Author:  Mark Helprin
Viewed: 32 - Published at: a year ago

Then came the matter of food. For ten hours he picked grains of rice off the floor and collected pasta, sugar, and individual tea leaves. He would not eat anything that had been tainted with blood, and was left with less than a third of his rations. Some things-powdered cocoa, for example-were uncollectible, or had risen on the wind. He had kerosene enough for one pot of boiling water and one hour of lamplight each day. Some of his blankets had bullet holes.

( Mark Helprin )
[ A Soldier of the Great War ]
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