1 Cold weather set in abruptly with a killing frost.
2 It ached in cold weather and the wooden peg was neither well padded nor comfortable.
3 So the spring months went by, the cool rains of April passing into the warm balm of green May weather.
4 This ain't no weather for a lady to be out in," said the soldier reprovingly, "with all this la grippe in the air.
5 He looked as calm as though he were discussing the weather, and his smooth drawl fell on her ears with no particular emphasis.
6 The hot, dry weather was making the cotton grow so fast you could almost hear it but Will said cotton prices were going to be low this fall.
7 The depot had not been rebuilt since it was burned in the battle and in its place was only a wooden shelter, with no sides to keep out the weather.
8 Some of them lacked an arm or a leg or an eye, many had scars which would ache in rainy weather if they lived for seventy years but these seemed small matters now.
9 It meant fresh pork for the white folks and chitterlings for the negroes when cold weather and hog-killing time should arrive, and it meant food for the winter for all.
10 Every morning when Scarlett arose she thanked God for the pale-blue sky and the warm sun, for each day of good weather put off the inevitable time when warm clothing would be needed.
11 She made a point of giving a disdainful look to every soldier she met, and crossed to the other side of the street in as insulting a manner as possible, though, she said, this was quite inconvenient in wet weather.
12 But there was a brisk and restless vitality about the young Irishman, fresh from a country where winds blew wet and chill, where misty swamps held no fevers, that set him apart from these indolent gentlefolk of semi-tropical weather and malarial marshes.