@@@@@She wished that it could last forever, and 468
@@@@@She wished that it
could last forever, and she begged Miss Eleanor to tell about Cousin
Townsend"Townsend's not really a cousin-cousin, you know, only a
third cousin twice removed, but he is the direct descendent of
Great-GreatGrandfather Ellinton, only son of an eldest son of an eldest
sonSo he inherited that original land grant, and the Ellinton
gambler's fever, and the Ellinton luckThey were always lucky, the
EllintonsExcept for one thing: there's another Ellinton family
trait, the boys are always cross-eyedTownsend married an
extremely
beautiful girl from a fine Philadelphia family-Philadelphia called it
the wedding of beauty and the beast
But the girl's father was a lawyer and a very sensible man about
property, and Townsend was fabulously richTownsend and his wife
settled in BaltimoreThen, of course, the War cameTownsend's wife
went running home to her family the minute Townsend went off to join
General Lee's armyShe was a Yankee, after all, and Townsend would
more than likely get killedHe couldn't shoot a barn, much less a
barn door, because of his cross eyesHowever, he still had the
Ellinton luckHe never got anything worse than chilblains although he
served all the way through to Appomattox
Meanwhile, his wife's three brothers and her father were all killed,
fighting in the Union ArmySo she inherited everything piled up by
her careful father and his careful ancestors
Townsend's living like a king in Philadelphia and doesn't care a fig
that all his property in Savannah was confiscated by Sherman
Did you see him, Rhett? How is he?"
"More cross-eyed than ever, with two cross-eyed sons and a daughter
that, thank God, takes after her mother Scarlett hardly heard
Rhett's
answer"Did you say the Ellintons were from Savannah, Miss Eleanor?
My mother was from Savannah," she said eagerlyThe crisscross of
relations that was so much a part of Southern life had long been a
frustrating lack in her ownEveryone she knew had a network of
cousins and uncles and aunts that covered generations and hundreds
of
milesPauline and Eulalie had no childrenGerald
O'Hara's brothers in Savannah were childless, tooThere must be lots
of O'Haras still in Ireland, but that did her no good, and all the
Robillards except her grandfather were gone from Savanna
