。回国第一天,继母和父亲就准备将自己送到别人床上去,可是,他们不知,那个男人竟是她的哥哥。他们将计就计,本是了复仇的计划,却不想竹马因此吃醋,还被误会。“丫头,胆子不小啊,和别人这么玩,就不怕那我吃醋。”“叶安尘,不是,我胆子不小,等等,你吃醋是什么鬼?”“总裁,有谣言称蓝小姐和韩家少爷…”“我怎么不知道?这些话是谁说的,你们就把那个人给我好好的招呼招呼,要不我就亲自招呼招呼你们”“可是,总裁,蓝小姐她…”“备车”
  • 快穿之毁人不倦

    快穿之毁人不倦

    “矮油~还不欢迎本系统的闪亮登场!!”脸皮退化的某只。“你是。。”不解的她。………………“本系统的使命完成了。。再见。。”一脸伤感。“没事我在”搂着她的他。
  • 光的背面

    光的背面

    谁都愿意成为光明的战士,然而总要有人去成为黑暗,成为光的守护者。
  • 魔剑仙途

    魔剑仙途

    万年前,魔族圣君破万年封印从黑暗纪元中带着仇恨苏醒,三天葬东海、七天屠雪域、半月灭神族,三界之内,无数生灵惶惶不得终日;人仙二族为拯救天下苍生,集天地日月精华以百星炼诛仙神剑,用万剑屠魔阵将魔君的邪灵封印在不死冥域中!万年后,一个凡尘书生进京赶考中途遇魔族狼兽于破庙中拾得一把锈蚀的断剑,三招之内杀尽魔狼,震惊三界!断剑重铸之日,剑仙归来之时,这是一本小白脸“软妹子”逆袭修行的故事!----------------------------剑仙等级:剑士、剑灵、剑师、剑宗、剑祖、剑皇、剑仙。
  • 天梦记

    天梦记

    一位凡间普通家族的青年从小就梦想着成为仙人,傲游天地,杀人于千里之外。奈何没有仙资,一个意外让他得到一个神秘的小塔,从此走上一条绝世妖孽之路,更让这修真界刮起一场腥风血雨。
  • 陌路先锋

    陌路先锋

    高考落榜的他走上了被他认为是第二条出路的军旅生涯,世态炎凉让他深刻认识到作为一名军人,祖国的利益高于一切。