登陆注册
15706900000060

第60章

And Chad? The news reached Major Buford's farm at noon, and Chad went to the woods and came in at dusk, haggard and spent. Miserably now he held his tongue and tortured his brain. Purposely, he never opened his lips to Harry Dean. He tried to make known to the Major the struggle going on within him, but the iron-willed old man brushed away all argument with an impatient wave of his hand. With Margaret he talked once, and straightway the question was dropped like a living coal. So, Chad withdrew from his fellows. The social life of the town, gayer than ever now, knew him no more. He kept up his college work, but when he was not at his books, he walked the fields, and many a moonlit midnight found him striding along a white turnpike, or sitting motionless on top of a fence along the border of some woodland, his chin in both hands, fighting his fight out in the cool stillness alone. He himself little knew the unmeant significance there was in the old Continental uniform he had worn to the dance. Even his old rifle, had he but known it, had been carried with Daniel Morgan from Virginia to Washington's aid in Cambridge. His earliest memories of war were rooted in thrilling stories of King's Mountain. He had heard old men tell of pointing deadly rifles at red-coats at New Orleans, and had absorbed their own love of Old Hickory. The school-master himself, when a mere lad, had been with Scott in Mexico. The spirit of the back-woodsman had been caught in the hills, and was alive and unchanged at that very hour. The boy was practically born in Revolutionary days, and that was why, like all mountaineers, Chad had little love of State and only love of country--was first, last and all the time, simply American. It was not reason--it was instinct. The heroes the school-master had taught him to love and some day to emulate, had fought under one flag, and, like them, the mountaineers never dreamed there could be another. And so the boy was an unconscious reincarnation of that old spirit, uninfluenced by temporary apostasies in the outside world, untouched absolutely by sectional prejudice or the appeal of the slave. The mountaineer had no hatred of the valley aristocrat, because he knew nothing of him, and envied no man what he was, what he had, or the life he led. So, as for slavery, that question, singularly enough, never troubled his soul. To him slaves were hewers of wood and drawers of water. The Lord had made them so and the Bible said that it was right. That the school-master had taught Chad. He had read "Uncle Tom's Cabin," and the story made him smile.

The tragedies of it he had never known and he did not believe. Slaves were sleek, well-fed, well-housed, loved and trusted, rightly inferior and happy;and no aristocrat ever moved among them with a more lordly, righteous air of authority than did this mountain lad who had known them little more than half a dozen years. Unlike the North, the boy had no prejudice, no antagonism, no jealousy, no grievance to help him in his struggle. Unlike Harry, he had no slave sympathy to stir him to the depths, no stubborn, rebellious pride to prod him on. In the days when the school-master thundered at him some speech of the Prince of Kentuckians, it was always the national thrill in the fiery utterance that had shaken him even then. So that unconsciously the boy was the embodiment of pure Americanism, and for that reason he and the people among whom he was born stood among the millions on either side, quite alone.

What was he fighting then--ah, what? If the bed-rock of his character was not loyalty, it was nothing. In the mountains the Turners had taken him from the Wilderness. In the Bluegrass the old Major had taken him from the hills. His very life he owed to the simple, kindly mountaineers, and what he valued more than his life he owed to the simple gentleman who had picked him up from the roadside and, almost without question, had taken him to his heart and to his home. The Turners, he knew, would fight for their slaves as they would have fought Dillon or Devil had either proposed to take from them a cow, a hog, or a sheep. For that Chad could not blame them. And the Major was going to fight, as he believed, for his liberty, his State, his country, his property, his fireside. So in the eyes of both, Chad must be the snake who had warmed his frozen body on their hearthstones and bitten the kindly hands that had warmed him back to life. What would Melissa say? Mentally he shrank from the fire of her eyes and the scorn of her tongue when she should know. And Margaret--the thought of her brought always a voiceless groan. To her, he had let his doubts be known, and her white silence closed his own lips then and there. The simple fact that he had doubts was an entering wedge of coldness between them that Chad saw must force them apart for he knew that the truth must come soon, and what would be the bitter cost of that truth. She could never see him as she saw Harry. Harry was a beloved and erring brother. Hatred of slavery had been cunningly planted in his heart by her father's own brother, upon whose head the blame for Harry's sin was set. The boy had been taunted until his own father's scorn had stirred his proud independence into stubborn resistance and intensified his resolution to do what he pleased and what he thought was right. But Chad--she would never understand him. She would never understand his love for the Government that had once abandoned her people to savages and forced her State and his to seek aid from a foreign land. In her eyes, too, he would be rending the hearts that had been tenderest to him in all the world: and that was all. Of what fate she would deal out to him he dared not think.

If he lifted his hand against the South, he must strike at the heart of all he loved best, to which he owed most. If against the Union, at the heart of all that was best in himself. In him the pure spirit that gave birth to the nation was fighting for life. Ah, God! what should he do--what should he do?

同类推荐
  • 千岩和尚语录

    千岩和尚语录

    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。
  • 申培诗说

    申培诗说

    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。
  • 理门论述记

    理门论述记

    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。
  • 千乘

    千乘

    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 Merchant of Venice

    The Merchant of Venice

    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
  • 席前闻鬼录

    席前闻鬼录

    80年代,在山东昌城南边一个小村庄里,一个孩子误入老槐树洞引出的女鬼牵出数十年前一场惨案。这孩子命中刚中有刚,瞎子爷爷给他起名张无厉。十几岁时玩耍中不慎落入古墓,碰到千年前将军古尸。古尸复活并对众人进行攻击,一身份成迷的老人将众人救下。张无厉毕业后被儿时玩伴拉入民族宗教事务办公室下一家风水公司工作……
  • 北辰凝寒 绝代风华

    北辰凝寒 绝代风华

    十年,若不是心有不甘,我又何苦隐忍十年,步步谋略。若不是心有不甘,我何苦冒险卷入这纷乱的京城之中。若不是早有预料,我何苦弹尽竭虑,只为确保万无一失。也曾后悔,也曾彷徨,付出这一切究竟是为了什么?只为解决这样一个无足轻重的人吗?不,我要保护我爱的人,爱我的人,永远,我相信我有这个能力,因为,还有你。
  • tfboys之因为遇见你们

    tfboys之因为遇见你们

    三位男神与三位女神,不同时间,却在同一地点相遇,会擦出怎样的火花呢。期待柔柔与思烊一起写的故事吧!
  • 重世剑神

    重世剑神

    昆仑山天虚宫弟子谢无华,因与天妖相恋,被掌教及师尊发现。两人联手打破天妖元神,留下天妖本体玉莲。天妖,数百万年方才出现一次!而她的每一次出现,必会带动三界大乱。天妖本体玉莲被禁昆仑山巅…而这一天,谢无华前往山巅……
  • 我真是龙

    我真是龙

    身怀青龙血脉,却活的不如狗。人族昌盛,唐宇身为妖族少主却眼看着妖族走向末路。人族大能”建国之后,不许成精“,直接埋葬了妖族未来,天怜唐宇,给他一次机会,让他勇闯天涯。
  • 童谣奇案

    童谣奇案

    十个性格迥异的少年少女因意外落在了一个不知名的荒岛上。抵达后迎接他们的只有两个遇难者。然而奇怪的事发生了,他们在自己的房间都发现了一首奇怪的童谣。众人惊慌之时,一人的惨死,揭开了死亡游戏的序幕......
  • 末日之超级店铺

    末日之超级店铺

    当你因为制造出几杆土炮而高兴不已时,哥的武装直升机已经快摆不下了。当你灰头土脸在和丧尸厮杀时,哥在洋房里吹空调、品洋酒!超级店铺无所不包!!!
  • 警察故事之特工守护

    警察故事之特工守护

    她是国家安全局顶尖少女特工,暗杀,爆破,收集情报,无不精湛到极点,是黑暗罪犯的终结者,精英中的精英。他是国家安全局高级少年特工,古怪,搞笑,玩世不恭,有些变态到极点,却享有神话般名誉,是王牌中的王牌。一次相遇,让两人的生命被紧紧的绑在一起,是什么让他们反目成仇,又是什么让他们走到相互残杀毫不留情的地步?请关注警察故事第一部特工守护,让他回答你想知道的一切。
  • 驯影人

    驯影人

    一天,街头混混秦燃在街上偶然碰见了一个怪老头,自那以后,秦燃发现自己的影子像有了生命一般,可以受到自己控制,驯化,进而为自己所用。紧接着,秦燃跟着自己的发小张震三一起,通过巷口的拓金花,一点点地发现了一个隐藏的世界,驯影人,弑影人,无影人的相继出现,揭示了一个由曼希国神像引发的天大秘密。
  • The Autobiography

    The Autobiography

    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。