多功能英语阅读12 The Last Charge(在线收听) |
The Last Charge Sergeant Davidson, the descendant of European immigrants, began to sweat as the roaring hot sun began to bear down on him. Sweat leaked out from the bumps of his spine and began to darken sections of his light gray Confederate Army uniform. Davidson sighed with fatigue. Everything reeled before his eyes. Small drops of sweat trickled down his coarse face, as well as down his back. Davidson had his Confederate Infantry cap tilted slightly, hoping to keep the burning sun rays in the drought from scorching his already well tanned face, especially his nose which had begun to have dead skin peel, owing to an awful sunburn. As he licked his dry lips, he began to reflect on the beginning of the war. Upon hearing of the attack on Fort Sumter, Davidson eagerly enlisted in the Confederate army of Georgia the very next day. Growing up, ha had idolized his grandfather for having fought in the Revolutionary war and expelling the British. Now, he saw himself in his grandfather's position. Only, the tyrant was not King George, but rather Abraham Lincoln. In fact, he tried his hardest to stay out of the political situation as a whole. He never cared much for Democrats or Republicans, tariffs or taxes. Davidson grew up in a poor household near a swamp, the oldest of four other children. All boys. The Davidsons were so poor, that the boys could not even finish secondary school, but rather worked long hours on their barren field to help the family's pitiful financial situation. All of the boys had little literacy. Later when he joined the army in the turbulent colonial period, Davidson sent almost all of his pay home to help his parent's debt. Since the Davidsons were so poor they had to rely on their sons working to pay the bills. So by no means could they ever afford a slave, even though it wasn't abnormal at all. They were like most Southerners. Since Davidson could never possibly own a slave, like most Confederate soldiers, he certainly wasn't fighting to preserve a practice that he would have no chance at being a part of. But if not for shaking off the yoke of slavery, then for what? State's Rights? Personal hatred? Rivalry that could never be reconciled? Morality? Fellowship? Salvation of the soul in repression? Davidson wanted one thing: Glory. He wanted to be hailed a hero the same way his grandfather was. Yet, as most Americans learned, no matter what side they fought on, there wasn't much glory in seeing a man's insides blown out. Nor in seeing worms nesting in the mouths of dead soldiers and crippled soldiers with bandages and stitches all over their bodies. And neither in witnessing wild wolves feasting on the livers and kidneys of the corpses of Union and Confederate dead alike. Their hearts wrenched at the horreble sight. Yet, Davidson and his comrades managed to march on to break the siege and reclaim a lost position in the flank. They were fueled by the belief that they would endure until final conquest. The young Davidson, who had absolutely no rigorous military training before he volunteered, was dispatched to the battlefield and learned quickly the rules of survival on the battlefield. As he lay huddled in the trench with the other recruits, he turned his head around to gaze up at the aky. It was a cloudless day, which only made it more unbearably hot. Davidson's ice blue eyes focused on the sun's radiance, only to look away quickly before they damaged. The young Sergeant began to worry. The dynamic momentrm of the war had consumed him to the point where he truly had no idea what state they were in. Now, he was simply a skeleton of his former self. His outline was there, but the will for battle on the inside, was gone. The war was lost and what would happen to him? Could he really become an ordinary civilian and go back to the lowliest, thankless jobs to pay his debts? He had no one to really go back to. No lover. No friends, since they had all been killed in combat. It had been with him every day he woke up and every night when he fell asleep. Before he could contemplate his future any longer, the Lieutenant stood up. He hoisted a flag into the air and screamed "Charge!" And so, they obeyed. The rebel yell of slogans rose up once again as they rushed to sweep the Union position. Davidson at last knew that this was his destiny. To meet death in hand-to-hand combat with the enemy, as it had been to their predecessors for centuries. However, fate would rob even that from Sergeant Davidson. For as they neared thier target, the Union troops unveiled a new weapon. The first machine gun. From a hundred yards away, the bullets sliced through the vulnerable Confederate charge and the attack was quickly repelled. Davidson along with all the rest was simply ripped to shreds. The American soldiers slaughtered other American soldiers in the new way of war. Cold, impersonal, and mechanized. Davidson and his comrades were struck down in matter of minutes. Out of decency, the Union troops buried the platoon in a separate grave for each. Then, the northern soldiers went back to their camp and waited for the next enemy to come by. And so, the flesh and blood of the old fashioned soldiers had come face to face with the iron and steel of the mechanized warriors of tomorrow... only to be crushed under the grinding wheels of the prolonged war. |
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