1 Not for honor and glory, certainly.
2 Of course, a girl wanted her own wedding--not shared glory.
3 And he wore these garments with a still more elegant air as though unaware of their glory.
4 And that is why I'm here who have no love of death or misery or glory and no hatred for anyone.
5 This, then, was what Ashley had meant when he wrote that war was not glory but dirt and misery.
6 He had humbled her, hurt her, used her brutally through a wild mad night and she had gloried in it.
7 The Lost Cause was stronger, dearer now in their hearts than it had ever been at the height of its glory.
8 She had a Christmas present for Ashley, but it paled in insignificance beside the glory of Melanie's gray coat.
9 Already the plowing was nearly finished, and the bloody glory of the sunset colored the fresh-cut furrows of red Georgia clay to even redder hues.
10 The unfortunate boy had not only been cheated of the love he thought he had won but also of his high hopes of honor and glory on the field of battle.
11 His tall brothers were a grim, quiet lot, in whom the family tradition of past glories, lost forever, rankled in unspoken hate and crackled out in bitter humor.
12 She was pretty and she knew it; she would have Ashley for her own before the day was over; the sun was warm and tender and the glory of the Georgia spring was spread before her eyes.
13 There were boys in the Home Guard, proud to be playing at war, promising themselves they would be in Virginia this time next year, if the war would just last that long; old men with white beards, wishing they were younger, proud to march in uniform in the reflected glory of sons at the front.
14 As the girls drove back to Tara, Scarlett was silent for a while, thinking of what she had seen in the various homes, remembering against her will the County in its glory, with visitors at all the big houses and money plentiful, negroes crowding the quarters and the well-tended fields glorious with cotton.