1 His face tingled and he felt dizzy, as if he had stopped in at the Starkfield saloon on a zero day for a drink.
2 Give me a good horse to ride and some good licker to drink and a good girl to court and a bad girl to have fun with and anybody can have their Europe.
3 Such a glowing morning usually called Scarlett to the window, to lean arms on the broad sill and drink in the scents and sounds of Tara.
4 Scarlett held wobbling heads that parched lips might drink, poured buckets of water over dusty, feverish bodies and into open wounds that the men might enjoy a brief moment's relief.
5 Prissy, take the baby and Wade inside and give Wade a drink of water.
6 "One damned bast--Scallawag less," said Tony, holding out his glass for another drink.
7 Dr. Meade had not thought to warn her that a woman in her condition should not drink, for it never occurred to him that a decent woman would drink anything stronger than scuppernong wine.
8 Scarlett had found that a drink of neat brandy before supper helped immeasurably and she would always chew coffee or gargle cologne to disguise the smell.
9 Mammy had hunted for it, just before the funeral when the pallbearers wanted a drink, and already the air in the kitchen was electric with suspicion between Mammy, Cookie and Peter.
10 She took another drink at the thought, shuddering as the hot brandy went down her throat.
11 And what fun to drink all the champagne you pleased.
12 They did not drink like the men of Scarlett's girlhood.
13 After the door shut behind the doctor, Uncle Rhett came swiftly into the dining room and poured himself a large drink from the decanter before he saw Wade.
14 Where they had gone to talk and drink, Scarlett did not know but she suspected, of course, Belle Watling's house.
15 No one ever knew exactly what happened but when Rhett finally came home, somewhat the worse for drink, the house was in an uproar and Bonnie's screams reached him even in the stables.