登陆注册
19597600000049

第49章 The Girl Behind the Counter--III(2)

Did England then set loose on us a pack of black savages and politicians to help us rebuild?Why,this very day I cannot walk on the other side of the river,I dare not venture off the New Bridge;and you who first beat us and then unleashed the blacks to riot in a new 'equality'that they were no more fit for than so many apes,you sat back at ease in your victory and your progress,having handed the vote to the negro as you might have handed a kerosene lamp to a child of three,and let us crushed,breathless people cope with the chaos and destruction that never came near you.Why,how can you dare--"Once again,admirably she pulled herself up as she had done when she spoke of the President."I mustn't!"she declared,half whispering,and then more clearly and calmly,"Imustn't."And she shook her head as if shaking something off."Nor must you,"she finished,charmingly and quietly,with a smile.

"I will not,"I assured her.She was truly noble.

"But I did think that you understood us,"she said pensively.

"Miss La Heu,when you talked to me about the President and the White House,I said that you were hard to answer.Do you remember?""Perfectly.I said I was glad you found me so.'

"You helped me to understand you then,and now I want to be helped to further understanding.Last night I heard the 'Ode for the Daughters of Dixie.'I had a bad time listening to that.""Do you presume to criticise it?Do we criticise your Grand Army reunions,and your 'Marching through Georgia,'and your 'John Brown's Body,'and your Arlington Museum?Can we not be allowed to celebrate our heroes and our glories and sing our songs?"She had helped me already!Still,still,the something I was groping for,the something which had given me such pain during the ode,remained undissolved,remained unanalyzed between us;I still had to have it out with her,and the point was that it had to be with her,and not simply with myself alone.We must thrash out together the way to an understanding;an agreement was not in the least necessary--we could agree to differ,for that matter,with perfect cordiality--but an understanding we must reach.And as I was thinking this my light increased,and I saw clearly the ultimate thing which lay at the bottom of my own feeling,and which had been strangely confusing me all along.

This discovery was the key to the whole remainder of my talk;I never let go of it.The first thing it opened for me was that Eliza La Heu didn't understand me,which was quite natural,since I had only just this moment become clear to myself.

"Many of us,"I began,"who have watched the soiling touch of politics make dirty one clean thing after another,would not be wholly desolated to learn that the Grand Army of the Republic had gone to another world to sing its songs and draw its pensions."She looked astonished,and then she laughed.Down in the South here she was too far away to feel the vile uses to which present politics had turned past heroism "But,"I continued,"we haven't any Daughters of the Union banded together and handing it down.""It?"she echoed."Well,if the deeds of your heroes are not a sacred trust to you,don't invite us,please,to resemble you."I waited for more,and a little more came.

"We consider Northerners foreigners,you know."Again I felt that hurt which hearing the ode had given me,but I now knew how I was going to take it,and where we were presently coming out;and Iknew she didn't mean quite all that--didn't mean it every day,at least--and that my speech had driven her to saying it.

"No,Miss La Heu;you don't consider Northerners,who understand you,to be foreigners.""We have never met any of that sort."

("Yes,"I thought,"but you really want to.Didn't you say you hoped Iwas one?Away down deep there's a cry of kinship in you;and that you don't hear it,and that we don't hear it,has been as much our fault as yours.I see that very well now,but I'm afraid to tell you so,yet.")What I said was:"We're handing the 'sacred trust'down,I hope.""I understood you to say you weren't."

"I said we were not handing 'it'down."

I didn't wonder that irritation again moulded her reply."You must excuse a daughter of Dixie if she finds the words of a son of the Union beyond her.We haven't had so many advantages."There she touched what I had thought over during my wakeful hours:the tale of the ashes,the desolate ashes!The war had not prevented my parents from sending me to school and college,but here the old had seen the young grow up starved of what their fathers had given them,and the young had looked to the old and known their stripped heritage.

"Miss La Heu,"I said,"I could not tell you,you would not wish me to tell you,what the sight of Kings Port has made me feel.But you will let me say this:I have understood for a long while about your old people,your old ladies,whose faces are so fine and sad."I paused,but she merely looked at me,and her eyes were hard.

"And I may say this,too.I thank you very sincerely for bringing completely home to me what I had begun to make out for myself.I hope the Daughters of Dixie will go on singing of their heroes."I paused again,and now she looked away,out of the window into Royal Street.

"Perhaps,"I still continued,"you will hardly believe me when I say that I have looked at your monuments here with an emotion more poignant even than that which Northern monuments raise in me.""Why?"

"Oh!"I exclaimed."Need you have asked that?The North won.""You are quite dispassionate!"Her eyes were always toward the window.

"That's my 'sacred trust.'"

It made her look at me."Yours?"

"Not yours--yet!It would be yours if you had won."I thought a slight change came in her steady scrutiny."And,Miss La Heu,it was awful about the negro.It is awful.The young North thinks so just as much as you do.

同类推荐
  • The Hunchback of Notre Dame

    The Hunchback of Notre Dame

    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。
  • The Deliverance

    The Deliverance

    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。
  • 阿毗达磨发智论

    阿毗达磨发智论

    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。
  • 得配本草

    得配本草

    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。
  • 亨利四世下篇

    亨利四世下篇

    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
  • 暗夜战纪

    暗夜战纪

    因人陷害入狱,却遇到了一心为了暗夜精灵复兴而努力的暗夜少年,看似巧合的监狱相遇,命运的齿轮已经旋转。当我手握权柄,让鲜红蔷薇重新绽放在这个大陆每一个角落的时候,一个种族的复兴!
  • 封天乱古纪

    封天乱古纪

    一本笔记,一段不为人知的故事,带着丁泪来到了修炼的世界,可惜,却让天地所不容,丁泪为寻父母,为寻红颜,一怒与天斗,沟通天地大道,天地为炉,以道火铭道身,与万法同源,激发血脉,挣脱枷锁,天地惊!古体现!从此乱古封天!!
  • 网游之佣金猎人

    网游之佣金猎人

    他,号称全球最强的网游猎人。他,曾经用30级的弓手单挑过地狱魔王。他,可以每天射箭几万次不眠不休。他,任务委托达成率100%。他,创造的神话和记录至今无人能破。他还有两个最好的朋友,性情古怪却生死相交。如今他接到了职业生涯中最困难的委托。最强的网游猎人VS全球顶尖的网游工作室。他不败的记录还能延续下去吗?
  • 绝色驯兽师王的独宠

    绝色驯兽师王的独宠

    她是现代的一代狠女,却因被最亲妹妹的背叛而意外穿越,穿越就算了,她居然还穿到一个以修炼元灵为主的吕罗大陆。她是袁家的废材嫡女,只因喝了一碗毒汤而元灵散尽,当她穿越到她身上时,就绝对会把那些人欠她的一一讨回来。驯兽师?冰火师?她通通不在话下,别人丹药多的当糖豆吃,我的神兽多的抢你糖豆吃。他是唯我独尊的家伙,却在见到她时一见钟情。“娘子,我们一起站到那巅峰如何?”“要站也不跟你站啊!”
  • 中国的细节

    中国的细节

    他是中国最知名也最受争议的日本人之一,他被奉为“新锐国际政治观察家”,也被抨击为“赤化”“没资格说三道四”。他身处夹缝,备受争议,却始终坚持对中国的观察和思考。他见证了中国的繁荣自信,也感受到了其中的不和谐声音。他笔下的中国由诸多细节构成:从咖啡店提供上网服务到高考生优先安检,从大学生的课堂讨论到媒体开始亲赴现场,从《建国大业》到诚品书店,从刘翔到足球球迷,从“剩男”到“港漂”……于生活,他谈有趣的文化现象;于时政,他聊国家外交和发展。他以温和而不偏颇的表述为目标,但绝不盲目讨好大众。他坚信,当代中国与加藤嘉一是真正意义上的“绝配”关系。
  • 冥冥千年

    冥冥千年

    我会生生世世恋着你,找到你;如若有一天,走了一遭“鬼门关”,不慎喝下“孟婆汤”一不小心忘记你——请你,一定一定要在来世找到我、唤醒我;让我重新遇见你、爱上你上一世,这一世,下一世——一个又一个的千百年过去,我依然会坚定不渝地站在轮回的出入口——静心等待着——生命中唯一的那个人
  • 护花铃

    护花铃

    江湖中盛传的不死神龙龙布诗经过“丹凤神龙”华山一战之后生死不知,去处不明,其门人弟子本性显露。南宫平临危受命,屡有奇遇,生死之间,才识人称冷血的“孔雀妃子”梅吟雪却是情痴,叶秋白徒弟叶曼青亦有情女子。而南宫家的巨变,也揭开了百年的江湖传说,以及诸神岛和群魔岛的秘密……
  • 归庐谭往录

    归庐谭往录

    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。
  • 深渊游侠

    深渊游侠

    鲜花与荆棘之年,传奇玩家罗恩穿越到了艾维林世界。这是一个动荡不安的年代,庞大的元素潮汐摧毁了十二座宇宙魔池,世界之柱在众神之巅轰然倒塌,诸神被迫降临凡间。黑暗与邪恶在混乱中滋生,王国崩塌,诸神损落,世界在熊熊烈焰中燃烧,无数生灵在痛苦中哀嚎!这是一个凡人崛起的年代,人,掌握了神的力量,诸神,魔鬼,巫妖,传奇,龙,无数传说中的生物纷纷现身。忽然降临到这个世界的罗恩,在混乱与邪恶中挣扎生存,被迫开启了一段属于他的辉煌传奇。【伪DND设定,数据党勿扰,一切以本书为主】
  • 穿越腹黑大小姐:穷追不舍

    穿越腹黑大小姐:穷追不舍

    一朝穿越,成了一个默默无闻的嫡女,什么?!被尊贵的奕王殿下看上?她才不要嫁人!某男:“到底怎样你才能答应求婚?”某女:“我不爱结婚!”