- Baobao Zhang, Grade 11
Caught between the pale snow-covered ridge aheadand the looming tumult of thundering hail, Jack Greeneyed the half-frozen river with a heavy heart.An unkind Virginian winter, like a mother-birdbent on hell, had pecked at him since the first of November.Trapped in his red-brick coffer, Jack had counted thenre-counted the testaments of his fortune: Chinese platesand Indian tea and Spanish silver bourgeoisies.But under the shadows of midnight, they haunted his dreamswith polished accusations, pricking his conscience till it bled.
Though Jack Green would never confess the Oirginal Sin,he firmly believed in Eden and that it existed somewherebeyond the pine-laced gates of the Cumberland Gap.Far too old to undertake the pilgrimage, he cleansedhimself with glimpses of spring for personal salvation.In due season, the wildflowers on the riverbankwould flood his valley with unnamable colors.And in due season, another shipload of transplantationswould arrive in Williamsburg, eager to choke the New World--or perhaps to bless it with beauty.
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