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authorRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-15 04:55:29 -0700
committerRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-15 04:55:29 -0700
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Captain Jinks, Hero, by Ernest Crosby
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Captain Jinks, Hero
+
+Author: Ernest Crosby
+
+Illustrator: Dan Beard
+
+Release Date: September 22, 2006 [EBook #19353]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CAPTAIN JINKS, HERO ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Jacqueline Jeremy, Suzanne Shell and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ [Illustration: CAPTAIN JINKS, HERO
+ "SAM WAS TAKEN STRADDLING A CHAIR" [_Page 124_]]
+
+
+
+ Captain Jinks
+ Hero
+
+ BY
+
+ ERNEST CROSBY
+
+ _Author of
+ "Plain Talk in Psalm and Parable"_
+
+ _Illustrations by_
+ DAN BEARD
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+ NEW YORK AND LONDON
+ FUNK & WAGNALLS COMPANY
+
+ 1902
+
+
+
+ COPYRIGHT, 1902,
+ By FUNK & WAGNALLS COMPANY
+
+ _Registered at Stationers' Hall, London_
+
+ _Printed in the United States_
+
+ _Published February, 1902_
+
+
+
+
+ _TO_
+ F. C.
+
+
+
+ CONTENTS AND CARTOONS
+
+ CHAPTER PAGE
+
+ I. A BOMBSHELL, 1
+ II. EAST POINT, 14
+ III. LOVE AND COMBAT, 34
+ IV. WAR AND BUSINESS, 60
+ V. SLOWBURGH, 89
+ VI. OFF FOR THE CUBAPINES, 117
+ VII. THE BATTLE OF SAN DIEGO, 151
+ VIII. AMONG THE MORITOS, 185
+ IX. ON DUTY AT HAVILLA, 216
+ X. A GREAT MILITARY EXPLOIT, 240
+ XI. A DINNER PARTY AT GIN-SIN, 250
+ XII. THE GREAT WHITE TEMPLE, 277
+ XIII. THE WAR-LORD, 310
+ XIV. HOME AGAIN, 338
+ XV. POLITICS, 365
+ XVI. THE END, 374
+
+
+
+ FULL-PAGE ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+ PAGE
+
+ CAPTAIN JINKS, HERO, _Frontispiece_
+ _"Sam was taken straddling a chair."_
+
+ WAR'S DEMAND, 6
+ _"But what did he want of soldiers?"_
+
+ THE MANLY SPORT AT EAST POINT, 56
+ _"Starkey stood off and gave him his 'coup de grace.'"_
+
+ A BLOOD BROTHERHOOD, 120
+ _"A big company to grab everything.... The
+ Benevolent Assimilation Company, Limited."_
+
+ TWO OF A KIND, 206
+ _"There are four marks."_
+
+ CONSENT OF THE GOVERNED, 238
+ _"What business have these people to talk about
+ equal rights?"_
+
+ WINNERS OF THE CROSS, 266
+ _"He got the Victorious Cross in South Africa."_
+
+ THE PERFECT SOLDIER, 324
+ _"The Emperor gave an exclamation of surprise
+ and delight."_
+
+ HARMLESS, 392
+ _"He sits like that for hours."_
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER I
+
+ A Bombshell
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+
+ "Bless my soul! I nearly forgot," exclaimed Colonel Jinks, as he came
+ back into the store. "To-morrow is Sam's birthday and I promised Ma to
+ bring him home something for a present. Have you got anything for a boy
+ six years old?"
+
+ "Let me see," answered the young woman behind the counter, turning
+ round and looking at an upper shelf. "Why, yes; there's just the thing.
+ It's a box of lead soldiers. I've never seen anything like them
+ before"--and she reached up and pulled down a large cardboard box.
+ "Just see," she added as she opened it. "The officers have swords that
+ come off, and the guns come off the men's shoulders; and look at
+ the----"
+
+ "Never mind," interrupted the colonel. "I'm in a hurry. That'll do very
+ well. How much is it?"
+
+ And two minutes later he went out of the store with the box in his hand
+ and got into his buggy, and was soon driving through the streets of
+ Homeville on his way to his farm.
+
+ No one had ever asked Colonel Jinks where he had obtained his title. In
+ fact, he had never put the question to himself. It was an integral part
+ of his person, and as little open to challenge as his hand or his foot.
+ There are favored regions of the world's surface where colonels, like
+ poets, are born, not made, and good fortune had placed the colonel's
+ birthplace in one of them. For the benefit of those of my readers who
+ may be prejudiced against war, and in justice to the colonel, it should
+ be stated that the only military thing about him was his title. He was
+ a mild-mannered man with a long thin black beard and a slight stoop,
+ and his experience with fire-arms was confined to the occasional
+ shooting of depredatory crows, squirrels, and rats with an ancient
+ fowling-piece. Still there is magic in a name. And who knows but that
+ the subtle influence of the title of colonel may have unconsciously
+ guided the searching eyes of the young saleswoman among the Noah's arks
+ and farmyards to the box of lead soldiers?
+
+ The lad for whom the present was intended was a happy farmer's boy, an
+ only child, for whom the farm was the whole world and who looked upon
+ the horses and cows as his fellows. His little red head was constantly
+ to be seen bobbing about in the barnyard among the sheep and calves, or
+ almost under the horses' feet. The chickens and sparrows and swallows
+ were his playmates, and they seemed to have no fear of him. The black
+ colt with its thick legs and ruffled mane ran behind its gray dam to
+ hide from every one else, but it let Sam pat it without flinching. The
+ first new-hatched chicken which had been given to him for his very own
+ turned out to be a rooster, and when he found that it had to be taken
+ from him and beheaded he was quite inconsolable and refused absolutely
+ to feast upon his former friend. But with this tenderness of
+ disposition Sam had inherited another still stronger trait, and this
+ was a deep respect for authority, and such elements of revolt as
+ revealed themselves in his grief over his rooster were soon stifled in
+ his little heart. He bowed submissively before the powers that be. From
+ the time when he first lisped he had called his parents "Colonel Jinks"
+ and "Mrs. Jinks." His mother had succeeded with great difficulty in
+ substituting the term "Ma" for herself, but she could not make him
+ address his father as anything but "Colonel," and after a time his
+ father grew to like it. No one knew how Sam had acquired the habit; it
+ was simply the expression of an inherently respectful nature. He
+ reverenced his father and loved his father's profession of farmer. His
+ earliest pleasure was to hold the reins and drive "like Colonel Jinks,"
+ and his earliest ambition was to become a teamster, that part of the
+ farm work having peculiar attractions for him.
+
+ In the afternoon on which we were introduced to the Colonel, Sam was
+ watching on the veranda for his father's return, and was quick to spy
+ the parcel under his arm, and many were the wild guesses he made as to
+ its contents. The Colonel left it carelessly upon the hall table, and
+ Sam could easily have peeped into it, but he would as soon have thought
+ of cutting off his hand.
+
+ "What's in that box in the hall, Colonel Jinks?" he asked in an
+ embarrassed voice at supper, as he fingered the edge of the tablecloth
+ and looked blushingly at his plate.
+
+ "Oh, that?" replied his father with a wink--"that's a bombshell." And a
+ bombshell indeed it proved to be for the Jinks family.
+
+ The box was put upon a table in the room in which little Sam slept with
+ his parents, and he was told that he could have it in the morning. He
+ was a long time going to sleep that night, trying to imagine the
+ contents of the mysterious box. Not until he had quite made up his
+ mind that it was a farmyard did he finally drop off. At the first break
+ of day Sam was out of bed. With bare feet he walked on tiptoe across
+ the cold bare floor and seized the precious box. He lifted the lid at
+ one corner and put in his hand and felt what was there, and tried to
+ guess what it could be. Perhaps it was a Noah's Ark; but no, if those
+ were people there were too many of them. He would have to give it up.
+ He took off the cover and looked in. It was not a farmyard, at any
+ rate, and the corners of his mouth became tremulous from
+ disappointment. No, they were soldiers. But what did he want of
+ soldiers? He had heard of such things, but they had never been anything
+ in his life. He had never seen a real soldier nor heard of a
+ toy-soldier before, and he did not quite know what they were for. He
+ crept back to bed crestfallen, his present in his arms. Sitting up in
+ bed he began to investigate the contents of the box. It was a complete
+ infantry battalion, and beautiful soldiers they were. Their coats were
+ red, their trousers blue, and they wore white helmets and carried
+ muskets with bayonets fixed. Sam began to feel reconciled. He turned
+ the box upside-down and emptied the soldiers upon the counterpane. Then
+ he noticed that they were not all alike. There were some officers, who
+ carried swords instead of rifles. He began to look for them and single
+ them out, when his eye was caught by a magnificent white leaden plume
+ issuing from the helmet of one of them. He picked up this soldier, and
+ the sight of him filled him with delight. He was taller and broader
+ than the rest, his air was more martial--there was something inspiring
+ in the way in which he held his sword. His golden epaulets were a
+ miracle of splendor, but it was the plume, the great white plume, that
+ held the boy enthralled. A ray of light from the morning sun, reflected
+ by the window of the stable, found its way through a chink in the blind
+ and fell just upon this plume. The effect was electric. Sam was
+ fascinated, and he continued to hold the lead soldier so that the
+ dazzling light should fall on it, gazing upon it in an ecstasy.
+
+ [Illustration: WAR'S DEMAND
+ "BUT WHAT DID HE WANT OF SOLDIERS?"]
+
+ Sam spent that entire day in the company of his new soldiers,--nothing
+ could drag him away from them. He made his father show him how they
+ should march and form themselves and fight. He drew them up in hollow
+ squares facing outward and in hollow squares facing inward, in column
+ of fours and in line of battle, in double rank and single rank.
+
+ "What are the bayonets for, Colonel Jinks?"
+
+ "To stick into bad people, Sam."
+
+ "And have the bad people bayonets, too?"
+
+ "Yes, Sam."
+
+ "Do they stick their bayonets into good people?"
+
+ "Oh, I suppose so. Do stop bothering me. If I'd known you'd ask so many
+ questions, I'd never have got you the soldiers."
+
+ His parents thought that a few days would exhaust the boy's devotion to
+ his new toys, but it was not so. He deserted the barnyard for the lead
+ soldiers. They were placed on a chair by his bed at night, and he could
+ not sleep unless his right hand grasped the white-plumed colonel. The
+ smell of the fresh paint as it peeled off on his little fingers clung
+ to his memory through life as the most delicious of odors. He would
+ tease his father to play with the soldiers with him. He would divide
+ the force in two, and one side would defend a fort of blocks and books
+ while the other assaulted. In these games Sam always insisted in having
+ the plumed colonel on his side. Once when Sam's colonel had succeeded
+ in capturing a particularly impregnable fortress on top of an
+ unabridged dictionary his father remarked casually:
+
+ "He's quite a hero, isn't he, Sam?"
+
+ "A what?" said Sam.
+
+ "A hero."
+
+ "What is a hero, Colonel Jinks?" And his father explained to him what a
+ hero was, giving several examples from history and fiction. The word
+ took the boy's fancy at once. From that day forward the officer was
+ colonel no longer, he was a "hero," or rather, "the hero." Sam now
+ began to save his pennies for other soldiers, and to beg for more and
+ more as successive birthdays and Christmases came round. He played at
+ soldiers himself, too, coaxing the less warlike children of the
+ neighborhood to join him. But his enthusiasm always left them behind,
+ and they tired much sooner than he did of the sport. He persuaded his
+ mother to make him a uniform something like that of the lead soldiers,
+ and the stores of Homeville were ransacked for drums, swords, and belts
+ and toy-guns. He would stand on guard for hours at the barnyard gate,
+ saluting in the most solemn manner whoever passed, even if it was only
+ a sparrow. The only interest in animals which survived his change of
+ heart was that which he now took in horses as chargers. He would ride
+ the farm-horses bare-back to the trough, holding the halter in one hand
+ and a tin sword in the other with the air of a field-marshal. When
+ strangers tapped him on the cheek and asked him--as is the wont of
+ strangers--"What are you going to be, my boy, when you grow up?" he
+ answered no longer, as he used to do, "A driver, sir," but now
+ invariably, "A hero."
+
+ It so happened some two or three years after Sam's mind had begun to
+ follow the paths of warfare that his father and mother took him one day
+ to an anniversary celebration of the Methodist Church at Homeville, and
+ a special parade of the newly organized "John Wesley Boys' Brigade" of
+ the church was one of the features of the occasion. If Mrs. Jinks had
+ anticipated this, she would doubtless have left Sam at home, for she
+ knew that he was already quite sufficiently inclined toward things
+ military; but even she could not help enjoying the boy's unmeasured
+ delight at this, his first experience of militarism in the flesh. The
+ parade was indeed a pretty sight. There were perhaps fifty boys in
+ line, ranging from six to eighteen years of age. Their gray uniforms
+ were quite new and the gilt letters "J.W.B.B." on their caps shone
+ brightly. They marched along with their miniature muskets and fixed
+ bayonets, their chubby, kissable faces all a-smile, as they sang
+ "Onward, Christian Soldiers," with words adapted by their pastor:
+
+ "Onward, Christian soldiers,
+ 'Gainst the heathen crew!
+ In the name of Jesus
+ Let us run them through."
+
+ By a curious coincidence their captain had a white feather in his cap,
+ suggesting at a considerable distance the plume of the leaden "hero."
+ Sam was overcome with joy. He pulled the "hero" from his pocket (he
+ always carried it about with him) and compared the two warriors. The
+ "hero" was still unique, incomparable, but Sam realized that he was an
+ ideal which might be lived up to, not an impossible dream, not the
+ denizen of an inaccessible heaven. From that day he bent his little
+ energies to the task of removing his family to Homeville.
+
+ It is not so much strength as perseverance which moves the world.
+ Colonel Jinks had laid up a competence and had always intended to
+ retire, when he could afford it, to the market town. Among other
+ things, the school facilities would be much better in town than in the
+ country. Mrs. Jinks in a moment of folly took the side of the boy,
+ and, whatever may have been the controlling and predominating cause,
+ the fact is that, when Sam had attained the age of twelve, the Colonel
+ sold the farm and bought one of the best houses in Homeville. Sam at
+ once became a member of the John Wesley Brigade and showed an aptitude
+ for soldiering truly amazing. Before he was fourteen he was captain,
+ and wore, himself, the coveted white feather, and his military duties
+ became the absorbing interest of his life. He thought and spoke of
+ nothing else, and he was universally known in the town as "Captain
+ Jinks," which was often abbreviated to "Cap." No one ever passed
+ boyhood and youth in such congenial surroundings and with such complete
+ satisfaction as "Cap" Jinks of the John Wesley Boys' Brigade.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER II
+
+ East Point
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+
+ But our relation to our environments will change, however much pleased
+ we may be with them, and "Cap" Jinks found himself gradually growing
+ too old for his brigade. The younger boys and their parents began to
+ complain that he was unreasonably standing in the way of their
+ promotion, and a fiery mustache gave signs to the world that he was now
+ something more than a boy. Still he could not bring himself to
+ relinquish the uniform and the white plume. A life without military
+ trimmings was not to be thought of, and there was no militia at
+ Homeville. Consequently he remained in the Boys' Brigade as long as he
+ could. When at last he saw that he must resign--he was now
+ two-and-twenty--he felt that there was only one course open to him, and
+ that was to join the army; and he broached this plan to his parents.
+ His mother did not like the idea of giving up her only son to such a
+ profession, but Colonel Jinks took kindly to the suggestion. It would
+ bring a little real militarism into the family and give a kind of _ex
+ post facto_ justification to his ancient title. "Sam, my boy," said he,
+ "you're a chip of the old block. You'll keep up the family tradition
+ and be a colonel like me. I will write to your Uncle George about it
+ to-morrow. He'll get you an appointment to East Point without any
+ trouble. Sam, I'm proud of you."
+
+ Uncle George Jinks, the only brother of the Colonel, was a member of
+ Congress from a distant district, who had a good deal of influence with
+ the Administration. The Colonel wrote to him asking for the cadetship
+ and rehearsing at length the young captain's unusual qualifications and
+ his military enthusiasm. A week later he received the answer. His
+ brother informed him that the request could not have come at a more
+ opportune moment, as he had a vacancy to fill and had been on the point
+ of calling a public examination of young men in his district for the
+ purpose of selecting a candidate; but in view of the evident fitness of
+ his nephew, he would alter his plans and offer him the place without
+ further ceremony. He wished only that Sam would do credit to the name
+ of Jinks.
+
+ It was on a beautiful day in June that "Cap" Jinks bade farewell to
+ Homeville. The family came out in front of the house, keeping back
+ their tears as best they could at this the first parting; but Sam, tho
+ he loved them well, had no room in his heart for regret. There was a
+ vision of glory beckoning him on which obliterated all other feelings.
+ The Boys' Brigade was drawn up at the side of the road and presented
+ arms as he drove by, and he saw in this the promise of greater things.
+ As he sat on the back seat of the wagon by himself behind the driver,
+ he took from his pocket the old original "hero," the lead officer of
+ his boyhood, and gazed at it smiling. "Now I am to be a real hero," he
+ thought, "and all the world will repeat the name of Sam Jinks and read
+ about his exploits." He put the toy carefully back in his breast
+ pocket. It had become the talisman of his life and the symbol of his
+ ambitions.
+
+ The long railway journey to East Point was full of interest to the
+ young traveler, who had never been away from home before. His mind was
+ full of military things, but he saw no uniforms, no arms, no
+ fortifications anywhere. How could people live in such a careless,
+ unnatural fashion? He blushed with shame as he thought to himself that
+ a foreigner might apparently journey through the country from one end
+ to the other without knowing that there was such a thing as a soldier
+ in the land. What a travesty this was on civilization! How baseless the
+ proud boasts of national greatness when only an insignificant and
+ almost invisible few paid any attention to the claims of military
+ glory! The outlook was indeed dismal, but Sam was no pessimist.
+ Obstacles were in his dictionary "things to be removed." "I shall have
+ a hand in changing all this," he muttered aloud. "When I come home a
+ conquering general with the grateful country at my feet, these wretched
+ toilers in the field and at the desk will have learned that there is a
+ nobler activity, and uniforms will spring up like flowers before the
+ sun." Where Sam acquired his command of the English language and his
+ poetic sensibility it would be difficult to say. It is enough to know
+ that these faculties endeavored, not without success, to keep pace with
+ his growing ambition for glory.
+
+ Sam's first weeks at East Point were among the happiest in his life.
+ Here, at any rate, military affairs were in the ascendant. His ideal of
+ a country was simply an East Point infinitely enlarged. His neat gray
+ uniform seemed already to transform him into a hero. When he thought
+ of the great soldiers who had been educated at this very place, he felt
+ a proud spirit swelling in his bosom. One night in a lonely part of the
+ parade-ground he solemnly knelt down and kissed the sod. The military
+ cemetery aroused his enthusiasm, and the captured cannon, the names of
+ battles inscribed here and there on the rocks, and the portraits of
+ generals in the mess-hall, all in turn fascinated him. As a new arrival
+ he was treated with scant courtesy and drilled very hard, but he did
+ not care. Tho his squad-fellows were almost overcome with fatigue, he
+ was always sorry when the drill came to an end. He never had enough of
+ marching and counter-marching, of shouldering and ordering arms. Even
+ the "setting-up" exercises filled him with joy. When cavalry drills
+ began he was still more in his element. His old teamster days now stood
+ him in good stead. In a week he could do anything with a horse,--he
+ understood the horse, and the horse trusted him. When he first emerged
+ from the riding-school on horseback in a squadron and took part in a
+ drill on the great parade-ground, he was prouder than ever before. He
+ went through it in a delirium, feeling like a composite photograph of
+ Washington and Napoleon. When the big flag went up in the morning to
+ the top of the towering flag-staff, Sam's spirits went up with it, and
+ they floated there, vibrating, hovering, all day; but when the flag
+ came down at night, Sam did not come down. He was always up, living an
+ ecstatic dream-life in the seventh heaven.
+
+ One night as Sam lay in his tent dreaming that he had just won the
+ battle of Waterloo, he heard a voice close to his ears.
+
+ "Jinks!"
+
+ "Yes, sir."
+
+ "Here is an order for you to report at once up in the woods at old Fort
+ Hut. The password is 'Old Gory'; say that, and the sentinel will let
+ you out of camp. Go along and report to the colonel at once."
+
+ "What is it?" cried Sam. "Is it an attack?"
+
+ "Very likely," said the voice. "Now wake up your snoring friend there,
+ for he's got to go too. What's his name?"
+
+ "Cleary," answered Sam, and he proceeded gently to awaken his tent-mate
+ and break the news to him that the enemy was advancing. It was not easy
+ to rouse the young man, but finally they both succeeded in dressing in
+ the dark, and hastened away between the tents across the most remote
+ sentry beat. They were duly challenged, whispered the countersign, and
+ in a few moments were climbing the rough and thickly wooded hill to the
+ fort.
+
+ "I wonder who the enemy is," said Sam.
+
+ "Enemy? Nonsense," replied Cleary. "They're going to haze us."
+
+ "Haze us? Good heavens!" said Sam. He had heard of hazing before, but
+ he had been living in such a realm of imagination for the past weeks
+ that the gossip had never really reached his consciousness, and now
+ that he was confronted with the reality he hardly knew how to face it.
+
+ "Yes," said Cleary, "they're going to haze us, and I wonder why I ever
+ came to this rotten place anyhow."
+
+ "Don't, don't say that," cried Sam. "You were at Hale University for a
+ year or two, weren't you? Did they do any hazing there?"
+
+ "Not a bit. They stopped it all long ago. The professors there say it
+ isn't manly."
+
+ "That can't be true," said Sam, "or they wouldn't do it here. But why
+ has it kept up here when they've stopped it at all the universities?"
+
+ "I don't know," said Cleary, "but perhaps it's wearing uniforms. I feel
+ sort of different in a uniform from out of it, don't you?"
+
+ "Of course I do," exclaimed Sam. "I feel as if I were walking on air
+ and rising into another plane of being."
+
+ "Well--ye-es--perhaps, but I didn't mean that exactly," answered
+ Cleary. "But somehow I feel more like hitting a fellow over the head
+ when I'm in uniform than when I'm not, don't you?"
+
+ "I hadn't thought of that," said Sam, "but I really think I do. Do you
+ think they'll hit us over the head?"
+
+ "There's no telling. There's Captain Clark of the first class and
+ Saunders of the third who are running the hazing just now, they say,
+ and they're pretty tough chaps."
+
+ "Is that Captain Clark with the squeaky voice?" asked Sam.
+
+ "Yes, he spoiled it taking tabasco sauce when he was hazed three years
+ ago. They say it took all the mucous membrane off his epiglottis."
+
+ There was silence for a time.
+
+ "Saunders is that fellow with the crooked nose, isn't he?" asked Sam.
+
+ "Yes; when they hazed him last year they made him stand with his nose
+ in the crack of a door until they came back, and they forgot they had
+ left him, and somebody shut the door on his nose by mistake. But he's
+ an awfully plucky chap. He just went on standing there as if nothing
+ had happened."
+
+ "Splendid, wasn't it?" cried Sam, beginning to see the heroic
+ possibilities of hazing. "Do you suppose that they have always
+ hazed here?"
+
+ "Yes, of course."
+
+ "And that General German and General Meriden and all the rest were
+ hazed here just like this?"
+
+ "Yes, to be sure."
+
+ Sam felt his spirits soaring again.
+
+ "Then I wouldn't miss it for anything," said he. "It has always been
+ done and by the greatest men, and it must be the right thing to do.
+ Just think of it. Meriden has walked up this very hill like you and me
+ to be hazed!" There was exultation in his tone.
+
+ "Well, I only hope Meriden looked forward to it with greater joy than I
+ do," said Cleary, with a dry laugh. "But here we are."
+
+ Before them under the ruined walls of the old redoubt called Fort Hut,
+ stood a small group of cadets, indistinctly lighted by several moving
+ dark-lanterns. While they were still twenty yards away, two men sprang
+ out from behind a tree, grasped them by the arms, tied their elbows
+ behind them, and, leading them off through the woods for a short
+ distance, bound them to a tree out of sight of the rest, and left them
+ there with strict injunctions not to move. It never entered into the
+ head of either of the prisoners that they might disobey this order, and
+ they waited patiently for events to take their course. As far as they
+ could make out by listening, some others of their classmates were
+ already undergoing the ordeal of hazing. They could hear water
+ splashing, suppressed screams and groans, and continual whispering. The
+ light of the lanterns flickered through the trees, now and then
+ illuminating the topmost branches. Presently a man came and sat down
+ near them, and said:
+
+ "Don't get impatient. We're nearly ready for you." It was the voice of
+ one of their two captors.
+
+ "May I ask you a question, sir?" said Sam.
+
+ "Blaze away," responded the man.
+
+ "Was General Gramp hazed at this same place, do you know?"
+
+ "Yes," said the man. "In this very same place. And while he was
+ waiting he sat on that very log over there."
+
+ Sam peered with awe into the darkness.
+
+ "May I--do you think I might--just sit on it, too?" asked Sam.
+
+ "Certainly," said the cadet affably, untying the rope from the tree and
+ leading Sam over to the log, where he tied him again.
+
+ Sam sat down reverently.
+
+ "How well preserved the log is," said Sam.
+
+ "Yes," said the guard; "of course they wouldn't let it decay. It's a
+ sort of historical monument. They overhaul it every year. Anyway it's
+ ironwood."
+
+ Sam thought to himself that perhaps some day the log might be noted as
+ the spot where the great General Jinks sat while awaiting his hazing,
+ and tears of joy rolled softly down over his freckles. He was still
+ lost in this emotion when steps were heard approaching and the
+ lantern-light drew nearer.
+
+ "Come, Smith, bring the prisoners in," said the same voice that had
+ waked Sam in his tent. He looked at the speaker and recognized the
+ tall, hatchet-faced, crook-nosed Saunders. Two or three cadets
+ unfastened Sam and Cleary, still, however, leaving their arms bound
+ behind them, and brought them to the open place under the wall where
+ Sam had first seen them. Sam now saw nothing; walking in the steps of
+ Generals Gramp and German, he felt the ecstasy of a Christian martyr.
+ He would not have exchanged his lot with any one in the world. Cleary,
+ however, who possessed a rather mundane spirit, took in the scene.
+ Twenty or thirty cadets were either standing or seated on the ground
+ round a circle which was illuminated by several dark-lanterns placed
+ upon the ground. In the center of the circle were a tub of water, some
+ boards and pieces of rope, and two large baskets whose contents were
+ concealed by a cloth.
+
+ "Come, boys," squeaked Captain Clark, a short, thickset fellow who
+ looked much older than the others and who spoke in a peculiar cracked
+ voice. "Come, let's begin by bracing them up."
+
+ "Bracing" was a process adopted for the purpose of making the patient
+ assume the position of a soldier, only very much exaggerated--a
+ position which after a few minutes becomes almost intolerable. Cleary
+ and Sam were promptly taken and tied back to back to an upright stake
+ which had escaped their observation. They were tied at the ankle, knee,
+ waist, under the arms, and at the chin and forehead. By tightening
+ these ropes as desired and placing pieces of wood in between, against
+ the back, the hazers made each victim stand with the chest pushed
+ preternaturally forward and the chin and abdomen drawn preternaturally
+ back. Cleary found this position irksome from the start, and soon
+ decidedly painful, but Sam was proof against it. In fact, he had been
+ practising just this position for eight or ten years, and it now came
+ to him naturally. Cleary soon showed marks of discomfort. It was a warm
+ night, and the sweat began to stand out on his forehead. As far as he
+ was concerned the hazing was already a success, but Sam evidently
+ needed something more.
+
+ "Here, give me the tabasco bottle," whispered Clark to Smith.
+
+ As the latter brought the article from one of the baskets, Sam said to
+ him in a low voice,
+
+ "Did General Gramp take it out of that same bottle?"
+
+ "Yes," said Smith; "strange to say, it's the very same one, and all
+ through his life afterward he took tabasco three times a day."
+
+ Sam rolled his eyes painfully to catch a glimpse of the historic
+ bottle. Clark took it and applied it to Sam's lips. It was red-hot
+ stuff, and the whole audience rose to watch its effect upon the victim
+ at the stake. Sam swallowed it as if it had been lemonade. In fact, he
+ was only aware of the honor that he was receiving. He had only enough
+ earthly consciousness left to notice that one of the cadets in the
+ crowd was photographing him with a kodak, and accordingly he did not
+ even wink.
+
+ "By Jove, he's lined with tin," ejaculated Saunders, whose deflected
+ nose gave him a sinister expression. "You ought to have had his
+ plumbing, Clark."
+
+ "Shut up and mind your own business," said Clark. "Come, let's give him
+ the tub. This won't do. That other chap's happy enough where he is."
+
+ Sam was untied again and led forward to the middle of the ring, the
+ faithful Smith still keeping close to him.
+
+ "Is that an old tub?" whispered Sam, still standing stiffly as if his
+ body had permanently taken the "braced" shape.
+
+ "I should say so. All the generals were ducked in it. Kneel down there
+ and look in. Do you see that round dent in the middle? That's where
+ General Meriden bumped his head in it. He never did things by halves."
+
+ Sam did as he was told, and he felt that he was in a proper attitude
+ upon his knees at such a shrine. To him it was holy water.
+
+ "Now, Jinks," squeaked Clark.
+
+ "Yes, sir," answered Sam.
+
+ "Stand on your head now in that tub, and be quick about it."
+
+ Sam fixed his mind upon General Meriden in the same circumstances, drew
+ in his breath, and endeavored to stand on his head in a foot of water,
+ holding on to the rim of the tub with his hands. His legs waved
+ irresolutely in the air with no apparent unity of motive, and bubbles
+ gurgled about his neck and shoulders.
+
+ "Grab his legs!" shouted Clark.
+
+ Two cadets obeyed the order, and Clark took out his watch to time the
+ ordeal. The instants that passed seemed like an age.
+
+ "Isn't time up?" whispered Saunders.
+
+ "Shut up, you fool, haven't I got my watch open?" replied Clark. "But,
+ good heavens!" he added, "take him out--I believe my watch has
+ stopped." And he shook it and put it to his ear.
+
+ Sam was hauled out and laid on the grass, but he was entirely
+ unconscious. His tormentors were thoroughly scared. Fortunately they
+ had all gone through a course of "first aid to the injured," and they
+ immediately took the proper precautions, holding him up by the feet
+ until the water ran out of his mouth and nose, and then rolling him on
+ the tub and manipulating his arms. At last some faint indications of
+ breathing set in, and they concluded to carry him down to his tent.
+ Using two boards as a stretcher, six of them acted as bearers, and the
+ procession moved toward the camp. Cleary would have been forgotten, had
+ he not asked them to untie him, which they did, and he followed behind,
+ walking most stiffly. As they neared the camp the party separated. Two
+ of the strongest took Sam, whose mind was wandering, to his tent, and
+ Clark made Cleary come and spend the night with him, lest anxiety at
+ Sam's condition might impel him to report the matter to the
+ authorities. How they all got to their tents in safety, and how the
+ password happened to be known to all of them, we must leave it to the
+ officers in command at East Point to explain. Sam was dropped upon his
+ bunk without much consideration. The two cadets waited long enough to
+ make sure that he was breathing, and then they decamped.
+
+ "It's really a shame," said Smith to Saunders, who tented with
+ him, before he turned over to sleep; "it's really a shame to leave
+ that fellow there without a doctor, but we'd all get bounced if it
+ got out."
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER III
+
+ Love and Combat
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+
+ At reveille the next morning, as the roll was called in the company
+ street, Private Jinks did not answer to his name. They found him in his
+ tent delirious and in a high fever. His pillow was a puddle of water.
+ It was necessary to have him taken to the hospital, and before long he
+ was duly installed there in a small separate room. The captain of his
+ company instituted an inquiry into the causes of his illness and
+ reported that he had undoubtedly fainted away and thrown water over
+ himself to bring himself to. The surgeon in charge of the hospital
+ thereupon certified that this was the case, and in this way bygones
+ officially became bygones. It was late in the afternoon before Sam
+ recovered consciousness. A negro soldier, who had been detailed to
+ act as hospital orderly, was adjusting his bed-clothes, and Sam opened
+ his eyes.
+
+ "Gettin' better, Massa Jinks?" said the man, smiling his good will.
+
+ "Company Jinks, all present and accounted for," cried Sam, saluting as
+ if he were a first sergeant on parade.
+
+ "You're here in de hospital, Massa," said the man, who was known as
+ Mose; "you ain't on parade sure."
+
+ Sam looked round inquiringly.
+
+ "Is this the hospital?" he asked. "Why am I in the hospital?"
+
+ "You've been hurtin' yourself somehow," answered Mose with a low
+ chuckle. "There's lots of fourth-class men hurts themselves. But
+ you'll be all right in a week."
+
+ "In a week!" exclaimed Sam. "But I can't skip drills and everything for
+ a week!"
+
+ "Now, don't you worry, Massa Jinks. You're pretty lucky. We've had some
+ men here hurted themselves that had to go home for good, and some of
+ 'em, two or three, never got well, and died. But bless you, you'll soon
+ be all right. Doctor said so."
+
+ Sam had to get what consolation he could from this. His memory began to
+ come back, and he recalled the beginning of the hazing.
+
+ "Is Cadet Cleary in the hospital?" he asked.
+
+ "No, sah."
+
+ "Won't you try to get word to him to come and see me here, if he can?"
+
+ "Yes, Massa, I'll try. But they won't always let 'em come. Maybe
+ they'll let him Sunday afternoon."
+
+ Sure enough, Cleary succeeded in getting permission to pay Sam a call
+ on Sunday.
+
+ "Well, old man, I've got to thank you for letting me out of a lot
+ of trouble," he cried as he clasped Sam's hand and sat down by the
+ bedside.
+
+ "Did they duck you, too?" asked Sam. "You must be stronger than I am.
+ It's a shame I couldn't stand it."
+
+ "No. When they'd nearly killed you they let me off. Don't you be
+ ashamed of anything. They kept you in there five minutes--I'm not
+ sure it wasn't ten. If you weren't half a fish, you'd never have
+ come to, that's all there is of that. And after you'd drunk all
+ that tabasco, too!"
+
+ "Is my voice quite right?" asked Sam.
+
+ "Yes, thank fortune, there's no danger of your squeaking like
+ Captain Clark."
+
+ Sam sighed.
+
+ "And is my nose quite straight?"
+
+ "Yes, of course; why shouldn't it be?"
+
+ Sam sighed again.
+
+ "I'm afraid," he said, "that no one will know that I've been hazed."
+
+ He was silent for a few minutes. Then a smile came over his face.
+
+ "Wasn't it grand," he went on, "to think that we were following in
+ the steps of all the great generals of the century! When I put my
+ head into the tub and felt my legs waving in the air, I thought of
+ General Meriden striking his head so manfully against the bottom,
+ and I thanked heaven that I was suffering for my country. I tried
+ to bump my head hard too, and it does ache just a little; but I'm
+ afraid it won't show."
+
+ He felt his head with his hand and looked inquiringly at Cleary, but
+ his friend's face gave him no encouragement, and he made no answer.
+
+ "I think I saw somebody taking a snap-shot of me up there," said Sam.
+ "Do you think I can get a print of it? I wish you'd see if you can get
+ one for me."
+
+ "It's not so easy," said Cleary. "He was a third-class man, and of
+ course we are not allowed to speak to him. They've just divided us
+ fourth-class men up among the rest to do chores for them. My boss is
+ Captain Clark, and he's the only upper-class man I can speak to, and
+ he would knock me down if I asked him about it. You'd better try
+ yourself when you come out."
+
+ "Who am I assigned to?" asked Sam.
+
+ "To Cadet Smith, and he's a much easier man. You're in luck. But my
+ time's up. Good-by," and Cleary hurried away.
+
+ Sam Jinks left the hospital just one week after his admission. He might
+ have stayed a day or two longer, but he insisted that he was well
+ enough and prevailed upon the doctor to let him go. He set to work at
+ once with great energy to make up for lost time and to learn all that
+ had been taught in the week in the way of drilling. The morning after
+ his release, when guard-mounting was over, Cleary told him that Cadet
+ Smith wished to speak to him, and Sam went at once to report to him.
+
+ "Jinks," said Smith, when Sam had approached and saluted, "I am going
+ down that path there to the right. Wait till I am out of sight and then
+ follow me down. I don't want any one to see us together."
+
+ "All right, sir," said Sam.
+
+ When Smith had duly disappeared, Sam followed him and found him
+ awaiting him in a secluded spot by the river. Sam saluted again as he
+ came up to him.
+
+ "I suppose you understand, Jinks, that none of us upper-class men can
+ afford to be seen talking to you fourth-class beasts?"
+
+ "Yes, sir."
+
+ "Of course, it wouldn't do. Don't look at me that way, Jinks. When an
+ upper-class man is polite enough to speak to you, you should look down,
+ and not into his face."
+
+ Sam dropped his eyes.
+
+ "Now, Jinks, I wanted to tell you that you've been assigned to me to do
+ such work as I want done. I'm going to treat you well, because you seem
+ to be a pretty decent fellow for a beast."
+
+ "Thank you, sir," said Sam.
+
+ "Yes, you seem disposed to behave as you should, and I don't want to
+ have any trouble with you. All you'll have to do is to see that my
+ boots are blacked every night, keep my shirts and clothes in order,
+ take my things to the wash, clean out my tent, and be somewhere near
+ so that you can come when I call you; do you understand?"
+
+ "Yes, sir."
+
+ "Oh, then, of course, you must make my bed, and bring water for me, and
+ keep my equipments clean. If there's anything else, I'll tell you. If
+ you don't do everything I tell you, I'll report it to the class
+ committee and you'll have to fight, do you understand?"
+
+ "Yes, sir."
+
+ "That will do, Jinks; you may go."
+
+ "I beg your pardon, sir. May I ask you a question?"
+
+ "What?" shouted Smith. "Do you mean to speak to me without being
+ spoken to?"
+
+ "I know it's very wrong, sir," said Sam, "but there's something I want
+ very much, and I don't know how else to get it."
+
+ "Well, I'll forgive you this time, because I'm an easy-going fellow. If
+ it had been anybody else but me, you'd have got your first fight. What
+ is it? Out with it."
+
+ "Please, sir, when I was haz--I mean exercised the other night, I
+ saw somebody taking photographs of it. Do you think I could get
+ copies of them?"
+
+ "What do you want them for?" asked Smith suspiciously.
+
+ "I'd like to have something to remember it by," said Sam. "I want to be
+ able to show that I did just what Generals Gramp and German did."
+
+ Smith smiled. "All right," he replied. "I'll get them for you if I can,
+ and I'll expect you to work all the better for me. Now go."
+
+ "Oh, thank you, sir--thank you!" cried Sam; and he went.
+
+ That night he and Cleary talked over the situation in whispers as they
+ lay in their bunks.
+
+ "I don't like this business at all," said Cleary. "I didn't come
+ to East Point to black boots and make beds. It's a fraud, that's
+ what it is."
+
+ "Please don't say that," said Sam. "They've always done it,
+ haven't they?"
+
+ "I suppose so."
+
+ "Then it must be right. Do you think General Meriden would have done it
+ if it had been wrong? We must learn obedience, mustn't we? That's a
+ soldier's first duty. We must obey, and how could we learn to obey
+ better than by being regular servants?"
+
+ "And how about obeying the rules of the post that forbid the whole
+ business, hazing and all?" asked Cleary.
+
+ Sam was nonplussed for a moment.
+
+ "I'm not a good hand at logic," he said. "Perhaps you can argue me
+ down, but I _feel_ that it's all right. I wouldn't miss this special
+ duty business for anything. It will make me a better soldier and
+ officer."
+
+ "Sam," said Cleary, who had now got intimate enough with him to use his
+ Christian name,--"Sam, you were just built for this place, but I'll be
+ hanged if I was."
+
+ The summer hastened on to its close, and the first-and third-class men
+ had a continual round of social joys. The hotel on the post was full of
+ pretty girls who doted on uniforms, and there were hops, and balls,
+ and flirtations galore. The "beasts" of the fourth class were shut out
+ from this paradise, but they could not help seeing it, and Sam used his
+ eyes with the rest of them. He had never before seen even at a distance
+ such elegance and luxury. The young women especially, in their gay
+ summer gowns, drew his attention away sometimes even from military
+ affairs. There was a weak spot in his make-up of which he had never
+ before been aware. There was one young woman in particular who caught
+ his eye, a vision of dark hair and black eyes which lived on in his
+ imagination when it had vanished from his external sight. Sam actually
+ fancied that the young woman looked at him with approving eyes, and he
+ was emboldened to look back. It was impossible for social intercourse
+ between a young lady in society and a fourth-class "beast" to go
+ further than this, and at this point their relations stood, but Sam was
+ sure that the maiden liked his looks. It so happened that her most
+ devoted admirer was none other than Cadet Saunders, who was continually
+ hovering about her. Sam was devoured with jealousy. In his low estate
+ he was even unable to find out her name for a long time. He could not
+ speak to upper-class men, and his classmates knew nothing of the gay
+ world above them. However, he discovered at last that she was a Miss
+ Hunter from the West. His informant was a waiter at the hotel whom he
+ waylaid on his way out one night, for cadets were forbidden to enter
+ the hotel.
+
+ "I suppose she has her father and mother with her?" Sam suggested.
+
+ "Oh, no, sir. She's all alone. She's been here all alone every summer
+ this six years."
+
+ "That's strange," said Sam. "Hasn't she a protector?"
+
+ "Oh, yes! she has protectors enough. You see, she's always engaged."
+
+ "Engaged!" exclaimed the unhappy youth. "How long has she been engaged,
+ and to whom?"
+
+ "Why, this time she's only been engaged two weeks," said the waiter,
+ "and it's Cadet Saunders she's engaged to; but don't worry, sir, it's
+ an old story. She's been engaged to a different man every summer for
+ six years, and at first she generally had two men a summer. She began
+ with officers of the first class, two in a year; then she fell off to
+ one in a season; then she dropped to third class; and now she has Mr.
+ Saunders because his nose isn't just right, sir, if I may say so."
+
+ Sam hardly knew what to think. The news of her engagement had plunged
+ him into despair, but the information that engagement was with her a
+ temporary matter was decidedly welcome; and even if it were couched in
+ language that could hardly be called flattering, still he was glad to
+ hear it. Sam thanked the waiter and gave him a silver coin which he
+ could ill spare from his pay, but he was satisfied that he had got his
+ money's worth.
+
+ Sam ruminated deep and long over this hard-wrung gossip. He could not
+ believe that the object of his dreams was no longer in her first
+ girlhood. There was some mistake. Then it was absurd to suppose that
+ she was reduced to the acceptance of inferior third-class men. How
+ could a waiter understand the charms of Saunders' historical nose?
+ Evidently she had selected him from the whole corps on account of his
+ exploits as an object of hazing. Sam almost wished that Saunders' nose
+ was a blemish, for it would help his chances, but candor obliged him to
+ admit that it was, on the contrary, one of his rival's strong points,
+ and he sighed once again to think that he bore no marks on his own
+ person of the hazing ordeal. All that Sam could do now was to wait. He
+ recognized the fact that no girl with self-respect would speak to a
+ "beast," and he determined to be patient until in another twelvemonth
+ he should have become a full-fledged third-class man himself. The other
+ engagements had proved ephemeral, why not that with Saunders?
+ Fortunately this new sentiment of Sam's did not interfere with his
+ military work. Instead of that it inspired him with new fervor, and he
+ now strove to be a perfect soldier not only for its own sake, but for
+ her sake too.
+
+ Meanwhile Saunders began to imagine that Sam looked at his _fiancée_ a
+ little too frequently and long, and he determined to punish him for it.
+ How was this to be done? In his deportment toward the upper-class men
+ Sam was absolutely perfect, and had begun to win golden opinions from
+ instructors and cadets alike. He always did more than was required of
+ him, and did it better than was expected. He treated all upper-class
+ men with profound respect, and he did it without effort because it came
+ natural to him. He never ventured to look them in the eye, and he
+ blushed and stammered when they addressed him. Saunders tried to find a
+ flaw in his behavior so that he might have the matter taken up by the
+ class committee, but there was no flaw to be found. Self-respect
+ prevented him from giving the real reason, his jealousy; besides, it
+ was out of the question to drag in the name of a lady.
+
+ One day Saunders, Captain Clark, Smith, and some other cadets were
+ discussing the matter of fourth-class discipline, and the merits of
+ some recent fights which had been ordered between fourth-class men
+ and their seniors for the purpose of punishing the former, when
+ Saunders tried skilfully to lead the conversation round to the case
+ of Sam Jinks.
+
+ "There are some fellows in the fourth class that need a little taking
+ down, don't you think so?" he asked.
+
+ "If there are, take them down," said Clark laconically. "Who do you
+ mean?"
+
+ "Why, there's that Jinks fellow, for instance. He struts about as if he
+ were a major-general."
+
+ "He is pretty well set up, that's a fact," said Smith, "but you can't
+ object to that. I must say he does his work for me up to the handle.
+ Look at that for a shine"; and he exhibited one of his boots to the
+ crowd.
+
+ "I wonder if he can fight?" said Saunders, changing his tactics. "He's
+ a well-built chap, and I'd like to see what he can do. How can we get
+ him to fight if we can't haul him up for misbehaving?"
+
+ "It's easy enough, if he's a gentleman," answered Clark, who was a
+ recognized authority in matters of etiquette.
+
+ "How?" asked Saunders.
+
+ "Why, all you've got to do is to insult him and then he'll have to
+ fight."
+
+ "How would you insult him?" asked Saunders eagerly.
+
+ "The best way," said Clark sententiously, "is to call him a hog in
+ public, and then, if he is a gentleman, he will be ready to fight."
+
+ "I'll do it," said Saunders. "I'm dying to see that fellow fight. Of
+ course, I don't care to fight him. We can get Starkie to do that, I
+ suppose."
+
+ "Yes," said Clark. "We'll select somebody that can handle him and teach
+ him his place, depend on that."
+
+ Saunders set out at once to carry out the program. As soon as he found
+ Jinks in a group of fourth-class men, he went up to him, and cried in a
+ loud voice,
+
+ "Jinks, you're a hog."
+
+ "Yes, sir," said Sam, saluting respectfully.
+
+ "Do you hear what I say? you're a wretched hog."
+
+ "Yes, sir."
+
+ "You're a hog, and if you're a gentleman you'll be ready to fight if
+ you're asked to."
+
+ "Yes, sir," responded Sam, as Saunders turned on his heel and walked
+ away. Somehow Clark's plan did not seem to have worked to perfection,
+ but it must be all right, and he hastened to report the affair to his
+ class committee, who promptly determined that Cadet Jinks must fight,
+ and that their classmate Starkie be requested to represent them in the
+ encounter. Starkie weighed at least thirty pounds more than Sam, was
+ considerably taller, had several inches longer reach of arm, and was a
+ practised boxer. Sam had never boxed in his life. These facts seemed to
+ the committee only to enhance the interesting character of the affair.
+
+ "We're much obliged to you, Saunders," said the chairman. "You've done
+ just right to call our attention to this matter. These beasts must be
+ taught their place. The only manly way to settle it is by having
+ Starkie fight him. You have acted like a gentleman and a soldier."
+
+ The fight was arranged for a Saturday afternoon on the familiar
+ hazing-ground near the old fort. Sam selected Cleary and another
+ classmate for his seconds, and Starkie chose Saunders and Smith.
+
+ "Jinks," said Smith in a moment of unwonted affability, "you've got a
+ chance now to distinguish yourself. I'll see that you get fair play. Of
+ course, you'll have to fight to a finish, but you must take your
+ medicine like a man."
+
+ "Did General Gramp ever have to fight here?" asked Sam, touching
+ his cap.
+
+ "Of course," said Smith, "and on that very ground, too. You don't seem
+ to have read much history."
+
+ The prospect of the fight gave Sam intense joy. His sense of glory
+ seemed to obliterate all anticipation of pain. This was his first
+ opportunity to become a real hero. When he was hazed he only had to
+ suffer; now, on the other hand, he was called upon to act. He got
+ Cleary to show him some of the simplest rules of boxing, and he
+ practised what little he could during the three intervening days. He
+ was quite determined to knock Starkie out or die in the attempt.
+
+ At four o'clock on the day indicated a crowd of first-and third-class
+ men were collected to see the great event. No fourth-class men were
+ allowed to attend except the two seconds. A ring was formed; Captain
+ Clark was chosen as referee; and the two combatants, stripped to the
+ waist, put on their hard gloves and entered the ring. Starkie eyed his
+ antagonist critically, while Sam with a heavenly smile on his face did
+ not focus his eyes at all, but seemed to be dreaming far away. When the
+ word was given, however, he dashed in and made some desperate lunges at
+ Starkie. It was easy to see in a moment that Sam could do nothing. He
+ could not even reach his opponent, his arms were so much shorter. If
+ Starkie held one of his arms out stiffly, Sam could not get near him
+ and was entirely at his mercy. The third-class man consequently set
+ himself leisurely to work at the task of punishing the unfortunate
+ Jinks. Two or three blows about the face and jaw which started the
+ blood in profusion ended the first round. Sam did not recognize the
+ inevitable result of the fight, and was anxious to begin again. He did
+ not seem to feel any pain from the blows. Two or three rounds had the
+ same result, and Sam became weaker and weaker. At last he could only go
+ into the ring and receive punishment without making an effort to avert
+ it, but he did not flinch.
+
+ "Did you ever see such a chap?" said Smith to Saunders. "Let's call the
+ thing off."
+
+ "Nonsense," said the latter. "Wait till he's knocked insensible"; and
+ the rest of the spectators expressed their agreement with him.
+
+ Just then a sound of marching was heard, and a company of cadets were
+ seen coming up the hill in command of an army officer.
+
+ "Hullo, Clark," whispered Smith. "Stop the fight. Here comes old
+ Blair, and he may report us."
+
+ "Not much," said Clark. "He'll mind his own business."
+
+ The company approached within a few yards of the ring.
+
+ "Eyes right!" shouted Captain Blair, and every man in the company
+ turned his eyes away from the assembled crowd, and Blair himself stared
+ into the woods on the other side of the path. The company had almost
+ passed out of sight when Blair's voice was heard again.
+
+ "Front!" and the danger of detection had blown over.
+
+ After this faint interruption, Sam was brought up once more, pale and
+ bloody, and hardly able to stand. Yet he smiled through the blood.
+ Starkie stood off and gave him his _coup de grace_, a full blow in the
+ solar plexus, which doubled him up quite unconscious on the ground.
+ Clark declared the fight finished, and the crowd broke up hastily,
+ leaving Cleary and his associate to get Sam away as best they could.
+ They had a pail of water, sponges and towels, and they bathed his
+ face; and after half an hour's work were rewarded by having him open
+ his eyes. In another half-hour he was able to stand, and supporting him
+ on each side, they led him slowly down to the hospital.
+
+ "What's the matter?" said the doctor as they entered the office. "Oh! I
+ see. You found him lying bleeding up by Fort Hut, didn't you?"
+
+ "Yes, sir," said Cleary.
+
+ "He must have fallen down and hit his head against a stone, don't you
+ think so?"
+
+ "Yes, sir."
+
+ "That's a dangerous place; the pine-needles make it very slippery,"
+ said the doctor, as he entered the case in his records. "Here, Mose,
+ put Cadet Jinks to bed."
+
+ This time Sam was laid up for two weeks, but he felt amply repaid for
+ this loss of time by a visit from no less a person than Cadet Smith.
+
+ "Mind you never tell any one I came here," said Smith, "and treat me
+ just the same when you come out as you did before; but I wanted to
+ tell you you're a brick. I never saw a man stand up to a dressing the
+ way you did, and that's the truth."
+
+ [Illustration: THE MANLY SPORT AT EAST POINT
+ "STARKEY STOOD OFF AND GAVE HIM HIS COUP DE GRACE"]
+
+ Tears of joy rolled down Sam's damaged face.
+
+ "I've brought you those photographs of the hazing, too," said Smith
+ with a laugh. And he produced two small prints from his pocket. Sam
+ took them with trembling hands and gazed at them with rapture. One of
+ them represented Cleary and Jinks tied to the stake, apparently about
+ to be burned to death, and Sam was delighted to see the ultra-perfect
+ position which he had assumed. The other photograph had been taken the
+ moment after Sam's immersion in the tub. He could see his hands
+ clutching the rim, while his legs were widely separated in the air.
+
+ "It might be General Meriden as well as me," he cried joyously. "Nobody
+ could tell the difference."
+
+ "That's so," said Smith.
+
+ "I shall always carry them next my heart," said Sam. "How can I thank
+ you enough? I am sorry that I can't black your boots this week."
+
+ "Oh! never mind," said Smith magnanimously, looking down at his feet.
+ "Cleary does them pretty well. You'll be out before long."
+
+ When Sam was discharged from the hospital the cadet corps had struck
+ camp and gone into barracks for the year. The summer maidens, too, had
+ fled, and East Point soon settled down to the monotony of winter work.
+ Every cadet looked forward already to the next summer: the first class
+ to graduation; the second to the glories of first-class supremacy in
+ camp and ballroom; the third class to their two months' furlough as
+ second-class men; but the fourth class had happier anticipations than
+ any of the rest, for they were to be transformed in June from "beasts"
+ into men, into real third-class cadets, with all the rights and
+ privileges of human beings. Sam's dream was also irradiated with the
+ hope of winning the affections of the fair Miss Hunter, to whom he had
+ never addressed a word, but of whose interest he felt assured. He did
+ not know where the assurance came from, but he had little fear of
+ Saunders now. Next summer Saunders would be away on leave, anyhow. Sam
+ knew, if no one else did, that he had actually fought for the hand of
+ Miss Hunter; and, tho he had been defeated, had not Smith admitted that
+ his defeat was a practical victory? He felt that he had won Miss
+ Hunter's hand in mortal combat, and he dismissed from his mind all
+ doubt on the subject.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER IV
+
+ War and Business
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+
+ Marian Hunter was, as we have already surmised, a lady of experience.
+ She was possessed, as is not uncommonly the case with young ladies at
+ East Point, of an uncontrollable passion for things military. Manhood
+ and brass buttons were with her interconvertible terms, and the idea of
+ uniting her young life to a plain civilian seemed to her nothing less
+ than shocking. The pleasures of her first two or three summers at East
+ Point and of her first half-dozen engagements had partaken of the bliss
+ of heaven. The engagements had never been broken off, they had simply
+ dissolved one into the other, and she had felt herself rising from step
+ to step in happiness. Naturally her conquests filled her with a supreme
+ confidence in her charms. She was not especially fickle by nature, but
+ she discovered that a first-class cadet, particularly if he was an
+ officer and had black feathers in his full-dress hat, was far more
+ attractive to think of than a supernumerary second lieutenant assigned
+ to duty in some Western garrison. Gradually, however, she found herself
+ less certain of winning whom she would. The competition of young girls
+ some two or three years her junior became threatening. She was obliged
+ to give up cadet officers for privates, and then first-class privates
+ for third-class privates, as the hotel waiter had explained to Sam. At
+ the time of Sam's arrival at the Point she was having more difficulty
+ than ever before, and she became thoroughly frightened. She took up
+ with Saunders because he alone came her way, but the engagement was a
+ poor makeshift, and she could not get up any enthusiasm over it. She
+ could hardly pretend to be in love with him, and she felt conscious
+ that she had a foolish prejudice in favor of straight noses. What was
+ she to do? If she was to marry at all in the army--and how could she
+ marry anywhere else?--she must soon make up her mind. Her experience
+ now stood her in good stead. Had she not seen these very first-class
+ cadet officers only three years before as mere despised "beasts," doing
+ all kinds of drudgery for their oppressors? Had she not seen her
+ _fiancé_, Saunders, himself, a short twelvemonth ago, with nose intact,
+ slinking like a pariah about the post? She had learned the lesson which
+ the younger girls had yet to learn, that from these unpromising
+ chrysalises the most gorgeous butterflies emerge, and like a wise woman
+ she began to study the fourth class. Sam stood out from his fellows,
+ not indeed as supremely handsome, altho he was not bad-looking, but
+ rather as the soldier _par excellence_ of his class. Marian was an
+ expert in judging the points of a soldier, and she saw at once that he
+ was the coming man. She could not make his acquaintance or speak to
+ him, but she could smile and thus lay the foundations of success for
+ next year. It would be easy thus to reach the heart of a lonely
+ "beast." And she smiled to a purpose, and it was that smile that won
+ the untried affections of Sam Jinks.
+
+ When June at last came and the new fourth-class men began to arrive,
+ Sam felt a new life surge into his soul. For a year he had been duly
+ meek and humble, for such it behooved a fourth-class man to be. Now,
+ however, he began to entertain a measureless pride, such being the
+ proper frame of mind of a man in the upper classes. He watched the
+ hotel sedulously to learn when Miss Hunter had made her appearance. One
+ morning he saw her, and she smiled more distinctly than ever. He knew
+ that his felicity was only a short way off. He must wait two weeks
+ until the graduation ball and the departure of the old first class;
+ then he could undertake to supplant the absent Saunders, who probably
+ knew the history of Miss Hunter and was not unprepared for his fate.
+
+ Meanwhile great events had occurred, and thrown East Point into a state
+ of excitement. The country was at war. Congress had determined to free
+ the downtrodden inhabitants of the Cubapine Islands from the tyranny of
+ the ancient Castalian monarchy. A call for volunteers had been issued,
+ and the graduating cadets were to be hurried to the seat of war. During
+ this agitation news arrived of a great naval victory. The mighty
+ Castalian fleet had been annihilated with great loss of life, while the
+ conquerors had not lost a man and had scarcely interrupted their
+ breakfast in order to secure this crushing triumph. It was in the midst
+ of such reports as these that the susceptible hearts of Sam Jinks and
+ Marian Hunter came together. The graduating class had gone, and Sam had
+ for two days been a full third-class man. For the first time he had
+ occupied the front rank at dress-parade, and seen clearly the officer
+ in command, the adjutant flitting about magnificently, the band
+ parading up and down and turning itself inside out around the towering
+ drum-major, the line of spectators behind, the bright faces and gay
+ parasols, and among them the black eyes of Marian looking unmistakably
+ at him. When at the end of the parade the company officers marched up
+ to salute and the companies were dismissed, Sam saw a member of the new
+ first class talking to her. He was now on an equality with all the
+ cadets, and he boldly advanced and asked for an introduction. At last
+ he had her hand in his, and as he pressed it rather harder than the
+ occasion warranted, he felt his pressure returned. Sam's fate was
+ sealed. He made no formal proposal, it was unnecessary. The engagement
+ was a thing taken for granted. It was a novel experience for Marian as
+ well as for Sam, as now for the first time she meant business. It is
+ impossible in cold ink to reproduce the ecstasies of those many hours
+ on Flirtation Walk, during which Sam opened his heart. For the first
+ time in his life he had found a person as deeply interested in military
+ matters as he was, and as much in love with military glory. He told her
+ his whole history, including the lead soldiers and the Boys' Brigade.
+ He laid bare to her his ambition to be a perfect soldier--a hero. He
+ told her how disappointed he was to find no other cadet so completely
+ wrapped up in his profession as he was, and how in her alone he had now
+ realized his ideal not only of womanhood, but also of appreciation of
+ the soldier's career. He rehearsed the thrilling experiences of hazing,
+ and went over the fight in detail and told her how Saunders had brought
+ it about.
+
+ "The horrid wretch!" she exclaimed, throwing her arms about his neck
+ and kissing him. "I'm so glad they didn't break your nose."
+
+ "Are you really?" he asked, and as he read the truth in her eyes a
+ weight was rolled from his soul.
+
+ He showed her the little lead officer with the plume, which he always
+ carried as a mascot in his breast-pocket, and also the two hazing
+ photographs which kept it company. She was delighted with them all.
+
+ "Oh! you will be a hero," she cried. "I am sure of it, and what a time
+ we shall have of it, you dear thing!"
+
+ With his spare time thus occupied Sam did not see much of Cleary,
+ who now shared another tent. One afternoon late in September he was
+ on the way to the gate of the hotel grounds where he was accustomed
+ to wait until Miss Hunter came out and joined him, when Cleary called
+ him aside.
+
+ "Sam," he said, "I've got something of importance to say to you. Can't
+ you come with me now?"
+
+ "Can't," said Sam. "Miss Hunter's waiting for me."
+
+ "Well, then, beg off to-morrow afternoon. I must have a long talk
+ with you."
+
+ "All right," answered Sam reluctantly. "If I must, I must, I suppose."
+
+ The next day found Sam and Cleary walking alone in the woods engaged in
+ deep conversation.
+
+ "Sam, what would you say to going to the war?" asked Cleary.
+
+ "I'd give anything to go!" exclaimed Sam.
+
+ "You wouldn't want to stay on account of that girl of yours?"
+
+ "No, indeed; she would be the first to want me to go."
+
+ "Then why don't you go?"
+
+ "How can I?" said Sam. "We've got three more years here. That ties us
+ down for that time, and by the time that's over the war will be over
+ too."
+
+ "That's what I think, and I'm sick of this place anyhow. I'm going to
+ resign."
+
+ "Resign!" cried Sam. "Resign and give up your career!"
+
+ "Not altogether, old man. Don't get so excited. What's the use of
+ staying here? We'll get sent off to some out-of-the-way post when we
+ graduate, and perhaps we'll get to be captains before our hair is
+ white, and perhaps we shan't; and then if a war breaks out we'll have
+ volunteers young enough to be our sons made brigadiers over our heads.
+ Aren't they doing it every day? I'm not going to waste my life that
+ way. I want to go to the war now, and I mean to go as a newspaper
+ correspondent."
+
+ "Oh, Cleary!" exclaimed Sam reproachfully.
+
+ "Tut, tut, Sam. You're not up to date. We've got no field-marshals in
+ our army and the newspaper correspondents take their place. Their names
+ are better known than the generals, and they advertise each other and
+ get a big share of the glory; and then they can always decently step
+ aside when they've got enough. They needn't stay on the fighting-line,
+ and that's a consideration. No, I'm sick of ordinary soldiering, but
+ I'm willing to be a field-marshal. My father has an interest in the
+ _Metropolitan Daily Lyre_, and I've written to him for an appointment
+ as correspondent in the Cubapines. What I've learned here will help me
+ a lot. But I want you to go with me."
+
+ "Me? Go with you? Do you think I'd be a newspaper correspondent?"
+
+ "No, of course not. It never entered my head. But why don't you get a
+ commission in the volunteers from your uncle? He can get just what he
+ wants, and they're talking of him for Secretary of War. All you've got
+ to do is to resign here and apply for a commission as colonel. Then
+ you'll probably land as a major, or a captain at any rate. By the time
+ the war is over, you'll be a general, if I know you, and then you can
+ be appointed captain in the regular army on retiring from the
+ volunteers, when our class is just graduating. You're just made for a
+ successful soldier. You've got the ambition and the courage, and you've
+ got just the brains for a soldier. You don't want to remain a
+ lieutenant until you are fifty, do you?"
+
+ There was great force in Cleary's argument, and Sam knew it. East
+ Pointers were scandalized at the manner in which outsiders were
+ jumped into important commands in the field, and when engagements
+ took place the volunteers came in for all the praise, while the
+ regulars who did almost all the work were hardly mentioned.
+
+ "I'll think it over," said Sam. "I'll speak to Marian about it. It's very
+ kind of you to think of me."
+
+ "Not a bit," said Cleary. "I'm looking out for myself. If you go as a
+ major and I go as correspondent, I'll just freeze to you and make a
+ hero of you whether you will or not. I'll make your fortune, and you'll
+ make mine. I'll see that you get a chance, and I know that you'll take
+ it if you get it. You're just cut out for it. Now get permission from
+ the young woman and we'll call it a go."
+
+ The following afternoon Sam walked over the same ground, but this time
+ it was Marian who accompanied him. She was enthusiastic over Cleary's
+ proposition.
+
+ "Just think of it! You'll come back a hero and a general, and I don't
+ know what not, and we'll get married, and the President will come to
+ the wedding; and then we'll have our wedding tour up here, and the
+ corps will turn out and fire a salute, and we'll be the biggest people
+ at East Point. Won't it be splendid?"
+
+ "Perhaps, dear, I'll never come back at all. Who knows? I may get
+ killed."
+
+ "Oh, Sam! if you did, how proud I'd be of it. I'd wear black for a
+ whole year, and they'd put up a monument to you over there in the
+ cemetery and have a grand funeral, and I'd be in the first carriage,
+ and the flag would be draped, and the band would play the funeral
+ march. Oh, dear! how grand it would be, and how all the girls would
+ envy me!"
+
+ Tears came to her eyes as she spoke.
+
+ "Just think of being the _fiancée_ of a hero who died for his country!
+ Oh, Sam, Sam!"
+
+ Sam took her in his arms.
+
+ "You're my own brave soldier's wife," he said. "I'd be almost ready to
+ die for you, but if I don't, I'll come back and marry you. I'll write
+ to uncle for a commission to-night, and ask his advice about resigning
+ here either now or later. It hardly seems true that I may really go to
+ a real war." And his tears fell and mingled with hers.
+
+ Sam's uncle fell in readily with Cleary's scheme. He was a politician
+ and a man of the world, and he saw what an advantage it would be for
+ his nephew to seek promotion in the volunteers, and how much a close
+ friend among the war correspondents could help him. Furthermore, he had
+ heard of Sam's excellent record at East Point and was disposed to lend
+ him what aid could be derived from his influence with the
+ Administration. When Sam's father learned that his brother approved of
+ the project, he offered no objection, and a few weeks after Cleary had
+ broached the subject, both of the young men sent in their resignations,
+ and these were accepted. Cleary left at once for the metropolis to
+ perfect his plans, while Sam remained for a few days at the Point to
+ bid farewell to his betrothed. His uncle had at once sent in his name
+ to the War Department as a candidate for colonel of volunteers with
+ letters of recommendation from the most influential men at the Capital.
+ While Sam was still at East Point he saw in the daily paper that his
+ name had been sent in to the Senate as captain of volunteers with a
+ long list of others, and almost immediately he received a telegram
+ from his uncle announcing his confirmation without question. On the
+ same morning came a letter from Cleary telling him to come at once to
+ town and make the final arrangements before receiving orders to join
+ his regiment. We shall draw a veil over the last interview between Sam
+ and Marian. She was proficient in the art of saying farewell, and
+ nothing was lacking on this occasion to contribute to its romantic
+ effect. They parted in tears, but they were tears of hope and joy.
+
+ Cleary met Sam at the station in the city and took him to a modest
+ hotel.
+
+ "It's going to be bigger thing than I thought," he said, as they sat
+ down together for a good talk in the hotel lobby, after Sam had made
+ himself at home in his room. "I'm going to run a whole combination.
+ I've got in with a man who's a real genius. His name's Jonas. He
+ represents the brewers' trust, and he's going out to start saloons with
+ chattel mortgages on the fixtures. It's a big thing by itself. But then
+ besides that he's got orders to apply for street-railroad franchises
+ wherever he can get them, and he is going to start agencies to sell
+ typewriters and bicycles and some patent medicines, and I don't know
+ what else. You see he wanted to represent the Consolidated Press as a
+ sort of business agent, and _The Daily Lyre_ belongs to the
+ Consolidated, and that's the way I came across him. The fact is he
+ represents pretty much all the capital in the country. It's a big
+ combination. I'll boom him and you, and you'll help us, and then we can
+ get in on the ground floor with him in anything we like. It's a good
+ outlook, isn't it, hey? Have you got your commission yet?"
+
+ "No," said Sam, "not yet. My uncle wants me to come and spend a few
+ days with him at Slowburgh to make my acquaintance, and the commission
+ will go there. I'm to be in the 200th Volunteer Infantry. I don't quite
+ understand all your plans, but I hope I'll get a chance at real
+ fighting for our country, and I should like to be a great soldier. You
+ know that, Cleary."
+
+ "Yes, old man, I know it, and you will be, if courage and newspapers
+ can do it. I'm sorry you didn't get a colonelcy, but captain isn't
+ bad, and we'll skip you up to general in no time. You've always wanted
+ to be a hero, haven't you? Well, the first chance I get I'll nickname
+ you 'Hero' Jinks, and it'll stick, I'll answer for it!"
+
+ "Oh! thank you," said Sam.
+
+ "Now, good-by. I'll come in for you to-morrow and take you in to see
+ our war editor. He's a daisy. So long."
+
+ When on the morrow Sam was ushered into the den of the war editor, he
+ was surprised to see what a shabby room it was. The great man was
+ sitting at a desk which was almost hidden under piles of papers,
+ letters, telegrams, and memoranda. The chairs in the room were equally
+ encumbered, and he had to empty the contents of two of them on the
+ floor before Sam and Cleary could sit down.
+
+ "Ah, Captain Jinks, glad to see you!" he said.
+
+ Sam beamed with delight. It was the first time that he had heard his
+ new title--a title, in fact, to which he had as yet no right.
+
+ "I suppose Mr. Cleary has explained to you," the editor continued, "what
+ our designs are. Editing isn't what it used to be. It has become a very
+ complicated business. In old times we took the news as it came along,
+ and that was all that was expected of us; but if we tried that way of
+ doing things now, we'd have to shut up shop in a week. When we need
+ news nowadays we simply make it. I don't mean that we invent news--that
+ doesn't pay in the long run; people learn your game and you lose in the
+ end. No, I mean that we create the events that make the news. We were
+ running short of news last year, that's the whole truth of it; and so
+ we got up this war. It's been a complete success. We've quadrupled our
+ circulation, and it's doubling every month. We're well ahead of the
+ other papers because it's known as our war, and of course we are
+ expected to know more about it than anybody else."
+
+ "But I thought the war was to free the oppressed Cubapinos--an outburst
+ of popular sympathy with the downtrodden sufferers from Castalian
+ misrule," interposed Sam, flushing. "That's the reason why I applied
+ for a commission, and I am ready to pour out my last drop of blood for
+ my country."
+
+ "Of course you are, my dear captain; of course you are. And your ideas
+ of the cause of the war, as a military man, are quite correct. Indeed,
+ if you will read my editorial of yesterday you will see the same ideas
+ developed at some length."
+
+ He pressed an electric button on his desk, and a clerk entered.
+
+ "Get me a copy of yesterday's paper."
+
+ In a moment it was brought; the editor opened it, marked an article
+ with a dash of his blue pencil, and handed it to Sam.
+
+ "There," said he, "put that in your pocket and read it. I am sure that
+ you will agree with every word of it. Your understanding of the
+ situation does great credit to your insight. That is, if I may use the
+ term, the esoteric side of the question. It is only on the external and
+ material side that it is really a _Daily Lyre's_ war. There's really
+ no contradiction, none at all, as you see."
+
+ "Oh! none at all," said Sam, with a sigh of relief. "I never quite
+ understood it before, and you make it all so clear!"
+
+ "Now you will be prepared by what I have said to comprehend that it's
+ just in this line of creating the news beforehand that we want to make
+ use of you, and at the same time it will be the making of you, do you
+ see?"
+
+ "Not quite," said Sam. "How do you mean?"
+
+ "Why, we understand that you're a most promising military man and that
+ you intend to distinguish yourself. Suppose you do, what good will it
+ do, if nobody ever hears of it? Doesn't your idea of heroism include a
+ certain degree of appreciation?"
+
+ "Yes."
+
+ "Of publicity, I may say?"
+
+ Sam nodded assent.
+
+ "Or even in plain newspaper talk, of advertising?"
+
+ "I shouldn't quite like to be advertised," said Sam uneasily.
+
+ "That's a rather blunt word, I confess; but when you do some fine
+ exploit, you wouldn't mind seeing it printed in full in the papers that
+ the people at home read, would you?"
+
+ "No-o-o, not exactly; but then I should only want you to tell the truth
+ about it."
+
+ "Of course; I know that, but there are lots of ways of telling the
+ truth. We might put it in at the bottom of an inside page and give only
+ a stick to it, or we might let it have the whole first page here, with
+ your portrait at the top and headlines like that"; and he showed him a
+ title in letters six inches long. "You'd prefer that, wouldn't you?"
+
+ "I'm afraid I would," said Sam.
+
+ "Well, if you didn't you'd be a blamed fool, that's all I've got to
+ say, and we wouldn't care to bother about you."
+
+ "I'm sure it's very good of you to take me up," said Sam. "Why do you
+ select me instead of one of the great generals at the front?"
+
+ "Why, don't you see? You wouldn't make a practical newspaper man. The
+ people are half tired of the names of the generals already. They want
+ some new names. It's our business to provide them. Then all the other
+ newspapers are on the track of the generals. We must have a little hero
+ of our own. When General Laughter or General Notice do anything, all
+ the press of the country have got hold of them. They've got their
+ photographs in every possible attitude and their biographies down to
+ the last detail, and pictures of their birthplaces and of their
+ families and ancestors, and all the rest of it. We simply can't get
+ ahead of them, and people are beginning to think that it's not our war
+ after all. When we begin to boom you, they'll find out that we've got a
+ mortgage on it yet. We'll have the stuff all ready here to fire off,
+ and no one else will have a word. It'll be the greatest beat yet,
+ unless Mr. Cleary is mistaken in you and you are not going to
+ distinguish yourself."
+
+ "I don't think he is mistaken," said Sam solemnly. "I do intend to
+ distinguish myself if I get the chance."
+
+ "And we'll see that you have the chance. It's a big game we're playing,
+ but we hold the cards and we don't often lose. You're not the only
+ card, to be sure. We've got a lot of men at the front now representing
+ us. Several of our correspondents have made a hit already, and some of
+ them have made themselves more famous than the generals! Ha, ha! Our
+ head editor is going out next month, and of course we'll see to it that
+ he does wonders. Hullo! there's Jonas now. Why, this is a lucky
+ meeting. Here, Jonas. You know Cleary. Mr. Jonas, Captain Jinks. I'll
+ be blessed if here isn't the whole combination."
+
+ Mr. Jonas, who had come into the room unannounced, and perched himself
+ on the corner of a table, was a rather short man with a brown beard and
+ eye-glasses, and wore his hat on the back of his head.
+
+ "Well, Jonas, how are things going?" asked the editor.
+
+ "A 1. Couldn't be better. I've just been down at Skinner's----"
+
+ "Skinner & Company, one of the biggest financial houses in the street,"
+ the editor explained to Sam.
+
+ "And they've agreed to go the whole job. First of all, it'll be chiefly
+ trade. I showed them the contracts for boots and hats for the army, and
+ they were tickled to death. They'll let us have as much as we want on
+ them. I didn't have the embalmed-beef contract with me--it smells too
+ bad to carry round in my pocket, hee-hee!--but I explained it to them,
+ and it's even better. They're quite satisfied."
+
+ "And how is the beer business going?"
+
+ "Oh! that's a success already. Look at this item," and he pulled a
+ newspaper from his pocket and showed it to the editor.
+
+ "One hundred more saloons in Havilla than there were at this time last
+ year! Can that be possible?" ejaculated the latter.
+
+ "Yes, and I'm behind fifty-eight of them. That agent I sent out ahead
+ is a jewel."
+
+ "Have you been up at the Bible Society?"
+
+ "Yes, and I've got special terms on a hundred thousand Testaments in
+ Castalian and the native languages. That will awaken interest, you see,
+ and then we'll follow it up with five hundred thousand in English, and
+ it will do no end of good in pushing the language. It will be made the
+ official language soon, anyway. What a blessing it will be to those
+ poor creatures who speak languages that nobody can understand!"
+
+ "How is the rifle deal coming out?"
+
+ "Only so-so. The Government will take about three-quarters of the lot.
+ The rest we'll have to unload on the Cubapinos."
+
+ "What!" exclaimed Sam, "aren't they fighting against us now?"
+
+ "Oh! we don't sell them direct of course," added Jonas, "but we can't
+ alter the laws of trade, can we? And they require that things get into
+ the hands of the people who'll pay the most for them, hey?"
+
+ "Naturally," said the editor. "Captain Jinks has not studied political
+ economy. It's all a matter of supply and demand."
+
+ "I'm ashamed to say I haven't," said Sam. "It must be very interesting,
+ and I'm much obliged to you for telling me about it."
+
+ "I suppose it's too early to do anything definite about concessions for
+ trolleys and gas and electric-lighting plants," said the editor.
+
+ "Not a bit of it. That's what I went to see Skinner about to-day. I'm
+ sounding some of the chief natives already, and our people there are
+ all right. Skinner's lawyers are at work at the charters, and I'll
+ take them out with me. We can put them through as soon as we annex
+ the islands."
+
+ "But we promised not to annex them!" cried Sam.
+
+ The editor and Jonas looked knowingly at each other.
+
+ "The captain is not a diplomatist, you see," said the former. "As for
+ that matter, a soldier oughtn't to be. You understand, Captain, that
+ all promises are made subject to the proviso that we are able to carry
+ them out."
+
+ "Certainly."
+
+ "Now it's perfectly clear that we can never fulfil this promise. It is
+ our destiny to stay there. It would be flying in the face of Providence
+ and doing the greatest injury to the natives to abandon them. They
+ would fly at each other's throats the moment we left them alone."
+
+ "They haven't flown at each other's throats where we have left them
+ alone," mused Sam aloud.
+
+ "I didn't say they had, but that they would," explained the editor.
+
+ "Oh! I see," said Sam, and he relapsed into silence.
+
+ "Talking of electric lights," continued Jonas, "I've got a book here
+ full of all sorts of electric things that we'll have to introduce
+ there. There's the electrocution chair; look at that design. They
+ garrote people in the most barbarous manner out there now. We'll
+ civilize them, if we get a chance!"
+
+ "Perhaps they won't have the money to buy all your things," remarked
+ Cleary, who had been a silent and interested spectator of the
+ interview.
+
+ "Yes," said Jonas, "we may have trouble with the poorest tribes. We
+ must make them want things, that's all. The best way to begin is to tax
+ them. I've got a plan ready for a hut-tax of five dollars a year.
+ That's little enough, I should think, but some of them never see money
+ and they'll have to work to get it. That will make them work the
+ coal-and iron-mines. Skinner has his eye on these, too. When the
+ natives once begin to earn money, they'll soon want more and then
+ they'll spend it on us."
+
+ "But the Government there will be too poor to take up great public
+ expenditures for a long time yet," said Cleary.
+
+ "Don't be too sure of that. They haven't even got a national debt.
+ That's one of the first things we'll provide for. They're a most
+ primitive people. Just think of their existing up to the present time
+ without a national debt! They're mere savages."
+
+ "Well," said Cleary, rising, "I think we've taken enough of your
+ valuable time and we must be off."
+
+ "Wait a moment," said the editor. "Have you explained all that I told
+ you to the captain?"
+
+ "Not yet," answered Cleary, "but I'll do it now on the way to his
+ hotel. He is going to leave town to-day, and he may be ordered to sail
+ any day now. I will try to go on the same ship with him."
+
+ "Perhaps I can manage it, too," said Jonas, as he shook hands with the
+ two friends, "if I can finish up all these arrangements. I must be on
+ the ground there as soon as I can."
+
+ As Sam and Cleary left the room the editor and Jonas settled down to a
+ confidential conversation, and there were smiles upon their lips as
+ they began talking.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER V
+
+ Slowburgh
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+
+ While Sam accepted the explanations of the editor and Jonas as
+ expressions of wisdom from men who had had a far wider experience than
+ his, he had some faint misgivings as to some of the business
+ enterprises in which his new friends were embarked, and he hinted as
+ much to Cleary.
+
+ "Some of those things do sound rather strange," answered Cleary, as
+ they walked away, "but you must look at the world in a broad way. Is
+ our civilization better than that of the Cubapinos?"
+
+ "Undoubtedly."
+
+ "Well, then, we must be conferring a favor upon them by giving it to
+ them. We can't slice it up and give them only the plums. That would be
+ ridiculous. They must take us for better and worse. In fact, I think we
+ should be guilty of hypocrisy if we pretended to be better than we are.
+ Suppose we gave them a better civilization than we've got, shouldn't we
+ be open to the charge of misrepresentation?"
+
+ "That's true," said Sam. "I didn't think of that.
+
+ "Yes," Cleary went on; "at first I had some doubts about that saloon
+ business particularly, but the more you think of it, the more you see
+ that it's our duty to introduce them there. It's all a part of our
+ civilization."
+
+ "So it is," said Sam. "And then people have always done things that
+ way, haven't they?"
+
+ "Yes, of course they have."
+
+ "Then it must be all right. What right have we to criticize the doings
+ of people so much wiser than we are? I think you are quite right. As a
+ correspondent you ought to be satisfied that you are doing the right
+ thing. To me as a soldier it's a matter of no importance anyway,
+ because a soldier only does what he's told, but you as a civilian
+ have to think, I suppose, and I'm glad you're satisfied and can make
+ such a conclusive case of it. What was it that the editor wanted you
+ to tell me?"
+
+ "Oh! yes. I came near forgetting. You see what a lot they're going to
+ do for us; now we must help them all we can. They want you to leave
+ behind with them all the material about yourself that you can get
+ together. You must get photographed at Slowburgh in a lot of different
+ positions, and in your cadet uniform and your volunteer rig when you
+ get it. Then you must let them have all your earlier photos if you can.
+ 'Hero Jinks as an infant in arms,' 'Hero Jinks in his baby-carriage,'
+ 'Hero Jinks as a schoolboy'--what a fine series it would make! You
+ know what I mean. Then you must write your biography and your opinions
+ about things in general, and give the addresses of all your friends and
+ relations so that they can all be interviewed when the time comes.
+ You'll do it, won't you? It's the up-to-date way of doing things, and
+ it's the only way to be a military success."
+
+ "If it's the proper way of doing things I'll do it," said Sam.
+
+ "That's a good fellow! I'll send you a list of questions to answer and
+ coach you as well as I can. I'm dying to get off and have this thing
+ started. Isn't Jonas great? He's got just my ideas, only bigger. You
+ see, he explained to me that in this country trusts have grown up with
+ great difficulty, and it was hard work to establish the benefits which
+ they produce for the public. They were fought at every step. But in the
+ Cubapines we have a clean field, and by getting the Government monopoly
+ whenever we want it, we can found one big trust and do ever so much
+ good. I half wish I were a Cubapino, they're going to be benefited
+ so, and without doing anything to deserve it either. Some people
+ are born lucky."
+
+ "I can't quite follow all those business plans," said Sam. "My head
+ isn't trained to it; but I'm glad we're going to do good there, and
+ if I can do something great to bring it about, it will give me real
+ happiness."
+
+ "It will, old man, it will. I'm sure of it," cried Cleary, as he took
+ his leave of Sam in front of the hotel. "Let me know what steamer
+ you're going by as soon as you get orders, and I'll try to manage it
+ to get a passage on her too. They often carry newspaper men on our
+ transports."
+
+ On the following day Sam went to visit his uncle at Slowburgh, a small
+ sea-port of some four thousand inhabitants lying several miles away
+ from the railroad. The journey in the train occupied six hours or more,
+ and Sam spent the time in learning the Castalian language in a handbook
+ he had bought in town. He had already taken lessons in the language at
+ East Point and was beginning to be fairly proficient. He alighted at
+ the nearest station to Slowburgh and entered the rather shabby omnibus
+ which was standing waiting. Sam felt lonely. There was nothing military
+ about the station and no uniform in sight. He no longer wore a uniform
+ himself, and the landscape was painfully civilian. Finally the horses
+ started and the 'bus moved slowly up the road. Sam was impatient. His
+ fellow countrymen were risking their lives thousands of miles away, and
+ here he was, creeping along a country road in the disguise of a private
+ citizen, far away from the post of duty and danger. He looked with
+ disgust at the plowmen in the fields busily engaged in preparing the
+ soil for next year's grain.
+
+ "What a mean, poor-spirited lot," he thought. "Here they are, following
+ their wretched plows without a thought of the brave soldiers who are
+ defending their country and themselves so many leagues away. It is the
+ soldier, suffering from hunger and fever and falling on the battlefield
+ in the agony of death, who makes it possible for these fellows to spend
+ their days in pleasant exercise in the fields. The soldier bears
+ civilization on his back, he supports all the rest, he is the pedestal
+ which bears without complaint the civilian as an idle ornament. The
+ soldier, in short, is the real man, the only perfect product of
+ creation."
+
+ And his heart was filled with thankfulness that he had selected the
+ career of a soldier and that there never could be any doubt of his
+ usefulness to the world. The only other occupants of the omnibus were
+ two men--one of them a commercial traveler, and the other an aged
+ resident of Slowburgh who had been at the county town for the day, as
+ Sam gathered from their conversation.
+
+ "I don't suppose that the war has caused much excitement at Slowburgh?"
+ asked Sam at last, introducing the subject uppermost in his mind.
+
+ "It ain't jest what it was when I went to the war," said the old man;
+ "but there is a deal o' talk about it, and all the young men are
+ wanting to go."
+
+ "Are they?" cried Sam, in delight. "And did you serve in the war? How
+ very interesting! Did you offer your life for your country without hope
+ of reward?"
+
+ "That's just what I did, young man, and if you doubt it, here's my
+ pension that I drew to-day in town, twelve dollars a month, and they've
+ paid it now these thirty-four years."
+
+ "That's a pretty soft thing," said the commercial man. "Better'n
+ selling fountain-pens in the backwoods."
+
+ "A soft thing!" cried the old man, "I ought to have twice as much.
+ There's Abe Tucker gets fifteen dollars because he caught cold on
+ picket duty, and I get a beggarly twelve."
+
+ "Were you severely wounded?" asked Sam.
+
+ "Well, no-o-o, not exactly, tho I might just as well 'a' been. I was
+ down bad with the measles. This is an ongrateful country. Here it is
+ only thirty-five years after the war, and they're only paying a hundred
+ and forty millions a year to only a million pensioners. It's a beggarly
+ shame!"
+
+ "Were there that many men in the war?" asked the traveler.
+
+ "Pretty near it, I reckon. But p'r'aps in thirty-five years there'd be
+ a natural increase. Think of it, a million men throwing away their
+ lives for a nothing like that! I jest tell our young fellers that
+ they'd better stay at home. Why, we've had to fight for what we've got.
+ You wouldn't think it, but we've had to pass around the hat, and shove
+ it hard under the nose of Congress, too, just as if we were beggars and
+ frauds, and as if we hadn't sacrificed everything for our country!"
+
+ "It's an outrage," cried Sam sympathetically. "But I hope you won't
+ keep the young men from going. I'm going soon, and perhaps the country
+ will be more generous in future."
+
+ "Take my advice, young man, and whenever anything happens to you while
+ you're away, take down the names of the witnesses and keep their
+ affidavits. Then you'll be all ready to get your pension as soon as you
+ come back. It took me three years to straighten out mine. Then I got
+ the back pay, of course, but I ought to have had it before. I've got a
+ claim in now for eight dollars more a month running all the way back.
+ It amounts to over three thousand dollars, and I ought to have it."
+
+ "Was that for the measles, too?" asked the stranger.
+
+ The old man glared at his interrogator, but did not deign to reply.
+
+ "Our Congressman, old Jinks, has my claim," he said, turning to Sam.
+ "But he doesn't seem to be able to do anything with it."
+
+ "He's my uncle," said Sam, fearing that he might hear something against
+ his worthy relative.
+
+ "So you're George Jinks' nephew, are you? Are you goin' to be a
+ captain? Do tell! I read about it in the Slowburgh _Herald_ last week.
+ I'm real glad to see you. You're the first officer I've seen in ten
+ years except the recruiting officer last week."
+
+ "Did they have a recruiting officer here, in Slowburgh?" asked Sam.
+
+ "Yes, they did, and there was thirteen fellers wanted to go, but he
+ only took five of 'em, and they hain't gone yet. The rest was too short
+ or too fat or too thin or something."
+
+ "Didn't any more men want to go than that?"
+
+ "No," said the old man. "They all want to wear soldier-clothes, but
+ they don't all want to go fighting. They've got up a militia battalion
+ for them now, and 'most everybody in town's got a uniform. I hadn't
+ seen a uniform in the county before in I don't know how long--except
+ firemen, I should say."
+
+ "I'm so glad they've got them now," cried Sam. "Doesn't it improve the
+ looks of the place? It's so much more homelike and-d-d glorious, don't
+ you think so?"
+
+ The old man had no opportunity to reply, as the 'bus now drew up at the
+ front door of the principal hotel. The commercial traveler got out
+ first and went into the house; the old man followed, and turning to Sam
+ as he passed him, he said with a glance at the vanishing stranger:
+
+ "He's a copperhead, that feller."
+
+ He went on toward the bar-room door, but called back as he went:
+
+ "If you get lonesome over at Jinks', come in here in the evening. Ask
+ for me; my name's Reddy."
+
+ Sam did not get out of the omnibus, but told the driver to take him to
+ Congressman Jinks'; and on they went, first to the right and then to
+ the left along the wide and gently winding streets, which would have
+ been well shaded with maples if the yellow leaves had not already begun
+ to fall. They drove in at last through a gate in a wooden fence and
+ round a semi-circular lawn to the front of a comfortable frame house,
+ and in a few moments he was received with open arms by his relations.
+
+ Congressman Jinks was a widower and had several children, all of whom,
+ however, were away at school except his eldest daughter, a young lady
+ of Sam's age, and his youngest, a girl of seven. The former, Mary, was
+ a tall damsel with fair hair and a decidedly attractive manner. Mr.
+ Jinks reminded Sam of his father with the added elegancies of many
+ years' life at the Capital.
+
+ "Well, Samuel, I am glad to see you at last. We know all about you, and
+ we're expecting great things from you," he cried out in a hearty voice.
+ Sam felt at home at once.
+
+ "Come, Mary, show your cousin his room. Here, give me your grip. Yes,
+ you must let me carry it. Now get ready for supper as soon as you can.
+ It's all ready whenever you are."
+
+ After supper they all sat round a wood fire, for it was a little chilly
+ in the evening now. Mr. Jinks had his little girl in his lap, and they
+ talked over family history and the events of the day. Sam asked who Mr.
+ Reddy was whom he had met in the train.
+
+ "Oh! you mean old Reddy. Was he drunk? No? That's odd."
+
+ "He'd been away for the day drawing his pension," said Sam.
+
+ "Of course," said Mr. Jinks. "I might have known it. That is his one
+ sober day in the month. He sobers up to go to town, but he'll make up
+ for lost time to-night. That twelve dollars will last just a week, and
+ it all goes into the bar-room till. He's been that way ever since I was
+ a boy, tho they say he was a steady enough young fellow before he went
+ to the war. It's a curious coincidence, but there are two or three old
+ rum-soaked war veterans like that hanging round every tavern in the
+ country, and I'd like to know how much pension money goes that way.
+ It's a great system tho, that pension system. I see something of it in
+ Whoppington when I'm attending Congress. It distributes the money of
+ the country and circulates it among the people. I like to see the
+ amount increase every year. It's a healthy sign. I'm trying to get some
+ more for Reddy. It helps the county just that much. Swan, the hotel
+ man, spends it here. I believe in protecting home industries and
+ fostering our home market. I wish you could have heard my speech on the
+ war-tax bill--it covered that point. My, how this war is costing, tho!
+ A million dollars a day! But it's well worth it. The more money we
+ spend and the higher the taxes, the more circulation there is. You
+ ought to see how things are booming at Whoppington. I'm sorry you
+ couldn't come to see me there, but I had to be here this week looking
+ after election matters in my district. In Whoppington all the hotels
+ are full of contractors and men looking for commissions in the army,
+ and promoters and investors, all with an eye to the Cubapines. You can
+ just see how the war has brought prosperity!"
+
+ "I should have liked to see Whoppington very much," said Sam, "but I
+ suppose I must wait till I come back. It must be very different from
+ other cities. You must feel there as if you were at the center of
+ things--at the very mainspring of all our life, I mean."
+
+ "You've hit the nail on the head," said his uncle. "Whoppington holds
+ up all the rest of the country. There is the Government that makes
+ everything go. There's no business there to speak of; no manufacturing,
+ no agriculture in the country round--nothing to distract your attention
+ but the power of the Administration that lies behind all the rest.
+ Just think what this country would be without Whoppington! Just imagine
+ the capital city sinking into the ground and what would we all do? Even
+ here at Slowburgh what would be left for us?"
+
+ "Wouldn't we have breakfast to-morrow morning, papa?" asked the little
+ girl in his lap.
+
+ "Er-er-well, perhaps we might have breakfast----"
+
+ "Wouldn't we have clothes, papa?"
+
+ "Perhaps we might have--but no, we couldn't either; it's the tariff
+ that gives us our clothes by keeping all foreign clothes out of the
+ country, and then we shouldn't have er-er----"
+
+ "It would upset the post-office," suggested Sam, coming to the rescue.
+
+ "Yes, to be sure, that is what I meant. It would cause a serious delay
+ in the mails, that's certain."
+
+ "And then there would be no soldiers," added Sam.
+
+ "Of course. How stupid of me to overlook that. How would you like to
+ see no soldiers in the street?"
+
+ "I shouldn't like it at all, papa."
+
+ "Yes, my dear boy," he proceeded, turning to Sam, "I would not want to
+ have it repeated in my district, but I confess that I am always
+ homesick for Whoppington when I am here. That's the real world there.
+ There's the State Department where they manage all the foreign affairs
+ of the world. What could we do without foreign affairs? And the
+ Agricultural Department. How could we get in our crops without it? And
+ the Labor Department. Every man who does a day's work depends on the
+ Labor Department for his living, we may say. And the----"
+
+ "The War Department," said Sam.
+
+ "Yes, the War Department. We depend on that for our wars. Perhaps at
+ first that does not seem to be so useful, but----"
+
+ "Oh! but, Uncle George, surely it is the most useful of all. What could
+ we do without wars. Just fancy a country without wars!"
+
+ "I don't know but you're right, Sam."
+
+ "And then the Treasury Department depends a good deal on the War
+ Department," said Sam, in triumph, "for without the War Department and
+ the army it wouldn't have any pensions to pay."
+
+ "That's so."
+
+ "Papa," said Mary Jinks, who had modestly taken no part in a
+ conversation whose wisdom was clearly beyond her comprehension--"papa,
+ why didn't everybody go to the war like Mr. Reddy, and then they'd all
+ have pensions and nobody'd have to work."
+
+ "It's their own fault if they didn't," answered her father; "and if
+ some people are overworked they have only their own selves to thank for
+ it. I have no patience with the complaints of these socialists and
+ anarchists that the poor are getting poorer and the number of
+ unemployed increasing. In a country with pensions and war taxes and a
+ tariff there's no excuse for poverty at all."
+
+ "Yes," said Sam, "they could all enlist if they wanted to."
+
+ The following day was spent in driving about the country. Mr. Jinks was
+ obliged to visit the various centers in his Congressional district, and
+ he took Sam with him on one of these expeditions. The country was
+ beautiful in the clear, cold autumn air. The mountains stood out blue
+ on the horizon, and the trees were brilliant with red and yellow
+ leaves. Sam, however, had no eyes for these things. He was eager to
+ hear about the militia company, and was pleased to see several pairs of
+ military trousers, altho they were made to do duty with civilian coats.
+ Such for him were the incidents of the day. After supper in the evening
+ he bethought him of old Reddy's invitation to the hotel bar-room, and
+ thinking that he might learn more about the local military situation
+ there, he excused himself and hied him thither. He found the room
+ crowded with the wiseacres of the place, the Bohemian, drinking element
+ perhaps predominating. The room was so full of smoke that, as Sam
+ entered, he could hardly distinguish its contents, but he saw a
+ confused mass of men in wooden arm-chairs tipped at every conceivable
+ angle, surrounding a tall round stove which was heated white hot. The
+ room was intensely warm and apparently totally wanting in ventilation.
+
+ "Here's my friend, Captain Jinks," said a husky voice which Sam
+ recognized as that of old Reddy. "Here, take this chair near the fire."
+
+ Sam accepted the offered chair, altho he would have preferred a
+ situation a little less torrid.
+
+ "Gentlemen, this is Captain Jinks," said the old man, determined to get
+ all the credit he could from his acquaintance with Sam. "Captain, this
+ is my friend, Mr. Jackson."
+
+ Mr. Jackson was a tall, thin, narrow-chested man with no shoulders, a
+ rounded back, and a gray, tobacco-stained mustache. His face was
+ covered with pimples, and a huge quid of tobacco was concealed under
+ his cheek. He was sitting on a chair tipped back rather beyond the
+ danger-point, and his feet rested on the rim which projected from the
+ stove half-way up. He made no effort to rise, but slowly extended a
+ grimy, clammy hand which Sam pressed with some hesitation.
+
+ "Glad to make your acquaintance, Captain," he drawled in a half-cracked
+ voice that suggested damaged lungs and vocal organs. "Shake hands with
+ Mr. Tucker."
+
+ Mr. Tucker, a little, old, red-faced man on the other side of the
+ stove, advanced and went through the ceremony suggested.
+
+ "We were just a-talking about them Cubapinos," explained Reddy. "The
+ idee of them fellers a-pitching into us after all we've done for 'em.
+ It's outrageous. They're only monkeys anyway, and they ought to be
+ shot, every mother's son on 'em. Haven't we freed 'em from the cruel
+ Castalians that they've been hating so for three hundred years?"
+
+ "They seem to be hating us pretty well just now," said a man in the
+ corner, whose voice sounded familiar to Sam. He turned and recognized
+ the commercial traveler of the day before.
+
+ "They're welcome to hate us," answered Jackson, "and when it comes to
+ a matter of hating I shouldn't think much of us if we couldn't make 'em
+ hate us as much in a year as the Castalians could in three hundred.
+ They're a blamed slow lot and we ain't. That's all there is of it. What
+ do you think, Captain?"
+
+ "I fear," said Sam, "that they don't quite understand the great
+ blessings we're conferring on them."
+
+ "What blessings?" asked the drummer.
+
+ "Why," said Sam, "liberty and independence--no, I don't mean
+ independence exactly, but liberty and freedom."
+
+ "Then why don't we leave them alone instead of fighting them?"
+
+ "What an idee!" exclaimed Tucker. "They don't know what liberty is, and
+ we must teach 'em if we have to blow their brains out."
+
+ "You're too hard on 'em, Tucker," drawled Mr. Jackson. "We mustn't
+ expect too much from pore savages who live in a country so hot that
+ they can't progress like we do." Here Mr. Jackson took off his hat and
+ wiped the beads of perspiration from his brow with a red bandanna
+ handkerchief. "Don't expect too much from cannibals that have their
+ brains half roasted by the tropical sun."
+
+ "That's a fact!" said some one in the throng.
+
+ "Yes," said Jackson, crossing his legs on a level well above his head,
+ "them pore critters need our civilization, that's what they need," and
+ he dexterously squirted a mouthful of tobacco juice on the white-hot
+ stove, where it sizzled and gradually evaporated. "We must make real
+ men of 'em. We must give 'em our strength and vigor and intelligence.
+ They're a dirty lot of lazy beggars, that's the long and short of it,
+ and we must turn 'em into gentlemen like us!"
+
+ A general murmur of approval followed this outburst.
+
+ "I hear," said Sam, anxious to get some definite information as to the
+ warriors of the town, "I hear that several Slowburghers are going to
+ the war."
+
+ "Yes," said Tucker, while Jackson after his effort settled down into a
+ semi-comatose state, "six of our boys are a-going. There's Davy Black,
+ he drives the fastest horse in these parts, and Tom Slade. Where is
+ Tom? He's generally here. They'll miss him here at the hotel, and Jim
+ Thomson who used to be bartender over at Bloodgood's, and the two
+ Thatchers--they're cousins--that makes five."
+
+ "The village ought to be glad they are going to represent her at the
+ front," said Sam.
+
+ "From all I can hear," said the commercial man, "I think they are."
+
+ "Naturally," cried Sam, "it will reflect great glory on the place. You
+ ought to be proud of them."
+
+ "It'll help the insurance business here," said a young man who had not
+ yet spoken.
+
+ "How is that?" asked Sam. "I don't exactly see."
+
+ "Well, it's this way. You see I'm in the insurance business and I can't
+ write a policy on a barn in this township, there's been so many burned;
+ and while I don't want to say nothing against anybody, we think maybe
+ they won't burn so much when the Thatchers clear out."
+
+ "Nothin' ain't ever been proved against 'em," said Tucker.
+
+ "That's true," said the young man, "but perhaps there might have been
+ if they'd stayed. They say that Squire Jones was going to have Josh
+ Thatcher arrested next week for his barn, but he's agreed to let up if
+ he'd go to the Cubapines. Maybe that isn't true, but they say so."
+
+ "I venture to say that it is a mistake," said Sam, who had been much
+ pained by the conversation. "Young men who are so patriotic in the hour
+ of need must be men of high character."
+
+ "Maybe they are and maybe they aren't," replied the insurance agent,
+ "but old Mrs. Crane told me she was going to buy chickens again next
+ week for her chicken-yard. There was so many stolen last year that she
+ gave up keeping them, but next week she's beginning again, and next
+ week the Thatchers are going away. It's a coincidence, anyhow."
+
+ "Oh, boys will be boys," said Reddy. "When they get a good pension
+ they'll be just as respectable as you or me. Here comes Tom Slade now,
+ and Josh Thatcher, too."
+
+ The door had opened, and through the smoke Sam descried two young men,
+ one a slight wiry fellow, the other a large, broad-shouldered,
+ fair-haired man with a dull expression of the eye.
+
+ "Who says 'drinks all around'?" cried the former. "Everybody's blowing
+ us off now."
+
+ "Here," said Jackson, waking up, "I'll do it, hanged if I don't. You
+ fellows are a-goin' to civilize the Cubapinos, and you deserve all the
+ liquor you can carry."
+
+ He got up and approached the bar and the crowd followed him, and soon
+ every one was supplied with some kind of beverage.
+
+ "Here's to Thatcher and Slade! May they represent Slowburgh honorably
+ in the Cubapines and show 'em what Slowburghers are like," said
+ Jackson, elevating his iced cocktail.
+
+ The health was heartily drunk.
+
+ "And here is to that distinguished officer, Captain Jinks. Long may he
+ wave!" cried old Reddy.
+
+ "Speech, speech!" exclaimed the convivial crowd.
+
+ "Gentlemen," responded Sam, "I am a soldier and not an orator, but I am
+ proud to have my name coupled with those of your honored fellow
+ townsmen. It is a sign of the greatness of our country that men of just
+ the same character are in all quarters of this mighty republic
+ answering their country's call. Soon we shall have the very pick of our
+ youth collected on the shores of these ungrateful islanders who have
+ turned against their best friends, and these misguided people will see
+ for themselves the fruits of our civilization as we see it, in the
+ persons of our soldiers. Permit me in responding to your flattering
+ toast to propose the names of Mr. Reddy and Mr. Tucker as
+ representatives of an older generation of patriots whose example we are
+ happy to have before us for our guidance."
+
+ This, Sam's first speech, was received with great applause, and then
+ Josh Thatcher proposed three cheers for Captain Jinks, which were
+ given with a will. The only perverse spirit was that of the commercial
+ traveler, who had sat in the corner reading an old copy of the
+ Slowburgh _Herald_, and now on hearing the cheers, took a candle and
+ went upstairs to bed.
+
+ "That man's no good," said Reddy with a shake of his head. While the
+ whole company were expressing their concurrence with this sentiment,
+ Sam bade them good-night and took his leave.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VI
+
+ Off for the Cubapines
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+
+ By the next morning's mail Sam's commission arrived, and with it orders
+ to report at once at the city of St. Kisco, whence a transport was
+ about to sail on a date which gave Sam hardly time to catch it. He must
+ hurry at once to town and get his new uniforms for which he had been
+ fitted the week before, and then proceed by the fastest trains on the
+ long journey to the distant port without even paying his parents a
+ farewell visit. He found Cleary busily engaged in making his final
+ arrangements, and persuaded him to cut them short and travel with him.
+ Sam had hardly time to take breath from the moment of his departure
+ from Slowburgh to the evening on which he and Cleary at last sat down
+ in their sleeping-car. His friend heaved a deep sigh.
+
+ "Well, here we are actually off and I haven't got anything to do for a
+ change. This is what I call comfort."
+
+ "Yes," said Sam, "but I wish we were in the Cubapines. This inaction is
+ terrible while so much is at stake. It's a consolation to know that I
+ am going to help to save the country, but it is tantalizing to wait so
+ long. Then in your own way you're going to help the country too," he
+ added, thinking that he might seem to Cleary to be monopolizing the
+ honors.
+
+ "I'll help it by helping you," laughed Cleary. "I've got another
+ contract for you. You see the magazines are worth working. They handle
+ the news after the newspapers are through with it, and they don't
+ interfere with each other. So I got permission to tackle them from
+ _The Lyre_, and I saw the editor of _Scribblers' Magazine_ yesterday
+ and it's a go, if things come out as I expect."
+
+ "What do you mean?" asked Sam.
+
+ "Why, you are to write articles for them, a regular series, and the
+ price is to be fixed on a sliding scale according to your celebrity at
+ the time of each publication. It won't be less than a hundred dollars a
+ page, and may run up to a thousand. It wouldn't be fair to fix the
+ price ahead. If the articles run say six months, the last article might
+ be worth ten times as much as the first."
+
+ "Yes, it might be better written," said Sam.
+
+ "Oh, I don't mean that. But your name might be more of an ad. by
+ that time."
+
+ "I've never written anything to print in my life," said Sam, "and I'm
+ not sure I can."
+
+ "That doesn't make any difference. I'll write them for you. You might
+ be too modest anyhow. I can't think of a good name for the series. It
+ ought to be 'The Autobiography of a Hero,' or 'A Modern Washington in
+ the Cubapines,' or something like that. What do you think?"
+
+ "I'm sure I don't know," said Sam. "I must leave that to you. They
+ sound to me rather too flattering, but if you are sure that is the way
+ those things are always done, I won't make any objection. You might ask
+ Mr. Jonas. Where is he?"
+
+ "He's going on next week. He's the greatest fellow I ever saw.
+ Everything he touches turns to gold. He's got his grip on everything in
+ sight on those blessed islands already. He's scarcely started, and he
+ could sell out his interests there for a cold million to-day. It's
+ going to be a big company to grab everything. He's called it the
+ 'Benevolent Assimilation Company, Limited'; rather a good name, I
+ think, tho perhaps 'Unlimited' would be nearer the truth."
+
+ "Yes," said Sam. "It shows our true purposes. I hope the Cubapinos will
+ rejoice when they hear the name."
+
+ "Perhaps they won't. There's no counting on those people. I'm sick of
+ them before I've seen them. I'm just going to tell what a lot of
+ skins they are when I begin writing for _The Lyre_. By the way, did you
+ have your photographs taken at Slowburgh?"
+
+ [Illustration: A BLOOD BROTHERHOOD
+ "A BIG COMPANY TO GRAB EVERYTHING ... THE 'BENEVOLENT ASSIMILATION
+ COMPANY, LIMITED'"]
+
+ "No," said Sam, "I forgot all about it, but I can write home about the
+ old ones, and I've got one in cadet uniform taken at East Point."
+
+ "Well, we mustn't forget to have you taken at St. Kisco, and we can
+ mail the photos to _The Lyre_, but you must be careful not to overlook
+ a thing like that again. The people will want to know what the hero who
+ saved the country looked like."
+
+ "Even if I don't do anything very wonderful," said Sam, "and I hope I
+ shall, I shall be taking part in a great work, and doing my share of
+ civilizing and Christianizing a barbarous country. They have no
+ conception of our civilized and refined manners, of the sway of law and
+ order, of all our civilized customs, the result of centuries of
+ improvement and effort."
+
+ Cleary picked up a newspaper to read.
+
+ "What's that other newspaper lying there?" asked Sam.
+
+ "That's _The Evening Star_; do you want it?" and he handed it to him.
+
+ "Good Lord! what's that frightful picture?" said Cleary, as Sam opened
+ the paper. "Oh, I see; it's that lynching yesterday. Why, it's from a
+ snap-shot; that's what I call enterprise! There's the darkey tied to
+ the stake, and the flames are just up to his waist. My! how he squirms.
+ It's fearful, isn't it? And look at the crowd! There are small boys
+ bringing wood, and women and girls looking on, and, upon my word, a
+ baby in arms, too! I know that square very well. I've often been there.
+ That's the First Presbyterian Church there behind the stake. Rather a
+ handsome building," and Cleary turned back to his own paper, while Sam
+ settled down in his corner to read how the leading citizens gathered
+ bones and charred flesh as mementoes and took them home to their
+ children. No one could have guessed what he was reading from his
+ expression, for his face spoke of nothing but a guileless conscience
+ and a contented heart.
+
+ One day at St. Kisco gave just time enough for the photographs, and
+ most of the day was devoted to them. Sam was taken in twenty poses--in
+ the act of leading his troops in a breach, giving the order to fire,
+ charging bayonets himself with a musket supposed to have been taken
+ from a dead foe, standing with his arms folded and his cap pulled over
+ his eyes in the trenches, and waving his cap on a bastion in the moment
+ of triumph. Cleary lay down so that his friend might be pictured with
+ his foot upon his prostrate form. The photographer was one who made a
+ specialty of such work, and was connected with a cinematograph company.
+
+ "If you have good luck, sir, and become famous," he said, "as your
+ friend thinks you will, we'll fight your battles over again over there
+ in the vacant lot; and then we'll work these in, and you'll soon be in
+ every variety show in the country."
+
+ "But I may be mounted on horseback," said Sam.
+
+ "That's so," said Cleary. "Can't you get a horse somewhere and take him
+ on that?"
+
+ "We never do that, sir. Here's a saddle. Just sit on it across this
+ chair, and when the time comes we'll work it in all right. We'll have a
+ real horse over in the lot." And thus Sam was taken straddling a chair.
+
+ They left orders to send copies of the photographs to Homeville,
+ Slowburgh, and to Miss Hunter who was still at East Point, and the
+ remainder to _The Lyre_. That very evening they boarded the transport
+ and at daybreak sailed away over the great ocean. The ship was filled
+ by various drafts for different regiments and men-of-war. Sam's
+ regiment was already at the seat of war, but there were several
+ captains and lieutenants assigned to it on board, as well as thirty or
+ forty men. Sam felt entirely comfortable again for the first time since
+ his resignation at East Point. He was in his element, the military
+ world, once more. Everything was ruled by drum, fife, and bugle. He
+ found the same feeling of intense patriotism again, which civilians can
+ not quite attain to, however they may make the attempt. The relations
+ between some of the officers seemed to Sam somewhat strange. The
+ highest naval officer on board, a captain, was not on speaking terms
+ with the highest army officer, a brigadier-general of volunteers. This
+ breach apparently set the fashion, for all the way down, through both
+ arms of the service, there were jealousies and quarrels. There was one
+ great subject of dispute, the respective merits of the two admirals who
+ had overcome the Castalian fleet at Havilla. Some ascribed the victory
+ to the one and some to the other, but to take one side was to put an
+ end to all friendships on the other.
+
+ "See here, Sam," said Cleary, not long after they had been out of sight
+ of land, "who are you for, Admiral Hercules or Admiral Slewey? We can't
+ keep on the fence, that's evident, and if we get down on different
+ sides we can't be friends, and that might upset all our plans, not to
+ speak of the Benevolent Assimilation Trust."
+
+ "The fact is," said Sam, "that I don't know anything about it. They're
+ both admirals, and they both must be right."
+
+ "Nobody knows anything about it, but we must make up our minds all the
+ same. My idea is that Hercules is going to come out ahead; and as long
+ as one seems as good as the other in other respects, I move that we go
+ for Hercules."
+
+ "Very well," said Sam, "if you say so. He was in command, anyway, and
+ more likely to be right."
+
+ So Sam and Cleary allied themselves with the Hercules party, which was
+ in the majority. They became quite intimate with the naval officers who
+ belonged to this faction, and saw more of them than of the army men.
+ Sam was much interested in learning about the profession which kept
+ alive at sea the same traditions which the army preserved on land. For
+ the first few days of the voyage the rolling of the ship made him feel
+ a little sick, and he concealed his failings as well as he could and
+ kept to himself; but he proved to be on the whole a good sailor. He was
+ particularly pleased to learn that on a man-of-war the captain takes
+ his meals alone, and that only on invitation can an inferior officer
+ sit down at table with him. This appealed to him as an admirable way of
+ maintaining discipline and respect. The fact that all the naval men he
+ met had their arms and bodies more or less tattooed also aroused his
+ admiration. He inquired of the common soldiers if they ever indulged in
+ the same artistic luxury, and found out to his delight that a few of
+ them did.
+
+ "It's strange," he remarked to Cleary, "that tattooing is universal in
+ the navy and comparatively rare in the army. I rather think the habit
+ must have been common to both services, and somehow we have nearly lost
+ it. It's a fine thing. It marks a man with noble symbols and mottoes,
+ and commits him to an honorable life, indelibly I may say."
+
+ "It's a little like branding a mule," said Cleary.
+
+ "Yes," said Sam; "the brand shows who owns the mule, and the tattooing
+ shows a man belongs to his country."
+
+ "And if he's shipwrecked and hasn't any picture-books or newspapers
+ with him, he can find all he wants on his own skin," said Cleary.
+
+ "Joke as you please, I think it's a patriotic custom."
+
+ "Why don't you get tattooed then?" asked Cleary.
+
+ "Do you think there's anybody on board can do it?" cried Sam
+ enthusiastically.
+
+ "Of course. Any of those blue-jackets can tell you whom to go to."
+
+ Sam was off before Cleary had finished his sentence. Sure enough, he
+ found a boatswain who was renowned as an artist, and without further
+ parley he delivered himself into his hands. Cleary was consulted on the
+ choice of designs, and the result was pronounced by all the
+ connoisseurs on board--and there were many--to be a masterpiece. On his
+ chest was a huge spread-eagle with a bunch of arrows, bayonets, and
+ lightning-flashes in his claws. Cannon belched forth on each side, and
+ the whole was flanked by a sailor on one side and a soldier on the
+ other. His arms were tattooed with various small designs of crossed
+ swords, flags, mottoes, the title of his regiment, and other such
+ devices. The boatswain now thought that his task was complete, but Sam
+ insisted on having his back decorated as well, altho this was rather
+ unusual. The general stock of subjects had been exhausted, and Cleary
+ suggested that a representation of Sam himself, striking off the
+ fetters of a Cubapino, would be most appropriate. After discussing a
+ number of other suggestions offered by various friends, this one was
+ finally adopted and successfully carried out. The operation was not
+ altogether painless and produced a good deal of irritation of the skin,
+ but it served to pass Sam's time and allay his impatience to be in the
+ field, and Cleary became so much interested that he consented to allow
+ the artist to tattoo a few modest designs of cannon and crossed
+ bayonets on his own arms. Sam's comparatively high rank among officers
+ who were, many of them, his juniors in rank but his seniors in years,
+ might have made his position at first a difficult one had it not been
+ for his entire single-mindedness and loyalty to his country. If the
+ powers that be had made him a captain, it was right that he should be a
+ captain. He obeyed implicitly in taking his seat near the head of the
+ table, as he would have obeyed if he had been ordered to the foot, and
+ he expected others to accept what came from above as he did.
+
+ One afternoon a report sprang up that land was in sight, and soon every
+ eye was strained in one direction. Sam's eyesight was particularly
+ good, and he was one of the first to detect the white gleam of a
+ lighthouse. Soon the coast-line was distinct, and it was learned that
+ they would arrive on the next day. By daybreak Sam was on deck,
+ studying as well as he could this new land of heroism and adventure.
+ Cleary joined him later, and the two friends watched the strange
+ tropical shore with its palm-groves and occasional villages, and a
+ range of mountains beyond. A bay opened before them, and the ship
+ turned in, passing near an old fortification.
+
+ "This is just where our fleet went in," said Cleary, examining a
+ folding map which he held in his hand. "They passed along there single
+ file," and he pointed out the passage.
+
+ "Wasn't it glorious! Just think of sailing straight on, no matter how
+ many torpedoes there were!" exclaimed Sam.
+
+ "They knew blamed well there weren't any torpedoes," answered Cleary.
+
+ "How could they have known? They hadn't ever been here before? There
+ might perfectly well have been a lot of them directly under them."
+
+ "Yes," said Cleary, "they might have grown up from the bottom of the
+ sea. All sorts of queer things grow here. There might have been a sort
+ of coral torpedoes."
+
+ "Cleary, you're getting more and more cynical every day. I wish you'd
+ be more reasonable. What's the matter with you?"
+
+ "It must be the newspaper business. And then you see I don't wear a
+ uniform either. That makes a lot of difference."
+
+ In another hour they passed the scene of the great naval battle. They
+ could just distinguish the hulks of the wrecks well in shore.
+
+ "And there's Havilla!" cried Cleary.
+
+ And Havilla it was. They entered the great Oriental port with its
+ crowded shipping. Small native boats were darting about between
+ merchantmen and men-of-war. The low native houses, the fine buildings
+ of the Castalian city, the palms, the Eastern costumes--all made a
+ scene not to be forgotten. An officer of the 200th Volunteer Infantry
+ came on board before the steamer had come to her moorings, with orders
+ for Captain Jinks to report at once at their headquarters in one of the
+ public buildings of the city. A lieutenant was left in charge of the
+ 200th's detail, and Sam hastened ashore in a native boat and Cleary
+ went with him. They had no difficulty in finding their way, and Sam was
+ soon reporting to his chief, Colonel Booth, an elderly captain of the
+ regular army, who had been placed at the head of this volunteer
+ regiment. The colonel received him rather gruffly, and turned him over
+ to one of his captains, telling him they would be quartered together.
+ The colonel was inclined to pay no attention to Cleary, but when the
+ latter mentioned the Benevolent Assimilation Company, Limited, he
+ suddenly changed his tone and expressed great delight at meeting him.
+ Sam and Cleary went off together with the captain, whose name was
+ Foster, to visit the lodgings assigned by the colonel. They were in a
+ building near by, which had been used as barracks by the Castalian
+ army. A number of rooms had been fitted up for the use of officers, and
+ Sam and Foster were to occupy one of these, an arrangement which
+ promised to be most comfortable. Five companies of their regiment were
+ quartered in the same building.
+
+ Cleary asked Foster's advice as to lodgings for himself, and Foster
+ took him off with him to find a place, while Sam was left to unpack his
+ luggage which had just arrived from the ship. They agreed to meet again
+ in the same room at nine o'clock in the evening.
+
+ It was somewhat after the hour fixed that the three men came together.
+ Foster brought out a bottle of whisky from a cupboard and put it on
+ the table by the water-jug, and then offered cigars. Sam had never
+ smoked before, but he felt that a soldier ought to smoke, and he
+ accepted the weed, and soon they were all seated, smoking and drinking,
+ and engaged in a lively conversation. Foster had been in the Cubapines
+ since the arrival of the first troops, and it was a treat for both of
+ his interlocutors to hear all the news at first hand from a participant
+ in the events.
+
+ "How were things when you got here?" asked Cleary.
+
+ "Well, it was like this," answered Foster. "Nothing had happened then
+ except the destruction of the fleet. Our fleet commanded the water of
+ course, and the niggers had closed up round the city on land. The
+ Castalians didn't have anything but the city, and when we came we
+ wanted to take the city."
+
+ "Was Gomaldo in command of the Cubapino army then?" asked Sam.
+
+ "Yes, he has been from the beginning. He's a bad lot."
+
+ "How is that?" asked Cleary.
+
+ "Why, he has interfered with us all along as much as he could, just as
+ if we didn't own the place."
+
+ "That's just what I thought," said Cleary. "The copperheads at home say
+ we treated him as an ally, but of course that's rubbish."
+
+ "Of course," said Foster, "we never treated him as an ally. We only
+ brought him here and made use of him, supplying him with some arms and
+ letting him take charge of some of our prisoners. We couldn't tell him
+ that we intended to keep the islands, because we were using him and
+ couldn't get on without him. He's an ignorant fellow and hasn't the
+ first idea of the behavior of an officer and a gentleman."
+
+ "Well, how did you take Havilla?" asked Sam.
+
+ "Oh, it was this way. The Castalians couldn't hold out because these
+ monkeys had the place so tight that they couldn't get any provisions
+ in. So they sent secret word to us that they would let us in on a
+ certain day if we would keep the natives out. We agreed to this, of
+ course. Then the Castalian general said that we must have some kind of
+ a battle or he would be afraid to go home, and we cooked up a nice
+ little battle. When the men got into it, however, it turned out to be
+ quite a skirmish, and a number were killed on both sides. Then they
+ surrendered and we went in and put a guard at the gates, and wouldn't
+ let the niggers in. You wouldn't believe it, but they actually kicked
+ at it. They're an unreasonable, sulky lot of beggars."
+
+ "Then what happened after that?" asked Sam.
+
+ "Oh, after that we sent the Castalians home and the Cubapinos moved
+ back their lines a little, and we agreed to a sort of neutral zone and
+ a line beyond which we weren't to go."
+
+ "What was it that started the fighting between us and them?" said Sam.
+
+ "It's a little mixed up. I was at the theater that night, and in the
+ middle of the play we heard firing, and all of us rushed off and found
+ everything in motion, and it grew into a regular fight. We made them
+ move back, and before long the firing ceased. I tried to find out the
+ next day how it began. The fact is, the day before, General Notice had
+ ordered the 68th to move forward about half a mile, and they did so.
+ The Cubapinos objected and insisted on crossing the new picket-line.
+ That evening an officer of theirs walked across it and was shot by the
+ sentinel. That started it."
+
+ "Was the regiment moved across the line fixed on their side of the
+ neutral zone?" said Cleary.
+
+ "Oh, yes. But that was all right. Don't we own the whole place? And the
+ regiment was only obeying orders."
+
+ "I wonder why the general gave the orders?" asked Cleary, musing as he
+ looked into the smoke which he was puffing forth.
+
+ "They say it was because he had what he called 'overmastering political
+ reasons.' That is, there was the army bill up in Congress and it had to
+ go through, and he was given the tip that some fighting would help it,
+ and he took the hint. It was good statesmanship and generalship, too.
+ All subordinate things must bend to the great general interests of the
+ country. It was a good move, for it settled the business. Gomaldo sent
+ in the next day and tried to patch up a truce, but Notice wouldn't see
+ his messengers. He told them they must surrender unconditionally. It
+ was fine, soldierly conduct. He's a brick."
+
+ "What has he gone home for?" asked Sam.
+
+ "Why, he'd conquered them. Why shouldn't he go home? They're giving him
+ a grand reception at home, and I'm glad to see it."
+
+ "But he says that he has pacified the islands and brought the war to a
+ close!"
+
+ "So he did, in the military sense. He couldn't tell that the scamps
+ wouldn't submit at once. It wasn't his fault that they showed such
+ unreasonable bitterness and obstinacy."
+
+ "How much territory do we hold now?" said Sam.
+
+ "We've got the city and a strip along the bay where the fleet is; about
+ five miles back, I should say. But it's hardly safe to wander off far
+ at night."
+
+ "What's going to happen next?" asked Cleary. "I want to send home some
+ news to _The Lyre_ as soon as I can, and I want my friend Jinks here to
+ have a chance to distinguish himself--and you too," he added hastily.
+
+ "We'll probably get to work by next week, the way things look now.
+ General Laughter is rather slow, but he means business. Gomaldo is
+ getting a big army together, and we may have to take the offensive to
+ get ahead of him. Now I suppose we ought to turn in. How would you like
+ to take a look at Havilla to-morrow and see the place where the naval
+ battle was? We can get off duty in the afternoon. All right, let's meet
+ at regimental headquarters at three."
+
+ Cleary bade them good-night, and Sam, who was beginning to feel
+ uncomfortable effects from his cigar, was quite ready to go to bed.
+
+ Sam's morning was occupied in familiarizing himself with the regimental
+ routine in barracks. The building enclosed a large court which was
+ used for drills and guard-mounting parade, and he did not have occasion
+ to leave it until he went to join his friends at headquarters. Promptly
+ at three o'clock the three men sallied forth. Sam was struck with the
+ magnificence of the principal buildings, including the palace and the
+ cathedral.
+
+ "It's a fine city, isn't it?" he said.
+
+ "Yes, and the women are not bad-looking," said Cleary.
+
+ "The people don't quite look like savages," said Sam.
+
+ "You can't judge of them by these," said Foster. "Wait till you meet
+ some negritos in the country."
+
+ "How large a part of the population are they?" said Sam.
+
+ "About one-fortieth, I think, but where principle is involved you can't
+ go by numbers."
+
+ "Of course not," was Sam's reply. "What building is that," he added,
+ "with our flag over it and the nicely dressed young women in the
+ windows?"
+
+ "That?" said Foster, laughing; "oh, that's the Young Ladies' Home. We
+ have to license the place. It's the only way to keep the army in
+ condition. Why, we've got about fifty per cent infected now."
+
+ "Really?" cried Sam. "How our poor fellows are called upon to suffer
+ for these ungrateful Cubapinos! Still they can feel that they are
+ suffering for their country, too. That's a consolation."
+
+ "There's more consolation than that," said Foster, "for we're spreading
+ the thing like wildfire among the natives. We'll come out ahead."
+
+ "I wish, tho, that they wouldn't fly Old Gory over the house,"
+ said Sam.
+
+ "There was some talk of taking it down, but you see it's the policy of
+ the Administration never to haul down the flag when it has once been
+ raised. It presents rather a problem, you see."
+
+ "It may wear out in time," said Sam, "altho it looks painfully new.
+ What will they do then?"
+
+ "I confess I don't know," said Foster. "They'll cross the bridge when
+ they reach it."
+
+ "A good many of the shop signs are in English already," remarked Sam.
+ "That's a good beginning."
+
+ "Yes," said Cleary. "But they seem to be almost all saloons, that's
+ queer."
+
+ "So they are," said Sam.
+
+ "There are some pretty good ones, too," said Foster. "Just stop in here
+ for a moment and take a drink."
+
+ They entered a drinking-place and found a bar planned on the familiar
+ lines of home.
+
+ "Look at this list of our drinks," said Foster proudly. "Count 'em;
+ there are eighty-two."
+
+ Sam examined the list, which was printed and framed and hanging on the
+ wall, and they each took a glass of beer, standing. There were about a
+ dozen men in the place, most of them soldiers.
+
+ "Do they do a big business in these places?" asked Sam.
+
+ "You'll think so when you see the drunken soldiers in the streets in
+ the evening," answered Foster. "We're planting our institutions here,
+ I tell you."
+
+ "Not only saloons," said Sam. "There's the post-office, for instance."
+
+ "They had a post-office before," said Cleary.
+
+ "But ours is surely better," rejoined Sam.
+
+ "It's better than it was," said Foster, "now that they've put the new
+ postmaster in jail. They say he's bagged $75,000."
+
+ "It's a good example of the way we treat embezzlers," cried Sam. "It
+ ought to be a lesson to these Cubapinos. He'll be sent home to be
+ tried. They ought to do that with every one caught robbing the mails in
+ any way."
+
+ "I'm afraid if they did the force would be pretty well crippled," said
+ Foster.
+
+ "Then there's the custom house," said Sam. "They must be delighted to
+ get rid of those Castalian swindlers."
+
+ "A merchant here told me," said Foster, "that they have to pay just as
+ often now, but that they have to pay bigger sums."
+
+ "Of course," cried Cleary, "you wouldn't expect our people to bother
+ with the little bribes the Castalians were after. We live on a larger
+ scale. It will do these natives good to open their eyes to a real
+ nation. I'm sorry any of them steal, but if they do, let 'em take a lot
+ and be done with it."
+
+ "We must remember that these people are only civilians," said Sam.
+ "What can we expect of them?"
+
+ "Our commissary and quartermaster departments aren't much better, tho,"
+ said Foster. "Somebody's getting rich, to judge from the prices we pay
+ and the stuff we get. The meat stinks, and the boots are made with glue
+ instead of stitches and nails."
+
+ "Then they must have been appointed from civil life," cried Sam.
+
+ "Come, Sam," said Cleary, "I'm a civilian now, and I'm not going to
+ have you crow over us. How about Captain Peters, who was the pet of
+ Whoppington and cleaned out the Deer Harbor fund?"
+
+ Sam walked on in silence.
+
+ "See here," said Foster, "I'm tired of going on foot. Let's take a cab.
+ Here, you fellow!"
+
+ A two-wheeled wagon with an awning, drawn by a small, shaggy horse,
+ drew up before them.
+
+ "There's a gentleman in it," said Sam. "We must wait for another."
+
+ "Nonsense!" cried Foster in a loud voice. "You evidently are a new
+ arrival. It's only one of those monkeys. Here you, sir, get out of
+ that!"
+
+ The native expostulated a little, shrugged his shoulders, and did as he
+ was told, and the three men got in.
+
+ "I'm afraid he didn't like it," said Sam.
+
+ "Didn't like it? What of it?" said Foster. "Whatever we do in uniform
+ is official business, and we've got to impress these fellows with our
+ power and make them respect us."
+
+ They drove now through some narrow streets, past various native cafés
+ half open to the air, where the _habitués_ were beginning to collect,
+ through a picturesque gate in the old city wall, and out on the
+ Boulevard, which was now filled with people driving and walking. It was
+ a gay scene, and reminded Cleary of some of the cities of the
+ Mediterranean which he had visited.
+
+ "They're not quite as much like Apaches as I expected," said Sam, and
+ neither of his friends ventured to respond.
+
+ "We haven't got time to go out to where the ships are sunk," said
+ Foster, "but if we drive up that hill and get out and walk up a little
+ farther we can see them in the distance. I've got my glasses with me."
+
+ In a few minutes they were at this point of vantage in a sort of
+ unfrequented public park, and the three men took turns in looking at
+ the distant wrecks through the captain's field-glass.
+
+ "It was a great victory, wasn't it?" said Sam.
+
+ "Well, perhaps it was," answered Foster; "but the fact is, that those
+ old boats could hardly float and their guns couldn't reach our ships.
+ We just took our time and blew them up and set them on fire, and the
+ crews were roasted or drowned, that was all there was of it. I don't
+ think much of naval men anyway, to tell the truth. They don't compare
+ with the army. They're always running their ships aground if there's
+ any ground to run into."
+
+ "Anyhow, if it had been a strong fleet we'd have wiped it out just the
+ same, wouldn't we?" said Sam.
+
+ "Undoubtedly," said Foster. "It's a pity, tho, that the fight didn't
+ test our naval armaments better. It didn't prove anything. If we'd only
+ used our torpedo-boats, and they'd got out their torpedo-boat
+ destroyers, and then we'd had some torpedo-boat-destroyer destroyers,
+ and----"
+
+ "Yes," interrupted Cleary, "it is a pity."
+
+ "But it wasn't Admiral Hercules's fault," said Sam. "His glory ought to
+ be just as great."
+
+ "Hercules! Hercules!" shouted Foster. "What had Hercules to do with it?
+ He's a first-class fraud. It was Slewey who won the battle. You don't
+ mean to tell me that you are Hercules men?"
+
+ Sam and Cleary tried in vain to explain their position, but Foster
+ would not listen to them. The breach evidently was irreparable. He
+ magnanimously turned over the cab to them, and went back to the city in
+ another vehicle.
+
+ "Well, this is strange," said Sam. "I liked everything about Captain
+ Foster, but I don't understand this."
+
+ "Oh, you will tho, old man," said Cleary. "I've found out this morning
+ that it's the same thing all through the army and navy here. They're
+ hardly any of them on speaking terms. If it isn't one thing it's
+ another. It's the Whoppington fashion, that's all. The general of the
+ army won't speak to the adjutant-general there, and they're always
+ smuggling bills into Congress to retire each other, and that spirit
+ runs all the way down through both services. I'm a civilian now, and I
+ can see with a little perspective. I don't know why military people are
+ always squabbling like the women in an old ladies' home. No other
+ professions do; it's queer. It's getting to be better to lose a battle
+ than to win it, for then you don't have to fight for a year or two to
+ find out who won it."
+
+ Sam entered a feeble protest against Cleary's criticisms, and the two
+ relapsed into silence.
+
+ "Who did win that naval victory anyhow?" said Sam at last.
+
+ "That's just what I'd like to know," responded Cleary. "One of the
+ admirals admits he wasn't there, and, if we are to believe the naval
+ people, the other one spent most of his time dodging around the
+ smokestack. But I think they're a little too hard on him; I can't
+ imagine why. I hear they're going to establish a permanent court at
+ Whoppington to determine who wins victories in future. It's not a bad
+ idea. My own view is that that battle won itself, and I shouldn't be
+ surprised if that was the way with most battles. It would be fun to run
+ a war without admirals and generals and see how it would come out. I
+ don't believe there'd be much difference. At any rate it looks so, if
+ what the navy says is true, and one of the admirals was away and the
+ other playing tag on the forward deck of the _Philadelphia_. Rum name
+ for a battle-ship, the _Brotherly Love_, isn't it?"
+
+ To this Sam made no answer.
+
+ On arriving at the barracks he succeeded in having a separate room
+ assigned to him, and thenceforth he and Foster were strangers.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VII
+
+ The Battle of San Diego
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+
+ During the next few days there was much activity in the army. It was
+ clear that there was an expedition in preparation. All sorts of rumors
+ were floating about, but it was impossible to verify any of them. Some
+ said that Gomaldo was advancing with a large army; others, that he had
+ surrendered and that the army was about to take peaceable possession
+ of the islands. Meanwhile Sam's position in the 200th Infantry was most
+ unpleasant. Foster was a popular man in the regiment, and he had set
+ all the officers against him. It was unfortunately a Slewey regiment,
+ and it was too late for Sam to change sides--a thing which he was quite
+ ready to do. He made up his mind never to mention the two admirals
+ again, and regretted that he had named them once too often. He
+ complained to Cleary.
+
+ "I'm afraid," he said, "that there's no chance of my doing anything.
+ The colonel will see to it that I am out of the way if there's anything
+ to do. I might as well have stayed at East Point."
+
+ "Brace up, old man! I've got an idea," said Cleary. "I'll fix you all
+ right. Just you wait till to-morrow or the day after."
+
+ The next day in the afternoon Sam received an order to report at once
+ at the headquarters of General Laughter. He hastened to obey, and was
+ ushered into the presence of that distinguished officer in the palace.
+ It was an impressive sight that met his eyes. The general was believed
+ to weigh some three hundred pounds, but he looked as if he weighed
+ nearer five hundred. He was dressed in a white duck suit with brass
+ buttons, the jacket unbuttoned in front and showing his underclothes.
+ He was suffering a good deal from the heat, and fanning himself
+ incessantly. Several members of his staff were busied talking with
+ visitors or writing at desks, but the chief was doing nothing. He was
+ seated in a superb arm-chair with his back to a pier-glass.
+
+ "Ah! captain," he said. "I'm glad to see you. Have a whisky and soda?
+ I've assigned you to duty on my staff. Report here again to-morrow at
+ ten and have your things moved over to the palace. Major Stroud will
+ show you your quarters, captain!"
+
+ Major Stroud advanced and shook hands with Sam. He was every inch a
+ soldier in appearance, but old enough to be a retired field-marshal.
+ The three indulged in whiskies and soda, and Sam took his leave after
+ a brief formal conversation. He found Cleary waiting for him in the
+ street.
+
+ "How on earth did you do it?" cried Sam.
+
+ "It's the B. A. C. L.," said Cleary.
+
+ "The what!"
+
+ "The Benevolent Assimilation Company, Limited. What do you suppose?
+ With _The Daily Lyre_ thrown in too."
+
+ "Oh! thank you, thank you, my dear, dear friend," ejaculated Sam, with
+ tears in his eyes. "I was beginning to think that my whole life was a
+ failure, and here I am just in the very best place in the world. I
+ won't disappoint you, I won't disappoint you!"
+
+ In the few days at the barracks of the 200th Infantry, Sam had learned
+ something of regimental work, and now he applied himself assiduously to
+ the study of the business of the headquarters of a general in command
+ in the field, for the army was practically in the field. At first it
+ all seemed to him to be a maze quite without a plan, and he hoped that
+ in time he would begin to see the outline of a system. But the more he
+ observed the less system he saw. Everything that could be postponed was
+ postponed. Responsibility was shifted from one staff officer to
+ another. No one was held accountable for anything, and general
+ confusion seemed to reign. The place was besieged with contractors and
+ agents, and the staff was nearly worried to death. The general was
+ always very busy--fanning himself--and the days went on.
+
+ One morning a fellow member of the staff, a young lieutenant whom he
+ scarcely knew, called Sam aside and asked him for a half-hour's
+ conference. They went off together into a deserted room, and the
+ lieutenant began the conversation in a whisper.
+
+ "See here, Captain," said he, "we're looking for a patriotic fellow who
+ cares more for his country than his own reputation. We understand that
+ you're just the man."
+
+ "I hope so," said Sam, delighted at the prospect of an opportunity to
+ distinguish himself.
+
+ "It's a rather delicate matter," continued the lieutenant, "and I must
+ say it's rather a compliment to you to be selected for the job. The
+ fact is, that Captain Jones is in trouble. He's about $3,000 short in
+ his accounts."
+
+ "How did that happen?" asked Sam.
+
+ "Oh, that's not the point. I don't see that it makes any difference.
+ But we've got to get him out of the scrape. The honor of the army is
+ at stake. Civilians don't understand us. They don't appreciate our
+ standards of honor. And if this thing gets out they'll charge us with
+ all kinds of things. We've got to raise $3,000. That's all there is
+ of it."
+
+ "Good heavens! how can we?" cried Sam. "I've hardly got anything left
+ of my pay, but I can give, say $25, on the next pay-day."
+
+ "We're not going to pass the hat around. That would be beneath the
+ dignity of the army. What we want you to do is this--and, indeed, we
+ have settled it that you should do it. You are to go to-morrow
+ afternoon to Banks & Company, the army contractors, and have a
+ confidential talk with Banks. Tell him you must have $3,000 at once.
+ Here's a letter of introduction to him. He will see that you represent
+ the people that run things here. Tell him that his contracts will
+ probably be preferred to Short & Co.'s, and tell him that for the
+ future we shan't inspect his things as closely as we have in the past.
+ You needn't go into particulars. He will understand. It's an ordinary
+ business matter."
+
+ "I don't quite like the idea," said Sam, ruminating. "Why don't you go
+ yourself?"
+
+ "My dear Captain, I'm only a lieutenant. It requires a man of higher
+ rank to do such an important piece of work. You're a new man on the
+ staff, and we wanted to pay you an honor and give you a chance to show
+ your patriotism. You will be saving the reputation and character of
+ the army."
+
+ "Oh, thank you!" exclaimed Sam. "Are you sure that it's always done in
+ just this way?"
+
+ "Always. It's an ordinary matter of business arrangement, as I've
+ already told you."
+
+ "Then it must be all right, I suppose," said Sam.
+
+ "But it's not only that. It's a noble act to protect the character of a
+ brother officer."
+
+ "So it is, so it is," said Sam. "I'll do it. I'll call and see him
+ about it to-morrow afternoon."
+
+ "Hello!" shouted another officer, coming into the room. "Have you seen
+ the orders? There's to be a conference of brigade and regimental
+ commanders here to-night, and all staff officers are invited to attend.
+ That means business."
+
+ Sam was overjoyed at the news, and the three men hastened to the
+ headquarters' room to discuss it with their fellow officers.
+
+ Sam was present at the conference as a matter of course, and he watched
+ the proceedings with the greatest interest. A map was stretched out on
+ a magnificent gilt table in the middle of the room in which Sam had
+ first seen the general, and most of the officers bent over it studying
+ it. The general sat back in his arm-chair with his fan and asked
+ everybody's advice, and no one appeared to have any advice to give.
+
+ "The fact is this, gentlemen," he said at last, "we've got to do
+ something, and the question is, what to do. Burton," said he to his
+ assistant adjutant-general, "show them the plan that we've worked
+ out."
+
+ Burton was one of the officers who were poring over the map, and he
+ began to explain a general advance in the direction of the enemy. He
+ pointed out the position which they were now supposed to occupy, some
+ ten miles away.
+
+ "We ought to move out our lines to-morrow," he explained, "within, say,
+ three or four miles of theirs. The regiments will keep the same order
+ that they're in here at Havilla. We can't make the final arrangements
+ until we get there. We may stay there a day or two to entrench
+ ourselves, and then move on them at daybreak some day within a week."
+
+ "That's the plan, gentlemen," said the general. "What do you think of
+ it?" and he began to question all the general and field officers
+ present beginning with the youngest, and none of them had any
+ suggestion to offer.
+
+ "Then it's understood that we start for this line here to-morrow
+ morning at seven," said Burton.
+
+ They all assented.
+
+ "Now, boys, let's have some whisky," said the general, and the
+ conference resolved itself into a committee of the whole.
+
+ Early in the morning the troops began to move forward. Sam, who acted
+ as aide-de-camp, was sent out from headquarters once or twice to urge
+ the various colonels to make haste, but there seemed to be no special
+ orders as to the details of the movement. The regiments went as best
+ they could and selected their own roads, finally choosing the positions
+ that seemed most desirable to their commanders, who took care not to
+ leave too great an interval between regiments. The men were set to work
+ at once at putting up the tents and making entrenchments. It was some
+ time after midday when the general and his staff finally left the
+ headquarters in the city. Sam came downstairs with Major Stroud to
+ mount his horse, and was surprised to see a landau with two horses
+ drawn up at the door.
+
+ "Who's that for?" he cried.
+
+ "For the general," answered Major Stroud quietly.
+
+ "For the general! Why on earth doesn't he ride a horse?"
+
+ "There isn't a horse in the place that can carry him. He tried one when
+ he first came here. He mounted it on a step-ladder, and the beast came
+ down on his knees on the stone pavement and had to be shot. He hasn't
+ tried it since."
+
+ After waiting on the street for a long time Sam had the privilege of
+ seeing the general emerge from the palace and enter his carriage. He
+ was perspiring and fanning as usual, but carried no whisky and soda.
+ The staff officers, of whom there were a dozen or more, mounted and
+ followed the carriage. Sam rode next to Stroud. There was much
+ confusion in the roads which they traveled--wagons laden with tents and
+ provisions and hospital stores, camp-followers of all descriptions, and
+ some belated soldiers besides. The general, however, had the right of
+ way, and they proceeded with reasonable speed. They passed through
+ native villages, rows of one-and two-story thatched houses on each
+ side, with wooden palisades in front of them, well shaded by low but
+ spreading palms. They passed large sugar refineries, built by the
+ Castalians, and churches and convents. They passed rice-fields, some
+ covered with water and others more or less dry, which sturdy peasants
+ were busy harrowing with buffaloes. On the road they saw many
+ two-wheeled carts drawn by single buffaloes, the man standing in the
+ cart as he drove. At last they came to a halt on rising ground at the
+ edge of a piece of woodland, and Colonel Burton, the adjutant-general,
+ rode up beside the general's carriage and dismounted, and the two began
+ to study the map again. After a long discussion the procession moved on
+ again and finally stopped at the crest of a ridge, where the general
+ alighted and soon selected a place for his tent. An hour had passed
+ before the tents and baggage arrived, but notwithstanding the delay the
+ tents were pitched and supper ready by sundown, and Sam found himself
+ actually in the field on the eve of a battle. The eve, however, was
+ somewhat prolonged. Several days passed, and Sam was kept pretty busy
+ in riding to the various brigade and regimental headquarters and
+ finding out how things were progressing: what was the state of the
+ trenches, and what news there was from the enemy. Scouting parties were
+ sent out, but their reports were kept secret, and Sam was left in the
+ dark. There was a native village about half a mile to the rear, and the
+ inhabitants were all friendly. Sam stopped there occasionally for a
+ drink of water, and became acquainted with the keeper of the café, who
+ was particularly amicable and fond of conversation. Cleary was on the
+ lookout for accommodations in the neighborhood, and Sam introduced him
+ to this native, Señor Garcia, who provided him with a room. One evening
+ Sam was sitting with Cleary in the café when Garcia, as was his custom,
+ joined them, and they began to talk in the Castalian language.
+
+ "We are glad you people are coming to rule our islands," said Garcia;
+ "that is, those of us who know your history, because we know that you
+ are a great people and love freedom."
+
+ "I am pleased to hear it," said Sam. "Cleary, I was sure that all the
+ sensible natives would feel that way."
+
+ "You believe in liberty, equality, fraternity?"
+
+ "Of course we do," said Cleary.
+
+ "Yes," said Sam, "if you understand those words properly. Now liberty
+ doesn't interfere with obedience. Our whole army here is built up on
+ the idea of obedience. We've all got liberty, of course, but----"
+
+ "Liberty to do what?" asked Garcia innocently.
+
+ "Why, liberty to--well, to--yes, liberty to do as we're ordered,"
+ said Sam.
+
+ "Ah! I see," said Garcia. "And then you have equality."
+
+ "Yes," said Sam, "in a general way we have. But that doesn't prevent
+ people from differing in rank. Now there's the general, he's my
+ superior, and I'm the superior of the lieutenants, and we're all
+ superior to the privates. We have regular schools at home to teach us
+ not to misunderstand the kind of equality that we believe in. There's
+ one at East Point for the army. This gentleman and I were educated
+ there. We weren't allowed even to look at our superiors. There's
+ another institution like it for the navy. And then every man-of-war and
+ every army garrison is a sort of college to spread these ideas about
+ rank. A captain of a ship can't even let his officers dine with him too
+ often. It's a fine system and it prevents us from making any mistakes
+ about what equality means."
+
+ "And then fraternity?" asked Garcia.
+
+ "Oh, that's just the same," said Cleary. "At East Point we got a blow
+ in the jaw if we showed the wrong kind of fraternity to our betters."
+
+ "It's a wonderful system," said Garcia. "But I have heard some of your
+ people explain liberty, equality, fraternity a little differently."
+
+ "They must have been civilians," said Sam. "The army and navy represent
+ all that is best in our country, and the people at large do not
+ understand the army and navy. Luckily for you, the islands will be in
+ charge of the army. There won't be any mistake about the kind of
+ liberty and equality we give you."
+
+ "I am so grateful," said Garcia, rolling up his eyes.
+
+ "Yes, Cleary," said Sam. "The people at home don't understand us.
+ Did you see that there's a bill in Congress to allow men in the ranks,
+ mere non-commissioned officers, to apply for commissions? If they pass
+ it, it will be the end of the army. Just think of a sergeant becoming
+ one of us! Oh, I forgot, you aren't an officer, but you must know how
+ I feel!"
+
+ Cleary expressed his sympathy, and Sam bade him and his host
+ good-night. On his way back through a path in the jungle he thought he
+ heard a light step behind him, but when he looked back he could see
+ nothing. When he arrived at the headquarters' tent he found all the
+ higher officers of the army there, and Stroud whispered to him that
+ they had heard that Gomaldo would take the offensive the next morning,
+ and that consequently a general advance was ordered for daybreak in
+ order that they might forestall him. The general was rather taken by
+ surprise and his final plans were not ready, but it was arranged that
+ at four o'clock each regiment should advance, and that orders
+ containing further details would be sent to them by six o'clock at the
+ latest. Burton remained in the general's tent to perfect the orders,
+ and Sam went to the tent which he occupied with Major Stroud to enjoy a
+ few hours' sleep.
+
+ "I'm afraid we're not quite ready," said Sam.
+
+ "No army ever is," replied Stroud laconically.
+
+ "I wish the general were a little livelier and quicker," said Sam,
+ blushing at his own blasphemy.
+
+ "And thinner?" said Stroud, smiling, as he twisted his white mustache
+ and smoothed his imperial. "Oh, he'll do very well. He's a good solid
+ point to rally round and fall back on, and then we always know where to
+ find him, for he can't get away very far if he tries."
+
+ At half-past three in the morning the officers of the staff were
+ called by a native servant and began to make their preparations. They
+ breakfasted as best they could on coffee without sugar or cream, and
+ some stale bread, with an egg apiece, and whisky. Sam felt
+ unaccountably sleepy, and he thought that all the rest looked sleepy
+ too. It was five o'clock before Burton had the orders ready for the
+ various subordinate commanders, telling each of them in which direction
+ to advance. The plan had been mapped out the night before, but the
+ orders had to be copied and corrected. At last he came out and
+ distributed them to Stroud, Sam, and several other officers--two orders
+ to each, yawning painfully as he handed them out.
+
+ "I don't think I slept a wink last night," he said.
+
+ The two commands to which Sam's orders were directed were stationed on
+ the extreme right of the army. He made a rough tracing of that part of
+ the map and set out at once on a wiry little native pony. For some
+ distance he followed the high-road, but then was obliged to turn into
+ a branch road which led through the woods, and which soon became a mere
+ wood-path. Before long he heard firing in front of him, and soon he
+ recognized the sound of whistling bullets above his head. He found
+ himself ducking his head involuntarily, and almost for the first time
+ in his life he was conscious of being afraid. This was a surprise to
+ him, as his thoughts during the night whenever he had been awake had
+ been full of pleasant anticipations.
+
+ The path suddenly came out into an open rolling country, and Sam pulled
+ up his horse, dismounted, and hiding behind some underbrush, took a
+ look at the situation. There was a Gatling-gun, worked by a young
+ officer and five men, a few hundred yards to the right at the edge of
+ the woods. Beyond to the front he could see a line of troops firing at
+ the enemy from behind a wall. Of the Cubapinos he could see nothing but
+ the smoke of their guns and muskets here and there. Shells were falling
+ in another part of the field, but nowhere near him. Bullets were
+ flying thick through the air, and he heard them hissing constantly. As
+ he looked he saw one of the Gatling crew fall over, doubled up in a
+ heap. Sam moved along in the wood nearer to this gun, so that he might
+ ask where he could find the brigade commander. As he approached he
+ heard the lieutenant say:
+
+ "Damn those sharp-shooters. They've got our range now. With this damned
+ smokeless powder they can pick us all off. Clark, bring some of that
+ artificial smoke stuff here."
+
+ The soldier obeyed, and in a few moments a dense smoke rose above them,
+ covering the whole neighborhood.
+
+ "What a wonderful thing these inventions are!" thought Sam, as he tied
+ his horse to a tree and advanced crouching toward the battery. The
+ lieutenant pointed out to him the position of the brigadier-general,
+ some distance back on the right under cover of the jungle, and told him
+ of a path that would take him there. Sam was not slow to follow his
+ directions, for just then a shell exploded close by. He soon found the
+ general surrounded by his staff on a partially wooded hill, from
+ which, however, they could command the field with their glasses.
+ Bullets were flying about them, and an occasional shell sailed over
+ their heads, but the general seemed perfectly at home. He took the
+ orders, opened them and read them.
+
+ "That's strange," said he. "Last night I understood that I was to make
+ for that pass between the hills there on the left, and now I'm ordered
+ to take the first turning to the right. I don't understand it. Do you
+ know anything about it?"
+
+ "No, sir."
+
+ "Well, he must have changed his mind. Or else it was a bluff to keep
+ his plans from leaking out. Tell the general that I will carry out his
+ orders at once."
+
+ Sam inquired of the members of the staff where he would be likely to
+ find the 43d Volunteers, to whose colonel his other orders were
+ directed, but they had no information, except that in the morning that
+ regiment had been stationed farther over on the right. Sam started out
+ again, guiding himself as best he could by a compass which he had in
+ his pocket. He selected the paths which seemed most promising, but the
+ jungle between was impenetrable on horseback. The firing on the extreme
+ right seemed to be farther in the rear, and he made his way in that
+ direction. Again he came out at the edge of the woods, and to his
+ surprise saw a battalion of the enemy at a short distance from him. He
+ turned his horse, stuck his spurs into him, and went back along the
+ path to the rear at a full run, while a shower of bullets fell around
+ him. He still kept on working to the right in the direction of the
+ firing which he heard in front of him. At last in a hollow of the
+ jungle he came upon a Red Cross station, one of those advance temporary
+ relief posts where the wounded who are too much injured to be taken at
+ once to the rear are treated. Twenty or thirty men were lying in a row,
+ some of them on their coats, others on the bare ground. Two surgeons
+ were doing what they could in the line of first aid to the injured,
+ binding up arms and legs, dressing wounds, and trying to stop the flow
+ of blood from arteries. Two soldiers were lifting a wounded man on a
+ stretcher so that he might be carried to the rear, and he was groaning
+ with agony. Every one of the patients was blotched in one place or
+ another with blood, and some of them were lying in pools of the crimson
+ fluid. Sam felt a little sick at his stomach. Two men came in with
+ another stretcher, bringing a wounded man from the front. The man gave
+ a convulsive start as they set him down.
+
+ "A bullet's just hit him in the head," said one of the men. "I'm glad
+ it wasn't me."
+
+ One of the doctors looked at the wounded man.
+
+ "He's dead," he said. "Damn you, what do you mean by bringing dead men
+ here?"
+
+ The two bearers took up their load again and dropped it out of sight in
+ the bushes. Sam did not like to interrupt the doctors, who were
+ overtasked, so he dismounted and tried to find a wounded man well
+ enough to answer his questions. One man at the end of the row looked
+ less pale than the rest, and he asked him where he could find the 43d.
+
+ "That's my regiment, sir," he replied, as a twig, cut off by a bullet,
+ fell on his face. "You'd better lie down here, sir; you'll be shot if
+ you don't. A lot of the wounded have been hit here again."
+
+ Sam sat down by his side.
+
+ "Our regiment is over that way," he said, pointing in the direction of
+ the firing. "I don't know where the colonel is. We haven't seen him for
+ hours. The lieutenant-colonel is down with fever. I think the major's
+ in command. You ought to find him at the front. We've been falling
+ back, and the firing sounds nearer than it did. I'm afraid the enemy
+ will catch us here."
+
+ Sam did not wait to hear anything further, but, leaving his horse tied
+ to a tree, he ran toward the front. He found many soldiers skulking
+ along the path, and they directed him to the major. He discovered him
+ sitting on the ground behind a stone wall.
+
+ "Here, major, are your orders. I understand you're in command."
+
+ "Not much," said the major. "The colonel's in command. You'd better
+ find him."
+
+ "Where is he?"
+
+ "I'm sure I don't know. I haven't seen him since six o'clock."
+
+ "But this is your regiment, isn't it?"
+
+ "Well, yes. It's part of it."
+
+ Just then a young captain came running up from the front, and cried out
+ to his major:
+
+ "Major, we're having a hard time of it there. Won't you come up and
+ take charge? I'm afraid they'll force us back."
+
+ "No," said the major, "I won't. I'm going back there to that last
+ village. It's a much better place to defend. Besides I'm not feeling
+ well. You fellows can stay here if you like. I shan't order the
+ regiment back, but I'll go back and get ready for them there. We ought
+ to have trenches there, you know," and he got up and walked rapidly off
+ down the road. The captain turned to Sam.
+
+ "I beg your pardon, captain," said he, "but what are we to do? Our
+ officers have given out, and we're a new regiment and haven't any
+ experience. Won't you take command?"
+
+ Sam was by no means satisfied in his mind that he would behave much
+ better than the major, but here was an opportunity that he could not
+ afford to lose.
+
+ "I'll see what I can do," said he. "Let's see what the orders are."
+
+ He opened the document and saw that it was a direction to keep on to
+ the front until they arrived before the town of San Diego, which they
+ were to assault and capture.
+
+ "Show me where your men are," said Sam. "Who have you got there?"
+
+ "We've got our own regiment, the 43d, and six or eight companies of the
+ 72d--I don't know where they came from; and then there's a battery, and
+ perhaps some others."
+
+ They hastened along the road together, urging the stragglers to join
+ them, which many of them did. The way became more and more encumbered
+ with men, and the bullets came thicker. Sam was thoroughly scared. He
+ could feel his legs waver at the knee, and it seemed as if a giant
+ hand had grasped him by the spine. They passed several musicians of
+ the band.
+
+ "Start up a tune!" cried Sam. "Play something and follow us." At the
+ same time he instinctively thrust his hand into his breast pocket and
+ felt for his traveling Lares and Penates, namely, his tin soldier, his
+ photographs of East Point, one of Marian, and her last letter.
+ Meanwhile the band began to play and the bass-drummer wielded his huge
+ drumstick with all his might. Sam began to feel happier, and so did the
+ men about him. One of the musicians suddenly fell, struck dead by a
+ bullet, and just then a shell burst over them and two or three men went
+ down. With one accord the soldiers began to curse and swear in the most
+ frightful manner and to insist on speedy vengeance. Sam was surprised
+ to find himself enjoying the oaths. They just expressed his feelings,
+ and he hurried on to the edge of the woods. In front of them they saw a
+ line of their own men lying on the ground behind stones and logs,
+ shooting at the enemy, whose line could be distinguished hardly more
+ than a third of a mile away.
+
+ "They're nearer than they were," whispered the captain. "We must push
+ them back or they'll have us. The men on the firing line are getting
+ scared."
+
+ "We must scare them behind more than the enemy does in front," said
+ Sam, drawing his revolver. "Here you, sir, get back into your place."
+
+ A man in the ranks, who was beginning to creep back, saw the revolver
+ and dropped back in his position with an oath.
+
+ "Forward!" cried Sam, now thoroughly in the spirit of the occasion.
+ "Come up to the front, all of you, and extend our line there to the
+ right. Lie down and take careful aim with every shot."
+
+ The men did as they were told, and Sam took up his position behind the
+ line with the captain, both of them standing in a perfect gale of
+ bullets, while all the rest were lying down.
+
+ "Lie down," said Sam to the captain. "You've no business to risk your
+ life like that."
+
+ "How about yours, sir?" said the captain, as he obeyed.
+
+ "I'll take care of myself, if you'll be good enough to let me,"
+ answered Sam.
+
+ The presence of a staff officer gave new courage to the men, and their
+ marksmanship began to have effect on the enemy, who were seen to be
+ gradually falling back. Sam took this opportunity to move his line
+ forward, and he sent a lieutenant to direct the battery to cover his
+ men when they should charge on the enemy's line. He moved his line
+ forward in this way successively three or four times, and the troops
+ were now thoroughly encouraged, and some of them even asked to be
+ allowed to charge. Sam, however, postponed this final act as long as he
+ could. It was not until he saw the captain whom he had met in the woods
+ mangled and instantly killed by a piece of shell that he became so
+ angry that he could restrain himself no longer. He gave the order to
+ fix bayonets, and with a yell the men rose from their lairs and rushed
+ over the intervening ground to the enemy's position. The Cubapinos did
+ not wait for them, but turned and ran precipitously. Sam and his men
+ followed them for at least a mile, when they made a stand again.
+
+ "They're in the trenches now that they were in this morning," explained
+ a lieutenant.
+
+ Here the same tactics were renewed, and in another half-hour Sam
+ ordered his men to charge again. This time the enemy waited longer, and
+ many of the attacking party fell, but before they reached the trenches
+ the Cubapinos took flight, and Sam saw his soldiers bayonet the last
+ two or three of them in the back. There were a good many dead in the
+ trenches, all of them shot through the head. It was a proud moment for
+ Sam when he stood on the edge of the trench and planted Old Gory there
+ while the men cheered. A wounded Cubapino lay just before him, and one
+ of the soldiers kicked him in the head and killed him. Sam noticed it,
+ and was a little startled to find that it seemed all right to him.
+
+ "I've half a mind to kick the next wounded man I see," he thought. "It
+ must be rather good sport"; but he did not do it.
+
+ The rest of the fight was in the nature of a procession. They pursued
+ the flying Cubapinos as fast as they could, but were unable to come up
+ with them. In a native village through which they passed, Sam asked an
+ old man, who had been too weak to get away, how far off San Diego was,
+ and learned that it was five miles away to the left. He could not
+ understand this, but still he kept on in that direction. As they left
+ the village it burst into flames, for the last soldiers had set it on
+ fire. Sam thought of the old man perishing in his hut, and it seemed to
+ him a fine thing and quite natural. On their way they came across other
+ bodies of troops who joined them, and it so happened that no one came
+ forward of superior rank to Sam, and consequently he retained the
+ command. Before they came in sight of San Diego he had quite a brigade
+ under him. He halted them in front of the town and sent out a scouting
+ party. There was no sound of firing now except in the distance. In an
+ hour the scouting party came back and reported that the place had been
+ vacated by the enemy, who for some reason had been seized by a panic.
+ Sam ordered the advance to be resumed, and late in the afternoon found
+ himself in possession of San Diego. He began to take measures at once
+ to fortify the place, when the brigadier-general whom he had seen in
+ the morning marched in with his brigade and took over the command from
+ him, congratulating him on his success, which was already the talk of
+ the army. Sam turned over the command to him with much grace and
+ dignity, and, borrowing a horse, set off for the old headquarters which
+ he had left in the morning, for he learned that, altho the enemy were
+ completely defeated and scattered, still the general would not move his
+ headquarters forward to the front till the following day.
+
+ The general received him with great cordiality.
+
+ "Everything turned out just as I planned it," he said, "but, Captain,
+ you helped us out at a critical point there on the right. I shall
+ mention you in despatches. You may depend on being promoted and given a
+ good post. You ought to have a regiment at least."
+
+ Sam was taking his supper when Cleary came in, hot and grimy.
+
+ "Well, you're a great fellow," he said, "to get away from me the way
+ you did this morning. But didn't I tell you, you were the stuff? Why,
+ you won the battle. Do you know that you turned their left flank?"
+
+ "To tell the truth, I didn't know it," said Sam.
+
+ "Well, you did."
+
+ "But the general planned everything," said Sam.
+
+ "Yes," said Cleary, "but I'll tell you more about that. I'm doing some
+ detective work, and I'll have something to tell you in a day or two.
+ But I wish I'd been with you. I had my kodak all ready. However, they
+ can make up the pictures at home. How's this for headlines?" and he
+ took some notes from his pocket. "'Great Victory at San Diego. Captain
+ Jinks Turns Defeat into Victory. Hailed as Hero Jinks by the Army.
+ General Laughter's Plans Carried Out through the Young Hero's
+ Co-operation.' What do you think of that? We'll put the part about the
+ general in small caps, because he's not quite solid with the trust. I'm
+ not going to write up anybody but you and the Mounted Mustangs; those
+ are my orders."
+
+ "How did the Mustangs make out?" asked Sam. "They were way off on the
+ left, and I haven't heard anything about them."
+
+ "They did very decently," said Cleary, "considering they were never
+ under fire before. They kept up pretty well with the regulars, and
+ fortunately they had a regular regiment on each side. They really
+ did well."
+
+ "Did they make any fine cavalry charges?" inquired Sam.
+
+ "Cavalry charges! Bless your heart, they didn't have any horses, and
+ it's lucky they didn't. They had their hands full without having to
+ manage any horses!"
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VIII
+
+ Among the Moritos
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+
+ On the following day headquarters were moved into San Diego. Sam was
+ lodged in the town hall with the general, and Cleary got rooms close
+ by. There were rumors of renewed activity on the part of the Cubapinos,
+ but it was thought that their resistance for the future would be of a
+ guerrilla nature. There was, however, one savage tribe to the north
+ which had terrorized a large district of country, and the general
+ decided that it must be subdued. Sam heard of this plan, but did not
+ know whether he would be sent on the expedition or not, and urged
+ Cleary to use his influence so that he might be one of the party.
+
+ "I'll manage it for you, old man," said Cleary, two or three days after
+ the battle. "I've got the general in a tight place, and all I've got to
+ do is to let him know it and he'll do whatever I want."
+
+ "What do you mean?"
+
+ "Why, he had about as much to do with the San Diego fight as the man in
+ the moon."
+
+ "What?"
+
+ "Well, I'll tell you the story. I've run down every clue and here it
+ is. You see somehow Colonel Burton got the orders mixed up that morning
+ and addressed every one of them to the wrong general."
+
+ "Is it possible?" exclaimed Sam. "That explains why they couldn't
+ understand the orders there in the Third Brigade, and why I took all
+ day to find San Diego. I wonder if it's true. Why on earth didn't
+ Gomaldo win then? It must have been a close call."
+
+ "It's plain enough why he didn't win," said Cleary. "That chap Garcia
+ was one of his spies, and a clever one too. He got all he could out of
+ you and me, but that wasn't much. Then he had the native servant of the
+ general in his pay. As soon as you left on the night before the battle
+ he cleared out too, and he got a statement from the native servant of
+ all the general intended to do. He got the news to Gomaldo by midnight,
+ and before sunrise the Cubapino forces were ready to meet each of our
+ columns when they advanced. They had ambushes prepared for each of
+ them. If the orders had gone out straight we'd have been cleaned out,
+ that's my opinion. But you see, they all went wrong and the columns
+ advanced along different roads, and poor Gomaldo's plans all went to
+ pot. I believe he had Garcia hanged for deceiving him. You haven't seen
+ the general's servant since the battle, have you?"
+
+ "Now that you speak of it, I don't think I have," said Sam. "But he's
+ a great general all the same, don't you think so?"
+
+ "Of course," answered Cleary.
+
+ "I wonder if all battles are won like that?" said Sam.
+
+ "I half think they are," said his friend. "And then the generals smile
+ and say, 'I told you so.'"
+
+ "Cleary," said Sam, "I want you to answer me one question honestly."
+
+ "Out with it."
+
+ "Did I have much to do with winning that battle or not?"
+
+ "To tell the honest truth, Sam, between me and you, I don't know
+ whether you did or not. But _The Lyre_ will say that you did, and that
+ will settle it for history."
+
+ Sam sighed and made no other reply.
+
+ The expedition against the Moritos started out a week later. It
+ consisted of two regiments, one of colored men under a certain Colonel
+ James, the other of white volunteers, with a brigadier-general in
+ command. Sam was assigned to the command of the volunteer regiment
+ with the temporary rank of major, its colonel having been wounded at
+ the battle of San Diego. For a whole day they marched northward
+ unmolested, and encamped at night in a valley in the mountains with a
+ small native village as headquarters. There had been little incident
+ during the day. They had burned several villages and driven off a good
+ many cattle for meat. Sam was surprised to see how handsome the
+ furniture was in the little thatched cottages of the people, perched as
+ they were on posts several feet high. It was a feast day, and the whole
+ population had been in the streets in their best clothes. The soldiers
+ snatched the jewels of the women and chased the men away, and then
+ looted the houses, destroying what they could not take, and finally
+ setting them on fire.
+
+ "It's better so," said Sam to his adjutant. "Make war as bad as
+ possible and people will keep the peace. We are the real peacemakers."
+
+ He heard shouts and cries as he passed through the villages, and had
+ reason to think that the soldiers were not contented with mere
+ looting, but he did not inquire. He took his supper with the general at
+ his headquarters. Colonel James and Cleary ate with them, for Cleary
+ was still true to his friend's fortunes and determined to follow him
+ everywhere. After an evening of smoking and chatting, Sam, Cleary, and
+ Colonel James bade the general good-night and started for their
+ quarters, which lay in the same direction. It was a gorgeous moonlight
+ night, such a night as only the tropics can produce, and they sauntered
+ slowly along the mountain road, enjoying the scene.
+
+ "There is a question that I have been wanting to ask you, Colonel,"
+ said Sam to Colonel James as they walked on together. "What do you
+ think of darkies as soldiers? I have never seen much of them, and as
+ you have a negro regiment, you must know all about it."
+
+ "Well, the truth is, Major," responded the colonel, "I wouldn't have
+ my opinion get out for a good deal, but I'll tell you in confidence.
+ They make much better soldiers than white men, that's the long and
+ short of it."
+
+ "How can you explain that? It's most surprising!" cried Sam.
+
+ "Well, they're more impressible, for one thing. You can work them up
+ into any kind of passion you want to. Then they're more submissive to
+ discipline; they're used to being ordered about and kicked and cuffed,
+ and they don't mind it. Besides, they're accustomed from their low
+ social position to be subordinate to superiors, and rather expect it
+ than not. They are all poor, too, and used to poor food and ragged
+ clothes and no comforts, and of course they don't complain of what they
+ get from us."
+
+ "You mean," said Cleary, "that the lower a man is in the scale of
+ society the better soldier he makes."
+
+ "Well," answered the colonel, "I hadn't ever put it just in that light,
+ but that's about the size of it. These darkies are great hands at
+ carrying concealed weapons, too. If it isn't a razor it's something
+ else, and if there's a row going on they will get mixed up in it, but
+ they're none the worse as soldiers for that."
+
+ "Let's go up to that point there and take the moonlight view before we
+ turn in," suggested Cleary.
+
+ The others agreed, and they began to climb a path leading up to the
+ right. It was much more of a climb than they had expected, and when
+ they had become quite blown they sat down to recover their breath.
+
+ "I think we'd better go back," said Colonel James. "We may lose our
+ way, and it isn't safe here. The Moritos are known to be thick in these
+ mountains, and they might find us."
+
+ "Oh, let's go a little farther," said Cleary, and they set out to
+ climb again.
+
+ "The path seems to stop here," said Sam, who was in the lead. "This
+ must be the top, but I don't see any place for a view. Perhaps we'd
+ better go back."
+
+ Cleary did not repeat his objection, and they began to retrace their
+ steps. For some time they went on in silence.
+
+ "The path begins to go up-hill here," said Cleary, who now led. "I
+ don't understand this. We didn't go down-hill at all."
+
+ "I think we did for a short distance," answered Sam.
+
+ They went on, still ascending.
+
+ "There doesn't seem to be any path here," said Cleary. "Do you see it?"
+
+ His companions were obliged to admit that they did not.
+
+ "We'd better call for help," said Sam, and the three men began to shout
+ at the top of their voices, but there was no reply. An hour must have
+ elapsed while they were engaged in calling, and their voices became
+ husky, but all in vain.
+
+ "Hist!" said Cleary at last. "I think I hear some one coming. I heard
+ the branches move. They have sent out for us, thank fortune! I didn't
+ like the idea of sleeping out here and making the acquaintance of
+ snakes and catching fevers."
+
+ The words, were hardly out of his mouth when three shadowy figures
+ sprang out of the bushes and grasped each of the three men from
+ behind, holding their elbows back so that they could not use their
+ arms, and in a moment a veritable swarm of long-haired, half-clad
+ Moritos were upon them, pinioning them and emptying their pockets and
+ belts. It was quite useless to make any resistance, the attack had been
+ too sudden and unexpected. Cleary cried out once, but they made him
+ understand that, if he did it again, they would stab him with one of
+ their long knives. When the captives were securely bound, the captors
+ began to discuss the situation in their own language, which was the
+ only language they understood. There was evidently some difference of
+ opinion, but after a few minutes they came to some kind of an
+ agreement. The legs of the prisoners were unbound, and they were made
+ to march through the jungle, each one with two guards behind him, who
+ pricked him with their lances if he did not move fast enough. Their
+ only other arms seemed to be bows and arrows. The march was a very
+ weary one, and through a wild, mountainous country which would have
+ been impassable for men who did not know it thoroughly. Occasionally
+ they seemed to be following obscure paths, but as often there was no
+ sign of a track, and the thick, tropical vegetation made progress
+ difficult. For an hour or two they climbed up the half-dry bed of a
+ mountain torrent, and more than once they were ankle-deep in swampy
+ ground. The Moritos passed through the jungle with the agility and
+ noiselessness of cats, but the three white men floundered along as best
+ they could. Their captors uttered never a word and would not allow them
+ to speak.
+
+ The sun was just rising over a wilderness of mountains when they came
+ to a small clearing in the woods, apparently upon a plateau near the
+ top of a mountain. In this clearing there were a number of isolated
+ trees, in each one of which, at about twenty feet above the ground,
+ was a native hut, looking like a huge bird's nest. A small crowd of
+ natives, including women and children, ran toward them shouting, and
+ now for the first time the men of the returning party began to talk
+ too. Some of them tied the legs of their prisoners again and sat them
+ down on the ground, while the others rehearsed the history of their
+ exploit. It was a curious scene to witness. The men as well as the
+ women wore their long, coarse hair loose to the waist. Some of the
+ men had feathers stuck in their hair, and all of them were grotesquely
+ tattooed.
+
+ "I wonder if they're cannibals?" said Cleary, for there seemed to be an
+ opportunity now for conversation.
+
+ "I don't think there are any in this part of the country," said Colonel
+ James. "Here comes our breakfast anyway."
+
+ All the inhabitants of the village had been inspecting the captives
+ with great interest, especially the women and children. Two women now
+ came running from the group of tree-houses with platters of meat, and
+ the crowd opened to let them approach.
+
+ "Don't ask what it is," said Cleary, as he gulped down his rations.
+
+ "I can't eat it!" cried Sam.
+
+ "Oh, you must, or you'll offend them," said Colonel James.
+
+ And they completed their repast with wry faces. When they had finished,
+ one of the warriors, whom they had noticed before on account of his
+ comparative height and the magnificence of his decorations, came up to
+ them and addressed them, to their great surprise, in Castalian. He
+ explained to them that he was the famous savage chief, Carlos, who as
+ head of the Moritos ruled the entire region, and that they were
+ prisoners of war; that he had learned Castalian as a boy from a
+ missionary in the mountains when the land was at peace; and that a
+ palaver would be held on the following day, to which the heads of the
+ neighboring villages would be invited, to determine what to do with
+ them. He showed special interest in Sam's red hair and mustache, and
+ smoothed them and pulled them, asking him if they had been dyed. When
+ he was informed that they were not, he was filled with admiration and
+ called up his favorites to examine this wonder of nature. Sam had
+ noticed that from the moment of his arrival he had been the object of
+ admiration of the women, and this fact was now accounted for.
+
+ The three prisoners had no reason to complain of their treatment during
+ the day. A guard was set upon them, but the ropes by which they were
+ tied were loosened, and they were allowed from time to time to walk
+ about. Most of the morning they passed in much-needed sleep. In the
+ afternoon Carlos visited them again with some of his men, and set to
+ work to satisfy his curiosity as to their country, translating their
+ answers to his friends. His Castalian was very bad, but so was that of
+ his captives; yet they succeeded in making themselves understood
+ without difficulty.
+
+ "Do you have houses as high as those?" he asked, pointing to the human
+ nests in the trees.
+
+ "Yes, indeed," said Cleary. "Near my home there is a house nearly a
+ quarter of a mile long and twice as high as that tree, and nine hundred
+ people live in it."
+
+ There were murmurs of astonishment as this information was translated.
+
+ "What is that great house for?" asked the chief.
+
+ "It's a lunatic asylum."
+
+ "What is that?"
+
+ "A house for lunatics to live in."
+
+ "But what is a lunatic?"
+
+ Cleary tried in vain to explain what a lunatic was. The Moritos had
+ never seen one.
+
+ "We have plenty of such houses at home," said Sam, "and we have had to
+ double their size in ten years to hold the lunatics; they are splendid
+ buildings. There was one not very far from the college where my friend
+ and I were educated. But some of our prisons are even larger than our
+ lunatic asylums."
+
+ "What is a prison," asked Carlos.
+
+ "Oh," said Sam, "don't you understand that either? It's a house in
+ which we lock up criminals--I mean men who kill us or rob us."
+
+ "Oh, I see," replied Carlos. "You mean your enemies whom you take
+ prisoner in battle."
+
+ "No, I don't. I mean our own fellow citizens who murder and steal."
+
+ "Do you mean that you sometimes kill each other and steal from each
+ other, your own tribe?"
+
+ "Yes," said Sam. "Of course people who do so are bad men, but there are
+ some such among us."
+
+ A great discussion arose among the natives after hearing this.
+
+ "What do they say?" asked Colonel James in Castalian.
+
+ "They say," said the chief, "that they can not believe this, as they
+ have never heard of members of the same tribe hurting each other."
+
+ "We do all we can to prevent it," said Sam. "In our cities we have
+ policemen to keep order; that is, we have soldiers stationed in the
+ streets to frighten the bad men."
+
+ "Do you have soldiers in the streets of your towns to keep you from
+ killing each other!" exclaimed the chief, in astonishment. "Who ever
+ heard of such a thing? I do not understand it," and, altho Sam repeated
+ the information in every conceivable way permitted by his limited
+ vocabulary, he was unable successfully to convey the idea.
+
+ "It is strange how uncivilized they are," he said to his friends.
+
+ "Do you live on bananas in your country?" asked Carlos.
+
+ "No; we eat them sometimes, but we live on grain and meat," said Sam.
+
+ "You must have to work very hard to get it."
+
+ "Yes, we do, sometimes twelve hours a day."
+
+ "How frightful! And is there enough for all to eat?"
+
+ "Not always."
+
+ "And are your people happy when they work so hard and are sometimes
+ hungry?"
+
+ "Not always," said Sam. "Sometimes people are so unhappy that they
+ commit suicide."
+
+ "What?"
+
+ "I mean they kill themselves."
+
+ There was now another heated discussion.
+
+ "What do they say?" asked Colonel James.
+
+ "They say that they did not know it was possible for people to kill
+ themselves. I did not know it either. It is very strange."
+
+ "What limited intelligences they have!" exclaimed Sam.
+
+ "They say," continued Carlos, in a somewhat embarrassed manner, "that
+ if you are condemned to death, they wish one of you would kill himself,
+ so that they can see how it is done."
+
+ "There's a chance for you, Sam," said Cleary, but Sam did not seem to
+ see the joke.
+
+ "I am very sorry," said Carlos, seating himself nearer to Sam, "I am
+ very sorry that we may have to kill you, for I like you; but what can
+ we do? It is a rule of our tribe to kill prisoners of war."
+
+ "I really don't see what they can do, if that is the case," said Sam in
+ English. "If that is their law, and they have always done it, of course
+ from their point of view it is their military duty. I don't see any way
+ out of it. Do you?"
+
+ "It wouldn't break my heart if they failed to do their duty in this
+ case," said Cleary. "For heaven's sake, don't tell him what you think.
+ Let's keep him feeling agreeable by our conversation. He's fallen in
+ love with you, Sam. Perhaps he'll give you to one of his daughters and
+ she may marry you or eat you, whichever she pleases."
+
+ "I wish you wouldn't joke about these things," said Sam. "It's a
+ serious piece of business. There's no glory in being tomahawked here in
+ the mountains."
+
+ "And I haven't got my kodak with me either," said Cleary.
+
+ "What made you come into my country?" asked Carlos. "Did you not know
+ how powerful I am? And what have I ever done against you?"
+
+ "We came because we were ordered to," said Sam.
+
+ "And do you do what you are ordered to, whether you approve of it or
+ not?"
+
+ "Of course we do."
+
+ "That is very strange," said Carlos. "We never obey anybody unless we
+ want to and think he is doing the right thing. I tell my men here what
+ I want to do, and if they agree to it they obey me, but if they don't I
+ give it up. But you do things that you think are wrong and foolish
+ because you are ordered to. It is very strange!"
+
+ "We are military men," said Sam. "It requires centuries of civilization
+ to understand us."
+
+ "How do you kill your prisoners?" asked Carlos.
+
+ "We don't kill them," answered Sam.
+
+ "I don't know about that, Sam," said Cleary in English. "We didn't take
+ many prisoners at San Diego."
+
+ "That's a fact," answered Sam, in the same language. "We didn't take
+ many. I never thought of that."
+
+ "Don't tell him, tho," added Cleary.
+
+ "But when you soldiers have to execute an enemy for any reason, how do
+ you do it?"
+
+ "We shoot them with rifles," said Sam.
+
+ "Is that all?"
+
+ "No; we make them dig their graves first," interposed Cleary. "That's a
+ hint to him," he whispered. "It's better than the stew pot."
+
+ "Dig their graves first!" exclaimed the chief, and he turned to his men
+ and explained the matter to them. They were evidently delighted.
+
+ "What are they saying?" asked James again.
+
+ "They say that that is a grand idea, and that they will adopt it. They
+ think civilization is a great thing, and they want to be civilized,"
+ said Carlos.
+
+ "There, I knew they weren't cannibals!" said the colonel.
+
+ There was silence for several minutes, and Carlos smoothed Sam's locks
+ with his hand.
+
+ "We must entertain him," said Cleary. "Say something, Sam, or he'll get
+ down on us."
+
+ "Say something yourself," said Sam, who was thoroughly vexed at his
+ friend's ill-timed flippancy.
+
+ "Does your tribe live in these mountains and nowhere else?" asked
+ Cleary.
+
+ "Oh, no. We have brothers everywhere. They are in all the islands, and
+ all over the world."
+
+ "You tell them by your language, I suppose."
+
+ "No, some of them do not speak our language. That makes no difference.
+ We tell our brothers in other ways."
+
+ "How?" said Cleary.
+
+ "There are four marks of the true Morito," said the chief. "Their young
+ men are initiated by torture. That is one mark. Then their chief men
+ wear feathers on their heads. That is the second. And the third mark is
+ that they are tattooed, as I am," and he pointed to the strange figures
+ on his naked chest; "and the fourth is that they all use the sacred
+ tom-tom when they dance."
+
+ "Sam," said Cleary, "have you got those East Point photographs in your
+ pocket?"
+
+ "Yes," said Sam, thrusting his hand into his bosom.
+
+ Cleary rolled over to Carlos as well as his ropes would allow, threw
+ his arms about his neck, and cried out in Castalian, "Oh, my
+ brother, my long-lost brother!"
+
+ [Illustration: TWO OF A KIND
+ "THERE ARE FOUR MARKS"]
+
+ There was a general commotion. The savages drew their knives, and for a
+ moment there seemed to be danger for the prisoners.
+
+ "What on earth are you trying to do, Mr. Cleary?" exclaimed Colonel
+ James. "It seems to me that your pleasantries are in very doubtful
+ taste while our lives are in the balance."
+
+ Cleary made no answer, but went on crying, "Oh, my brothers, my
+ long-lost brothers!"
+
+ "What do you mean?" ejaculated Carlos, in a rage. "I will give you one
+ minute in which to explain, and then your head will fall."
+
+ "We are your brothers. We are Moritos. We are your people from a
+ distant island, and you never knew it!"
+
+ "Is this true?" asked the chief, looking at Sam and the colonel.
+
+ "Swear to it," whispered Cleary.
+
+ "We swear that it is true," replied the two officers.
+
+ "Then prove it, or you shall all three die to-night. I am not to be
+ trifled with. Proceed."
+
+ "Señor," said Cleary, "you have said that you recognize Morito young
+ men by the fact that they have passed through the torture. We have
+ passed through the torture. My friend will show you the pictures taken
+ of both of us when we were about to be burned at the stake, and also
+ one of himself passing through the ordeal of water. Sam, show him the
+ photos."
+
+ Sam took the two pictures from his pocket and handed them to Cleary,
+ who held them in his hand while Carlos peered over his shoulder.
+
+ "You see here," he said, "that we are tied to the stake. You may
+ recognize our features. You see the expression of pain on our faces.
+ These men standing around are our elder brothers who initiated us. It
+ was done by night in a sacred grove where our ancestors have indulged
+ in these rites for many ages. That wall is part of a ruin of a temple
+ to the god of war."
+
+ Carlos evidently was impressed. He took the dim print, with its fitful
+ lantern-light effects, and studied it, comparing the faces with those
+ of his prisoners. Then he showed it to his followers, and they all
+ spoke together.
+
+ "They say," said their chief at last, "that they believe you speak the
+ truth. But how do we know that the old man was initiated too?"
+
+ "He is an old man," said Cleary. "He had a picture like this in his
+ pocket when he was young. We all carry them with us as long as they
+ hold together. But they will wear out. You may see that this one is
+ wearing out already."
+
+ "That is true," assented the chief. "But your picture proves against
+ you as well as for you. You have no feathers in your heads there, and
+ you are wearing none now," and he proudly straightened up those on his
+ head.
+
+ "In our country we have not many feathers as you have here," answered
+ Cleary. "The birds do not come often to that land, it is so cold. Only
+ our greatest men wear feathers. When we reach home and grow old and
+ wise and valiant, perhaps we shall all have feathers. This old warrior
+ of ours has feathers at home, but he does not carry them on journeys.
+ My young friend and I are yet too young. We have a picture of our old
+ friend here with his feathers."
+
+ "Good heavens!" exclaimed Sam. "What are you driving at. We'll be worse
+ off than ever now."
+
+ "Just you let me manage this affair," said Cleary. "Give me that photo
+ of the dress-parade at East Point that you showed me last week."
+
+ Sam did as he was told. It represented the dress-parade at sunset, the
+ companies drawn up in line at parade-rest and the band in full blast
+ going through its evolutions in the foreground, with a peculiarly
+ magnificent drum-major in bear-skin hat and plumes at the head,
+ swinging a gorgeous baton.
+
+ Cleary exhibited it to Carlos.
+
+ "There is our elderly friend," said he, indicating the drum-major. "He
+ is leading the national war-dance of our people. There is the tom-tom,"
+ he added triumphantly, pointing at the bass-drum, which was
+ fortunately presented in full relief.
+
+ Carlos was taken aback, and he made a guttural exclamation of surprise.
+
+ "Do you dress like that when you are at home?" he asked of Colonel
+ James.
+
+ "I do," replied the colonel majestically.
+
+ "Then I bow down before you," said the chief, kneeling down and
+ touching the ground with his forehead three times. "But," he added, as
+ he rose to his feet, "you have not yet proved that we are brothers.
+ Where are your tattoo-marks? Look at mine!"
+
+ "Sam, strip," whispered Cleary, and Sam tore off his coat and shirt,
+ displaying the masterpieces of the artistic boatswain. A cry of
+ admiration went up from the assembled savages. Carlos rushed at
+ him, threw his arms about his neck, and rubbed his nose violently
+ against his.
+
+ "For heaven's sake, save me, Cleary!" cried Sam. "My nose will be worse
+ than Saunder's, and Marian is prejudiced against damaged noses."
+
+ Cleary thought it best not to interfere, and finally the chief grew
+ tired of this exercise. He hardly paid any attention while Cleary
+ showed the modest tattoo-marks on his arms, and Colonel James exhibited
+ equally insignificant symbols on his, for he, too, had been tattooed in
+ his youth. He was too much engrossed in Sam's red hair and his
+ variegated cuticle.
+
+ "Here is the picture of the water-ordeal which you forgot to look at,"
+ said Cleary, as he collected the photographs. "This is my friend again
+ with his head in the water and his legs stretched out in supplication
+ to the god of the temple."
+
+ Carlos looked at it in ecstasy.
+
+ "Oh, my brothers!" he cried. "To think that I should not have known
+ you! You torture each other just as we do. You are tattooed just as we
+ are! You have bigger feathers and bigger dances and bigger tom-toms.
+ You are bigger savages than we are! Come, let us feast together."
+
+ The repast was soon prepared in the center of the clearing. The
+ prisoners, now unbound, washed and happy, were seated in the place of
+ honor on each side of the chief. A huge pot of miscellaneous food was
+ set down in the midst, and they all began to eat with their fingers,
+ the chief picking out the tid-bits for his guests and putting them in
+ their mouths. They were so much delighted with the results of the day's
+ work that they ate heartily and asked no questions. When the meal was
+ over, Cleary turned to the chief and thanked him in a little oration,
+ which was received with great favor.
+
+ "We have found our brothers," he said in conclusion, "and you have
+ found yours. You believe us now when we say that we have come to bless
+ you and not to injure you. We will not take your land. We will
+ generously give you part of it for yourselves. You see how we all love
+ you, the aged warrior and the red-headed chief as well as I. Why will
+ you not come with us when we set out on our journey to our great chief,
+ or why, at any rate, will you not send your chiefs with us, to tell
+ him that you have received us all as brothers and that we shall always
+ be friends and allies?"
+
+ Carlos translated this speech sentence by sentence. Cleary was a good
+ speaker, and they were impressed by his style as well as by his
+ argument. They palavered together for some time; then Carlos arose
+ and addressed his guests, but particularly Sam, whom he considered
+ as the leader.
+
+ "Brothers," he said, "we are indeed brothers by the torture, tattoo,
+ tom-tom, and top-feather. We did not know who you were, we did not
+ understand you. We wished to be left in peace. We did not want to have
+ the Castalians come here and rob us. We did not want their beads and
+ their brandy. We wanted to be let alone. But you are our brothers. You
+ are greater savages than we are. Why should we not go with you? The
+ chiefs of our other villages are coming to-morrow at sunrise. I will
+ conduct you back to your great chief with them, and we shall all
+ rejoice together."
+
+ It was now nearly dark. Carlos apologized for not having accommodation
+ for his guests in his tree-hut, but provided comfortable blankets on
+ the ground and had a fire built for them in a secluded place near the
+ village. The three men were soon sleeping peacefully, and they did not
+ awake until the sun had already risen.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER IX
+
+ On Duty at Havilla
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+
+ When they woke they heard the noise of voices in the village and
+ hastened thither. The chiefs had already arrived and were exchanging
+ greetings with Carlos and the other residents. Breakfast was prepared
+ by the women on the same ground where they had dined, and by eight
+ o'clock the expedition started, composed of some thirty warriors,
+ several of whom were laden with presents in the shape of baskets and
+ native cloth. When they neared the headquarters of the little invading
+ army, the three white men went ahead and informed the sentinels that it
+ was a peaceful embassy which followed them.
+
+ "You must leave me to tell the story of our exploit," Cleary had said,
+ and his friends were so well satisfied with his record as a talker that
+ they assented.
+
+ "General," said Cleary, as they entered his hut in the village, "we are
+ bringing in all the chiefs of the Moritos. They are ready to lay down
+ their arms and accept any terms. We have sworn friendship to them."
+
+ "How on earth have you managed it?" said the general.
+
+ "It is chiefly due to Captain Jinks, or, I should say, Major Jinks.
+ They were about to kill us when, by the sheer force of his glance
+ and his powers of speech, he actually cowed them, and they submitted
+ to him."
+
+ "I have heard of taming wild beasts that way," said the general, "but
+ I never quite believed it."
+
+ When the chiefs arrived they embraced every soldier they saw and showed
+ every sign of joy. The general ordered a feast to be spread for them
+ and addressed them in English. They did not understand a word of this
+ harangue, but seemed much affected. When they heard that the great
+ general of all was at San Diego, only a day's march away, they insisted
+ on going thither, and the next day the brigade marched back again,
+ leaving a small garrison behind. The army at San Diego could hardly
+ believe its eyes when at sundown the expedition returned, having fully
+ accomplished its object without firing a shot and accompanied by a band
+ of Moritos. When Cleary's version of the exploit became known, Sam was
+ openly acclaimed as a hero and the favorite of the army. General
+ Laughter complimented him again, and again mentioned him in despatches.
+ A week later his promotion to be major of volunteers, for meritorious
+ conduct in the field of San Diego, was announced by cable, and again
+ after a few days he was made a colonel. Sam's cup was full.
+
+ "Sam," said Cleary one day, "I believe in your luck. You'll be
+ President some of these days. All the time we were up in the mountains
+ I knew it would come out all right because we had you along."
+
+ Meanwhile the chiefs had tendered their presents to General Laughter
+ and had drunk plentiful libations of whisky and soda with him. They
+ spent a week of festivity in the town and then returned, having agreed
+ to all that was asked of them by their "brothers."
+
+ The rainy season now set in, and operations in the field became
+ difficult. Furthermore, the general had decided that the war was at an
+ end, and officially it was so considered. Some troops were left at San
+ Diego, but the headquarters were removed again to Havilla, and Sam went
+ back with the staff. He found himself received as a great man. His two
+ exploits had made him the most famous officer in the army, even more so
+ than the general in command. Soon after his return to the city one of
+ the civil commissioners, who had been sent out by the Administration,
+ gave a large dinner in his honor at the palace. The chief officers and
+ civil officials were among the guests, as well as two or three native
+ merchants who had remained loyal to the invading army for financial and
+ commercial reasons and had not joined the rebels, who composed
+ nine-tenths of the population. These merchants were generally known in
+ the army as the "patriots," and were treated with much consideration by
+ the civil commissioners.
+
+ After dinner the host proposed a toast to Sam and accompanied it with a
+ patriotic speech which thrilled the hearts of his audience. He pointed
+ to the national flag which was festooned upon the wall.
+
+ "Look at Old Gory!" he cried. "What does she stand for? For the rights
+ of the oppressed all over the earth, for freedom and equal rights,
+ for----"
+
+ There was a sound of boisterous laughter in the next room. A young
+ officer ran forward and whispered to the orator, "Be careful; some of
+ those captured rebel officers are shut up in there, and perhaps they
+ can overhear you. Be careful what you say. Some of them speak English."
+ The commissioner hemmed and hawed and tried to recover himself.
+
+ "What does the dear old flag stand for?" he repeated. "For
+ liber--No--for-r-r----Well, 'pon my word, what does she stand for?"
+
+ "For the army and navy," whispered a neighbor.
+
+ "Yes," he thundered. "Yes, the flag stands for the army and navy, for
+ our officers and men, for our men-of-war and artillery, for our cavalry
+ and infantry, that's what she stands for!"
+
+ This was received with great applause, and the speaker smiled with
+ satisfaction. Then gradually his expression became sad.
+
+ "I am sorry to say," he said,--"I am ashamed as a citizen of our great
+ land to be obliged to admit, that there are at home a few
+ craven-hearted, mean-spirited men--shall I call them men? No, nor even
+ women--there are creatures, I say, who disapprove of our glorious
+ deeds, who spurn the flag and the noble principles for which it stands
+ and to which I have alluded, who say that we have no business to take
+ away land which belongs to other people, and that we have not the right
+ to slaughter rebels and traitors in our midst. I appeal to the
+ patriotic Cubapinos at this board, if we are not introducing a higher
+ and nobler civilization into these islands."
+
+ The native gentlemen bowed assent.
+
+ "Have we not given them a better language than their own? Have we not
+ established our enlightened institutions? For instance, let me cite the
+ custom house. We have the collector here with us--and the post-office.
+ The postmaster is----"
+
+ "Sh-sh-sh!" whispered the prompter again. "He's in jail."
+
+ "I mean the assistant postmaster is also with us. And there are our
+ other institutions, the----"
+
+ "There's going to be a prize-fight to-night," cried a young lieutenant
+ who had taken too much wine, at the foot of the table. "Dandy Sullivan
+ against Joe Corker."
+
+ This interruption was too much for the commissioner, who was quite
+ unable to resume the thread of his remarks for several moments. The
+ guests in the mean time moved uneasily in their seats, for most of them
+ were anxious to be off to see the fight.
+
+ "Those who carp against us at home," continued the speaker, trying in
+ vain to find some graceful way of coming to a close, "those who
+ dishonor the flag are the men who pretend to be filled with humanity
+ and to desire the welfare of mankind. They pretend to object to
+ bloodshed. They are mere sentimentalists. They are not practical men.
+ They do not understand our destiny, nor the Constitution, nor progress,
+ nor civilization, nor glory, nor honor, nor the dear old flag, God
+ bless her. They are sentimentalists. They have no sense of humor."
+
+ Here the audience applauded loudly, altho the speaker had not intended
+ to have them applaud just there. It occurred to him that he might just
+ as well stop at this point, and he sat down, not altogether satisfied,
+ however, with his peroration and vexed to think that he had forgotten
+ Sam altogether. The party broke up without delay, and Sam walked off
+ with Cleary, who had been present, to see the prize-fight.
+
+ "The commissioner isn't much of a talker, is he?" said Cleary. "That
+ was a bad break about the postmaster. I hear they've arrested Captain
+ Jones for embezzlement too."
+
+ "Good heavens!" cried Sam, "what an outrage!" And he told Cleary of his
+ narrow escape from complicity in the matter, and how the military
+ operations had prevented him from calling on the contractors.
+ "Civilians don't understand these things," he added. "They oughtn't to
+ send them out here. They don't understand things."
+
+ "No. They haven't been brought up on tabasco sauce. What can you expect
+ of them?"
+
+ They soon arrived at the Alhambra Theater at which the fight was to
+ take place, and found it in progress. A large crowd was collected,
+ consisting of soldiers and natives in equal proportions. The last round
+ was just finishing, and Joe Corker was in the act of knocking his
+ opponent out. The audience was shouting with glee and excitement, the
+ cheers being mixed with hisses and cries of "Fake, fake!"
+
+ "I know Corker," said Cleary. "Come, I'll introduce you."
+
+ They pushed forward through the crowd, and were soon in a room behind
+ the stage, where Corker was being rubbed and washed down by his
+ assistants. Sam looked at the great man and felt rather small and
+ insignificant. "Here's a kind of civilian who is not inferior to army
+ men," he thought. "Perhaps he is even superior." He would not have said
+ this aloud, but he thought it.
+
+ "How de do, Joe?" said Cleary, shaking hands. "That was a great fight.
+ You knocked him out clean. Here's my friend, Colonel Jinks, the hero of
+ San Diego and the pacifier of the Moritos."
+
+ Corker nodded condescendingly.
+
+ "We enjoyed the fight very much," said Sam, not altogether at his ease.
+ "It reminded me of my own experience at East Point."
+
+ "It was a good fight," said Corker, "and a damned fair one too. I'd
+ like to punch the heads of those fellers who cried 'fake.' It was as
+ fair as fair could be, and Dandy and me was as evenly matched as two
+ peas. I always believe in takin' a feller of your size, and I did."
+
+ "That wasn't the way at East Point," said Cleary. "They didn't take
+ fellows of their size there."
+
+ "That's against our rules anyway," said Corker.
+
+ "It must be a civilian rule," said Sam, beginning to feel his
+ superiority again. "The military rule as we were taught it at East
+ Point was to take a smaller man if you could, and you see, the army
+ does just the same thing. We tackled Castalia and then the Cubapines,
+ and they weren't of our size. We don't fight the powerful countries."
+
+ "That's queer," said Corker, drinking a lemonade.
+
+ "It's perfectly right," said Sam. "When a man's in the right, and of
+ course we always are, if he fights a man of his size or one bigger than
+ he is, he gives the wrong a chance of winning, and that is clearly
+ immoral. If he takes a weaker man he makes the truth sure of success.
+ And it's just the same way with nations."
+
+ Corker did not seem to be much interested by this disquisition, and
+ Cleary dragged his friend away after they had respectfully bade the
+ pugilist good-night. A crowd of soldiers was waiting outside to see
+ Corker get into his carriage. They paid no attention whatever to Sam
+ and Cleary.
+
+ "When it comes to real glory a prize-fighter beats a colonel all
+ hollow," said Cleary, and they parted for the night.
+
+ Sam was retained on the general staff and assigned to the important
+ post of censor of the press. His duties were most engrossing, for not
+ only were the proofs of all the local newspapers submitted to him, but
+ also all other printed matter. One day a large number of handbills
+ were confiscated at a printer's and brought in for his inspection. He
+ was very busy and asked his native private secretary to look them over
+ for him. In a half-hour he came to him with a translation of the
+ document.
+
+ "What does it say?" cried Sam. "I have no time to read it through."
+
+ "It says that governments are made to preserve liberty, and that they
+ get their only authority from the free will of the people who are ruled
+ by them," answered the clerk.
+
+ "That's clearly seditious," said Sam. "There must be some plot at
+ the bottom of it. Have the whole edition burned and have the printer
+ locked up."
+
+ A few days later a newspaper was brought to him announcing that the
+ Moritos had massacred the garrison stationed among them, that the whole
+ province of San Diego was in revolt, and that the regiment there would
+ probably have to fall back on Havilla. Sam was much scandalized, and
+ sent at once for the native editor.
+
+ "What does this mean?" said he.
+
+ "Pardon, my colonel," said the little man apologetically, "this is a
+ newspaper and this is news. I am sure it is true."
+
+ "That is the civilian conception of news," said Sam, with disdain.
+ "Officially this is not true. We have instructions, as you have often
+ been told, not to allow anything to be printed that can injure the
+ Administration at Whoppington. Any one can see how this would injure
+ it, and news that can injure it is, from the military point of view,
+ untrue. General Notice is making a tour of the country at home,
+ receiving ovations everywhere on account of the complete subjugation of
+ the islands. What effect will such news have upon his reception? Is it
+ a proper way to treat a general who has deserved well of his country?"
+
+ "But," interposed the editor, "don't the people know that you are
+ continually sending out more troops?"
+
+ "The people do not mind a little thing like that," said Sam. "When an
+ officer and a gentleman says the war is over, they believe it, and
+ they show their gratitude by voting money to send new regiments. Your
+ action in printing this stuff is most disloyal. I will send one of my
+ assistants around to your office with you to see that this edition is
+ destroyed, and if you repeat the offense you will be deported."
+
+ The unfortunate man retired, shrugging his shoulders. As he went out
+ Cleary came running in with a copy of the paper.
+
+ "Oh! you've got a copy of that, have you?" said Sam. "It's an outrage
+ to print such things, isn't it?"
+
+ "I'm afraid it's true," said Cleary.
+
+ "What difference does that make?" exclaimed Sam. "It's the business of
+ an army to conquer a country. We've done it twice, and we can do it as
+ often as we like again."
+
+ "Hear, hear!" cried Cleary. "You're becoming more and more of a soldier
+ as you get promoted. You have the true military instinct, I see. Of
+ course it makes no difference who holds the country, but I'm a little
+ disappointed in the Moritos. As for San Diego, Colonel Booth of your
+ old regiment is in command, and I half think he didn't back up the
+ Morito garrison out of jealousy toward you. He wanted to have the
+ Morito country go back, so as to belittle our exploit. But we'll get
+ even with him. I've seen the cable-censor, and not a word about it will
+ go home. I have just sent a despatch saying that the whole island is
+ entirely in our hands and that the natives are swearing allegiance by
+ thousands."
+
+ "That's right," said Sam. "It's really a kindness to the people at
+ home, for if they think it's true it makes them just as happy as if it
+ were true, and I think it's positively cruel to worry them
+ unnecessarily."
+
+ "To be sure," said Cleary. "And if it does get out, we'll throw all the
+ blame on the Secretary of War and his embalmed beef. They say he's
+ writing a book to show that a diet of mummies is the best for fighting
+ men--and so the quarrels go on. By the way, I just stopped a piece of
+ news that might have interested you. Do you know that you have
+ suppressed the Declaration of Independence?"
+
+ "Nonsense. I haven't seen a copy of it in two years."
+
+ "Well, here's a despatch that I got away from the cable-office just in
+ time. It would have gone in another ten minutes. Here it is."
+
+ Sam took the paper and read an account of the printing by a native
+ committee of fifty thousand copies of the Declaration in Castalian, and
+ its immediate suppression by Colonel Jinks, the censor.
+
+ "It's a downright lie," cried Sam. "I'll call my native secretary and
+ inquire into this," and he rang his bell.
+
+ "See here, what does this mean?" he asked the clerk who hurried in.
+
+ The man thought a minute.
+
+ "I do not know the Declaration of Independence," he said, "but perhaps
+ that paper I translated for you the other day had something to do with
+ it. I have not a copy here."
+
+ "Were they burned?"
+
+ "Not yet, sir. They were seized, and are in our dépôt."
+
+ "Come," said Sam to Cleary, "let's go over there and look at it. It's a
+ half-mile walk and it will do me good."
+
+ "How are things at San Diego?" asked Sam, as they walked along
+ together. "You've been out there, haven't you?"
+
+ "Yes. We'll have to come in. The Cubapinos have got a force together at
+ a town farther down the river and are threatening us there. We got
+ pretty near them and mined under a convent they were in, and blew up a
+ lot of them, but it didn't do them much harm, for a lot of recruits
+ came in just afterward from the mountains. That convent was born to be
+ blown up, it seems, for some Castalian anarchists had a plot to blow it
+ up some years ago, and came near doing it, too. We made use of their
+ tunnels, which the monks were too lazy to have filled up. The anarchist
+ plot was found out, and they garroted a dozen of them."
+
+ "What inhuman brutes those anarchists are!" cried Sam. "Think of their
+ trying to blow up a whole houseful of people! I wish we could take
+ some one of the smaller islands and put all the anarchists of the world
+ there and let them live out their precious theories. Just think what a
+ hell it would be! What infernal engines of hatred and destruction they
+ would construct, if they were left to themselves--machines charged with
+ dynamite and bristling with all sorts of explosive contrivances!"
+
+ "Something like a battle-ship," suggested Cleary.
+
+ "Don't talk nonsense!" exclaimed Sam. "Only Castalian fiends would try
+ to destroy law and order and upset the peaceable course of society in
+ such a way. Do you suppose that any of our people at home would do such
+ a thing?"
+
+ "None, outside of the artillery," answered Cleary. "Well, at any rate,
+ our blowing up of the convent didn't do much good. There was some talk
+ of putting poison in the river to dispose of them, but of course we
+ couldn't do that."
+
+ "Of course not," said Sam. "That would be barbarous and against all
+ military precedents. The rules of war don't allow it."
+
+ "They're rather queer, those rules," answered his friend. "I should
+ like my enemies to take notice that I prefer being poisoned to being
+ blown up with bombshells. In some respects they don't pay much
+ attention to the rules, either. They don't take prisoners much
+ nowadays. Most of my despatches now read, 'fifty natives killed,' but
+ they say nothing of wounded or prisoners."
+
+ "We're fighting savages, we must remember that," said Sam.
+
+ "Then we've got a way of trying our pistols and rifles on natives
+ working in the fields; it's rather novel, to say the least. I saw one
+ man in the 73d try his new revolver on a native rowing a boat on the
+ river, and over the fellow toppled and the boat drifted down-stream.
+ The men all applauded, and even the officers laughed."
+
+ "Boys will be boys," said Sam, smiling. "They're good shots, at
+ any rate."
+
+ "They are that. There were some darkies plowing up there just this
+ side of San Diego, and some of our fellows picked them off as neatly
+ as you please. It must have been eight hundred yards if it was a foot.
+ But somehow I don't quite like it."
+
+ "War is war," said Sam, using a phrase which presumably has a rational
+ meaning, as it is so often employed by reasonable people. "It doesn't
+ pay to be squeamish. The squeamish men don't make good soldiers. I've
+ seen enough to learn that. They hesitate to obey orders, if they don't
+ like them."
+
+ As he said this they passed a small crowd of boys in the street. They
+ were trying to make two dogs fight, but the dogs refused to do so, and
+ the boys were beating them and urging them on.
+
+ "What stupid brutes they are," said Sam. "They're badly trained."
+
+ "They haven't had a military education," responded Cleary. "But I
+ almost forgot to ask you, have you seen the papers from home this
+ morning? They're all full of you and your greatness. Here are two or
+ three," and he took them from his pocket.
+
+ Sam opened them and gazed at them entranced. There was page upon page
+ of his exploits, portraits of all kinds, biographies, anecdotes,
+ interviews, headlines, everything that his wildest dreams had imagined,
+ only grander and more glorious. There was nothing to be seen but the
+ words "Captain Jinks" from one end of the papers to the other.
+
+ "They've even got a song about you," said Cleary. "Here it is:
+
+ "'I'm Captain Jinks of the horse-marines.
+ I feed my horse on corn and beans.
+ Of course it's quite beyond my means,
+ Tho a captain in the army!'"
+
+ "I don't altogether like it," said Sam. "What are the horse-marines? I
+ don't believe there are any."
+
+ "Oh, that doesn't make any difference. It seems it's an old song that
+ was all the go long before our time, and your name has revived it. It
+ will advertise you splendidly. The whole thing is a grand piece of
+ work for _The Lyre_. Jonas has been congratulating me on it. He'd come
+ and tell you so, but he doesn't want to be seen with you. You've
+ censured out everything I've asked you to for him, and he doesn't want
+ people to know about his pull. That's the reason why he's never called
+ on you. But he says it's the best newspaper job he ever heard of. I
+ tell you we're a great combination, you and I. Perhaps I'll write a
+ book and call it, 'With Jinks at Havilla.' Rather an original title,
+ isn't it? But I'm afraid that all this talk at home will not make you
+ very popular with the officers here, who knew you when you were only a
+ captain. What would you say to being transferred to Porsslania? They
+ want new men for our army there, and I've half a mind to go too for a
+ change and act as the _Lyre's_ correspondent there. They'll do anything
+ I ask them now."
+
+ "I'd like it very much," said Sam. "I'm tired of this literary
+ business. But here we are. This is our dépôt."
+
+ The two men entered the long low building in which confiscated
+ property was stored. A soldier who was acting as watchman showed them
+ where the circulars were piled. Cleary took one and glanced over it.
+
+ [Illustration: CONSENT OF THE GOVERNED
+ "WHAT BUSINESS HAVE THESE PEOPLE TO TALK ABOUT EQUAL RIGHTS?"]
+
+ "As sure as fate, it's the Declaration of Independence!" he laughed.
+
+ Sam took up a copy and looked at it too.
+
+ "I believe it is," he said. "I didn't half look at it the other day.
+ I'm ever so much obliged to you for telling me and stopping the
+ telegram. But between you and me, the circular ought to be suppressed
+ anyway. What business have these people to talk about equal rights and
+ the consent of the governed? The men who wrote the
+ Declaration--Jeffries and the rest--were mere civilians and these ideas
+ are purely civilian. Come, let's have them burned at once," and he
+ called up two or three soldiers, and in a few minutes the circulars
+ formed a mass of glowing ashes in the courtyard.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER X
+
+ A Great Military Exploit
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+
+ One day while Sam was still waiting for Cleary to carry out his
+ designs, his secretary told him that a sergeant wished to see him, and
+ Sam directed him to show him into his office. The man was a rather
+ sinister-looking individual, and his speech betrayed his Anglian
+ origin.
+
+ "Colonel," said he, after the door was closed and they were alone, "I'm
+ only a sergeant promoted from the ranks, but I'm not just an ordinary
+ common soldier. I know a thing or two, and I've got a plan and I
+ thought perhaps you would be glad to 'ear of it. I 'ave the 'abit of
+ observing things, and most soldiers don't. Why, bless me, you can march
+ them into a country and out again, and with their eyes front, they
+ don't see a bloomin' thing. They're trained to see nothin'. They're
+ good for nothin' but to do as they're bid. I used to be in the army in
+ the old country, and once at Baldershot I saw Lord Bullsley come along
+ on horseback and stop two soldiers carryin' a soup-pail.
+
+ "'Give me a taste of that,' says he, and one of them runs off and gets
+ a ladle and gives him a taste. He spits it out and makes a face and
+ shouts:
+
+ "'Good heavens! man, you don't call that stuff soup, do you?'
+
+ "'No, sir,' says the man. 'It's dish-water that we was a-hemptyin'.'
+ That's the soldier all over again. He 'adn't sense enough to tell him
+ beforehand."
+
+ "I don't see, sergeant, what that has to do with me," said Sam curtly.
+
+ "Well, sir, perhaps it hasn't. But I only wanted to say that I ain't
+ that kind of a man. I sees and thinks for myself. Now I 'ear that
+ they've got a letter captured from Gomaldo askin' General Baluna for
+ reenforcements, and that they've got some letters from Baluna too, and
+ know his handwritin'. I only wanted to say that I used to be a
+ writin'-master and that I can copy any writin' goin' or any signature
+ either, so you can't tell them apart. Now why couldn't we forge an
+ answer from Baluna to Gomaldo and send the first reenforcements
+ ourselves? He wants a 'undred men at a time. And then we could capture
+ Gomaldo as easy as can be. We could find him in the mountains. I know a
+ lot of these natives 'ere who would go with us if we paid them well."
+
+ "We should have to dress them up in the native uniform," said Sam. "I
+ don't know whether that would be quite honorable."
+
+ The sergeant smiled knowingly, but said nothing.
+
+ "Do you think we could get native officers to do such a thing?" Sam
+ asked.
+
+ "Oh, yes! Plenty of them. I know one or two. At first they wouldn't
+ like it. But give them money enough and commissions in our army, and
+ they'd do it."
+
+ "How different they are from us!" mused Sam. "Nobody in our army,
+ officer or man, could ever be approached in that way."
+
+ "It seems to me I've read somewhere of one of our principal
+ generals--Maledict Donald, wasn't it?"
+
+ Sam thought best not to hear this.
+
+ "But we would have to send some of our own officers on such an
+ expedition," he said. "We couldn't disguise them as natives."
+
+ "That wouldn't be necessary. They can go as if they were prisoners--you
+ and two or three others you could pick out. I'd like to go too. And
+ then I'd expect good pay if the thing went through, and a commission as
+ lieutenant."
+
+ "There'd be no trouble about that," answered Sam. "I'll think it over,
+ and perhaps consult the general about it and let you know by
+ to-morrow."
+
+ "Very good, sir. I'm Sergeant Keene of the 5th Company, 39th Infantry."
+
+ As the sergeant went out Cleary came in, and Sam laid the matter before
+ him.
+
+ "I know that fellow by sight," said Cleary. "They say he's served
+ several terms for forgery and counterfeiting. I don't like his looks.
+ That's a great scheme tho, if it does seem a little like
+ bunco-steering. It's all right in war perhaps."
+
+ "Yes," said Sam. "We have a higher standard of honor than civilians.
+ I'll go and see the general about it now."
+
+ After some consultation the general approved the plan and authorized
+ Sam to carry it out. The latter set Keene to work at once at forging a
+ letter from Baluna acknowledging receipt of the orders for
+ reenforcements and informing Gomaldo that he was sending him the first
+ company of one hundred troops. Meanwhile he selected three officers of
+ the Regular Army to accompany him besides Keene, and through the
+ latter approached three native officers who had been captured at San
+ Diego. One of these was a close confidential friend of Gomaldo's, but
+ Keene succeeded after much persuasion in winning them all over. It was
+ an easier task to make up a company of native privates, who readily
+ followed their officers when a small payment on account had been given
+ to each man.
+
+ "I don't quite like the job," Sam confessed to Cleary, "but the general
+ says it's all right and so it must be."
+
+ At last the expedition started out. All the natives were dressed in the
+ native uniform, and the five white men were clad as privates in the
+ invading army and held as prisoners. After passing the outposts near
+ San Diego they turned toward the south in the direction of the
+ mountains where Gomaldo's captured letter had been dated. They were
+ received with rejoicings in each native village as soon as they showed
+ the forged letter of Baluna and exhibited their white prisoners. The
+ villagers showed much interest in the latter, but treated them kindly,
+ expressing their pity for them and offering them food. They had no
+ difficulty in obtaining exact directions as to Gomaldo's situation, but
+ found that it lay in the midst of an uninhabited district where it was
+ impossible to obtain supplies, the village where he had established his
+ headquarters being the only one within many miles. They scraped
+ together what food they could in the shape of rice, Indian corn, and
+ dried beef, and set out on the last stage of their journey. There had
+ been heavy rains recently, and the mountain paths were almost
+ impassable. There were swift rivers to cross, precipices to climb, and
+ jungles to penetrate. The heat was intense, and the men began to suffer
+ from it. The advance was very slow, and soon the provisions gave out.
+ It began to seem probable that the whole expedition would perish in the
+ mountains. Sam called a council of war, and, at Keene's suggestion,
+ picked out the two most vigorous privates, who went ahead bearing the
+ alleged Baluna letter and another from Gomaldo's renegade friend, who
+ was nominally in command, asking for speedy succor. The two
+ ambassadors were well schooled in what they should say, and were
+ promised a large sum of money if they succeeded.
+
+ For two long days the party waited entirely without food, and they were
+ just beginning to despair, when the two men returned with a dozen
+ carriers sent by Gomaldo bringing an ample supply of bread and meat. He
+ also delivered a letter in which the native general congratulated his
+ friend on his success in leading the reenforcements and in capturing
+ the prisoners, and gave express instructions that the latter should be
+ treated with all consideration. The carriers were commanded by a native
+ lieutenant, who insisted that the prisoners should share equally with
+ the native troops, and saw to it personally that Sam and his friends
+ were served. His kindness cut Sam to the heart. After a few hours'
+ delay the expedition set out again, and on the following day it reached
+ the mountain village where Gomaldo had established himself.
+
+ Gomaldo's body-guard, composed of fifty troops neatly dressed in white
+ uniforms, were drawn up to receive them, and the whole population
+ greeted them with joy. Gomaldo himself stood on the veranda of his
+ house, and, after saluting the expedition, invited the native officers
+ who were to betray him in to dinner. At this moment Keene whispered to
+ Sam and the latter signaled to the native officer, Gomaldo's
+ treacherous friend who was in charge of him, and this man gave an order
+ in a low voice, whereupon the whole expedition discharged their rifles,
+ and half-a-dozen of the body-guard fell to the ground. In the mean time
+ two of the native officers threw their arms round Gomaldo and took him
+ prisoner, and his partizans were seized with a panic. Sam took command
+ of his men, who outnumbered the loyal natives, and in a few minutes he
+ had unchallenged control of the post without losing a single man,
+ killed or wounded. Gomaldo was intensely excited and upbraided Sam
+ bitterly when taken before him, but upon being promised good treatment
+ he became more tractable. Sam gave orders that the villagers should
+ bury the dead, among whom he regretted to see the body of the native
+ lieutenant who had brought him food when they were starving; and then,
+ after a rest of several hours, the expedition set out on the return
+ journey, Gomaldo and his men accompanying it as prisoners.
+
+ The news of the capture preceded the party, and when, after a march of
+ several days, they arrived at Havilla, Sam was received as a conquering
+ hero by the army. Cleary took the first opportunity to grasp his hand.
+
+ "Is it really a great and noble act?" Sam whispered. "I suppose it is,
+ for everybody says so, but somehow it has left a bad taste in my mouth,
+ and I can't bear the sight of that fellow Keene."
+
+ "Never mind," said Cleary. "You won't have to see him long. We're going
+ to Porsslania in a fortnight, you and I, and you'll have a chance to
+ turn the world upside down there."
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XI
+
+ A Dinner Party at Gin-Sin
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+
+ During the past months great events had taken place in the ancient
+ empire of Porsslania. Many years earlier the various churches had sent
+ missionaries to that benighted land to reclaim its inhabitants from
+ barbarism and heathenism. These emissaries were not received with the
+ enthusiastic gratitude which they deserved, and some of the Porsslanese
+ had the impudence to assert that they were a civilized people when
+ their new teachers had been naked savages. They proved their barbarism,
+ however, by indulging in the most unreasonable prejudices against a
+ foreign religion, and when cornered in argument they would say to the
+ missionaries, "How would you like us to convert your people to our
+ religion?" an answer so illogical that it demonstrates either their bad
+ faith or the low development of their intellects. The missionaries of
+ some of the sects, by the help of their governments, gradually obtained
+ a good deal of land and at the same time a certain degree of civil
+ jurisdiction. The foreign governments, wishing to bless the natives
+ with temporal as well as celestial advantages, followed up the
+ missionary pioneers with traders in cheap goods, rum, opium, and
+ fire-arms, and finally endeavored to introduce their own machinery and
+ factory system, which had already at home raised all the laboring
+ classes to affluence, put an end to poverty, and realized the dream of
+ the prophets of old. The Porsslanese resolutely resisted all these
+ benevolent enterprises and doggedly expressed their preference for
+ their ancient customs. In order to overcome this unreasonable
+ opposition and assure the welfare of the people, the various Powers
+ from time to time seized the great ports of the Empire. The fertile
+ diplomacy of the courts found sufficient grounds for this. Most
+ frequently the pretext was an attack upon a missionary or even a case
+ of cold-blooded murder, and it became a proverb among the Porsslanese
+ that it takes a province to bury a missionary. Finally, all the harbors
+ of the Empire were in the hands of foreigners, who used this
+ advantageous position to confer blessings thick and fast upon the
+ reluctant population, who richly deserved, as a punishment, to be left
+ to themselves. At last a revolutionary party sprang up among this
+ deluded people, claiming that their own Government was showing too much
+ favor to foreign religions and foreign machines. The Government did not
+ put down this revolt. Some said that it did not have the power and that
+ the provinces were practically independent of the central authority.
+ Others whispered that the Imperial Court secretly favored the rebels.
+ However this may be, the Fencers, as the rebels were called from their
+ skill with the native sword, succeeded without much difficulty in
+ getting possession of the imperial city and imprisoning the foreign
+ embassies and legations in the enclosure of the Anglian Embassy. The
+ Imperial Court meanwhile fled to a distant city and left the entire
+ control of the situation in the hands of the Fencers. The peril of the
+ legations was extreme. They were cut off completely from the coast,
+ which was many miles distant, and the foreign newspaper correspondents
+ amused themselves by sending detailed accounts of the manner in which
+ they had been tortured and murdered. The principal men among the
+ Porsslanese assured the Powers that the legations were safe, but they
+ were not believed. A great expedition was organized in which all the
+ great Powers took a part. The forts near the sea were stormed and
+ taken. The intermediate city of Gin-Sin was besieged and finally fell,
+ and the forces advanced to the gates of the Capital. Before long they
+ succeeded in taking possession of the great city. The Fencers fled in
+ confusion, and at least two-thirds of the population fled with them,
+ fearing the vengeance of the foreigners. The legations were saved,
+ after one ambassador had been shot by an assassin. The city was divided
+ into districts, each of which was turned over to the safe-keeping of
+ one of the foreign armies, and the object of the expedition had been
+ accomplished. In the mean time many foreign residents, including many
+ missionaries in various parts of the Empire, had been murdered, the
+ inhabitants not recognizing the obvious fact that they and their
+ countrymen were their best friends.
+
+ Affairs had reached this position when orders came to Havilla for
+ Colonel Jinks to proceed to join the army in Porsslania, where he would
+ be placed in command of a regiment. His fidus Achates, Cleary, had also
+ received permission from his journal to accompany him, and the two set
+ sail on a transport which carried details of troops. It is true that
+ these troops could ill be spared from the Cubapines, as the country
+ was still in the hands of the natives with the exception of here and
+ there a strip of the seacoast, and there was much illness among the
+ troops, many being down with fever and worse diseases. But it was
+ necessary for the Government to make as good a showing in Porsslania as
+ the other Powers, and the reenforcements had to go.
+
+ It was on a hot summer day that Sam and Cleary looked over the rail of
+ the transport as they watched the troops come on board. It was a
+ remarkable scene, for a crowd of native women were on the shore,
+ weeping and arguing with the men and preventing them from getting into
+ the boats.
+
+ "Who on earth are they?" asked Sam.
+
+ "It's a pretty mean practical joke," said Cleary. "That regiment has
+ been up in the interior, and they've all had wives up there. They buy
+ them for five dollars apiece. And the Governor of the province there, a
+ friendly native, has sent more than a hundred of the women down here,
+ to get rid of them, I suppose, and now the poor things want to come
+ along with their young men. Some of them have got babies, do you see?"
+
+ After a long and noisy delay the captain of the transport, assisted by
+ the officers of the regiment in question, persuaded the women to stay
+ behind, giving a few coppers to each and making the most reckless and
+ unabashed promises of return. The steamer then weighed anchor and was
+ soon passing the sunken Castalian fleet.
+
+ "The Court at Whoppington has just allowed prize-money to the officers
+ and men for sinking those ships," said Cleary. "They didn't get as much
+ as they wanted, but it's a good round sum."
+
+ "I'm glad they will get some remuneration for their hard work,"
+ said Sam.
+
+ "Do you see that native sloop over there?" said Cleary. "She's a pirate
+ boat we caught down in the archipelago. She had sunk a merchant vessel
+ loaded with opium or something of the kind, very valuable. They'd got
+ her in shallow water and had killed some of the crew, and the rest
+ swam ashore, and they were dividing up the swag when they were caught.
+ They would have had I don't know how many dollars apiece. They were
+ all hanged."
+
+ "Serves them right," said Sam. "We must put down piracy. Good-by,
+ Havilla," he added, waving his hat toward the capital. "It makes me
+ feel happy to think that I have actually ended the war by capturing
+ Gomaldo."
+
+ "Not much!" cried Cleary. "Didn't you hear the news this morning? The
+ Cubapinos are twice as active as ever. They're rising everywhere."
+
+ Not many days later, and after an uneventful voyage, the transport
+ sailed into the mouth of the Hai-Po River and came to anchor off the
+ ruins of the Porsslanese forts. Colonel Jinks had orders to proceed at
+ once to Gin-Sin, and he left with Cleary on a river steamer. They were
+ much struck by the utter desolation of the country. There were no signs
+ of life, but here and there the smoking ruins of a town showed where
+ human beings had been. They noticed something floating in the water
+ with a swarm of flies hovering over it.
+
+ "Good heavens! it's a corpse," said Cleary. "It's a native. That's a
+ handsome silk jacket, and it doesn't look like a soldier's either. Look
+ at that vulture. It's sweeping down on it."
+
+ The vulture circled round in the air, coming close to the body, but did
+ not touch it.
+
+ "It has had enough to eat already," said an Anglian passenger who was
+ standing near them. "Did you ever see such a fat bird? You'll see
+ plenty of bodies before long. Do you observe those vultures ahead
+ there? You'll find floating bodies wherever they are."
+
+ "I suppose they are the bodies of soldiers," said Sam.
+
+ "No, indeed, not all of them by any means. These Porsslanese must be
+ stamped out like vipers. I'm thankful to say most of the armies are
+ doing their duty. They don't give any quarter to native soldiers, and
+ they despatch the wounded too. That's the only way to treat them, and
+ they don't feel pain the way we do. In fact, they rather like it. The
+ Tutonians are setting a good example; they shoot their prisoners. I saw
+ them shoot about seventy. They tied them together four by four by their
+ pigtails and then shot them. It's best, tho, to avoid taking prisoners;
+ that's what most of them do."
+
+ "But you say these bodies are not all soldiers," said Cleary.
+
+ "No, of course not. You see the Mosconians kill any natives they
+ please. Then those who are out at night are killed as a matter of
+ course, and those who won't work for the soldiers naturally have to be
+ put out of the way. It's the only way to enforce discipline. Look at
+ these bodies now."
+
+ Corpses were now coming down the river one after another. Each had its
+ attendant swarm of flies, and vultures soared in flocks in the air. The
+ river was yellow with mud, and the air oppressively hot and heavy. Now
+ and then a whiff of putrid air was blown across the deck. The three men
+ watched the bodies drifting past, brainless skulls, eyeless sockets,
+ floating along many of them as if they were swimming on their backs.
+ "It is really a fine example of the power of civilization," said the
+ stranger. "I don't approve of everything that has been done, by any
+ means. Some of the armies have treated women rather badly, but no
+ English-speaking soldiers have done that. In fact, your army has hardly
+ been up to the average in effectiveness. You and the Japs have been
+ culpably lenient, if you will permit me to say so."
+
+ "We are only just starting out on our career as a military nation,"
+ said Sam. "You must not expect too much of us at first. We'll soon get
+ our hand in. As for the Japs, why they're heathen. They can hardly be
+ expected to behave like Christians. But we were afraid that the war was
+ over and that we should find nothing to do."
+
+ "The war over! What an absurdity! I have lived in Porsslania for over
+ thirty years and I ought to know something about it by now. There's an
+ army of at least forty thousand Fencers over there to the northwest
+ and another twenty-five thousand in the northeast. The Tutonians are
+ the only people who understand it. Their first regiments have just
+ arrived, and they are going to do something. They say the Emperor is
+ coming himself, and he will put an end to this state of affairs. He is
+ not a man to stand rebellion. All we can say is that we have made a
+ good beginning. We have laid the whole province waste, and it will be a
+ long time before they forget it."
+
+ The journey was hot and tedious; the desolated shore, the corpses and
+ vultures, and an occasional junk with square-rigged sails and high poop
+ were the only things upon which to fix the eye. When at last our
+ travelers arrived at the city of Gin-Sin, Sam learned that his regiment
+ had proceeded to the Capital and was in camp there, and it would be
+ impossible for him to leave until the following day. He stopped with
+ Cleary at the principal hotel. The city was in a semi-ruined condition,
+ but life was already beginning to assume its ordinary course. The
+ narrow streets, hung with banners and lanterns and cabalistic signs,
+ were full of people. Barbers and scribes were plying their trades in
+ the open air, and war was not always in sight. Sam's reputation had
+ preceded him, and he had scarcely gone to his room when he received an
+ invitation from a leading Anglian merchant to dine with him that
+ evening. Cleary was anxious to go too, and it so happened that he had
+ letters of introduction to the gentleman in question. He made his call
+ at once and was duly invited.
+
+ There were a dozen or more guests at dinner, all of them men. Indeed,
+ there were few white women left at Gin-Sin. With the exception of Sam
+ and Cleary all the guests were Anglians. There was the consul-general,
+ a little man with a gray beard, a tall, bald-headed, gray-mustached
+ major-general in command of the Anglian forces at Gin-Sin, two
+ distinguished missionaries of many years' experience, several junior
+ officers of the army, and a merchant or two. When dinner was announced
+ they all went in, each taking precedence according to his station. Sam
+ knew nothing of such matters, and was loath to advance until his host
+ forced him to. He found a card with his name on it at the second cover
+ on the right from his host. On his right was the card of a young
+ captain. The place on his left and immediately on the right of the host
+ bore no card, and the consul-general and the major-general both made
+ for it. The former got there first, but the military man, who was twice
+ his size, came into violent collision with him, pushed him away and
+ captured the seat, while the consul-general was obliged to retreat and
+ take the seat on the left of his host. The whole party pretended very
+ hard to have noticed nothing unusual.
+
+ "Rather odd performance, eh?" whispered the captain to Sam. "You see
+ how it is. Old Folsom says he takes precedence because he represents
+ the Crown, but the general says that's all rot, for the consul's only a
+ commercial agent and a K.C.Q.X. Now the general is a G.C.Q.X., and he
+ says that gives him precedence. Nobody can settle it, and so they have
+ to fight it out every time they meet."
+
+ "I see," said Sam. "I don't know anything about such things, but I
+ should think that the general was clearly in the right. He could hardly
+ afford to let the army be overridden."
+
+ "Quite so," said the captain. "I don't suppose you know these people,"
+ he added.
+
+ "Not one of them, except my friend, Mr. Cleary. We only arrived
+ to-day."
+
+ "The general is a good deal of a fellow," said the captain. "I was with
+ him in Egypt and afterward in South Africa."
+
+ "Were you, indeed?" cried Sam. "Do tell me all about those wars. They
+ were such great affairs."
+
+ "Yes, they were. Not much like this business here. Nothing could stop
+ us in the Sudan, and when we dug up the Mahdi and threw his body away
+ there was nothing left of the rebellion. I believe the best way to
+ settle things here would be to dig up somebody--Confusus, for instance.
+ If there's anything of that kind to be done our army could do it in
+ style."
+
+ "It must be a very effective means of subjugating people," said Sam.
+
+ "Yes, and would you believe it? the natives objected to it. They asked
+ us what we would think of it if they dug up our Queen. Just think of
+ it! The impudent niggers! As if there was any similarity in the two
+ cases."
+
+ "Outrageous," said Sam.
+
+ "And even at home and in Parliament, when our general was sitting in
+ the gallery hearing them discuss how much money they would give him,
+ some of the members protested against our digging the old fraud up. It
+ was a handsome thing for the general to go there and face them down."
+
+ "It showed great tact, and I may say--delicacy," said Sam.
+
+ "Yes, indeed," said the captain. "That's his strong point."
+
+ "But I suppose that the war in South Africa was even greater," said
+ Sam.
+
+ "Rather. Why we captured four thousand of those Boers with only forty
+ thousand men. No wonder all Anglia went wild over it. Lord Bobbets went
+ home and they gave him everything they could think of in the way of
+ honors. It was a fitting tribute."
+
+ "The war is quite over there now, isn't it?" asked Sam.
+
+ "Yes," answered the captain, somewhat drily. "And so is yours in the
+ Cubapines, I understand."
+
+ "Yes," said Sam. "I think the Cubapine war and the South African war
+ are about equally over."
+
+ "Do you see that lieutenant there between your friend and the parson?"
+
+ "Yes."
+
+ "He got the Victorious Cross in South Africa. He saved a sergeant's
+ life under fire. You see his cross?"
+
+ "How interesting!" said Sam. "He must be a hero."
+
+ "That chap with the mustache at the bottom of the table really did more
+ once. He saved three men from drowning in a shipwreck in the Yellow
+ Sea. He's got a medal for it."
+
+ [Illustration: WINNERS OF THE CROSS
+ "HE GOT THE VICTORIOUS CROSS IN SOUTH AFRICA"]
+
+ "Why doesn't he wear it, too?" asked Sam.
+
+ "Civilians never do," said the captain. "It would look rather odd,
+ wouldn't it, for him to wear a life-saving medal? You may be sure he
+ keeps it locked up somewhere and never talks about it."
+
+ "It is strange that civilians should be so far behind military men in
+ using their opportunities," said Sam.
+
+ "That old fellow with the long beard is Cope, the inventor of the Cope
+ gun. He's a wonder. He was out here in the employ of the Porsslanese
+ Government. Most of their artillery was designed by him. What a useful
+ man he has been to his country! First he invented a projectile that
+ could go through any steel plate then known, and all the navies had to
+ build new steel-clad ships on a new principle that he had invented to
+ prevent his projectiles from piercing them. Then what does he do, but
+ invent a new projectile that could go through that, and they had to
+ order new guns for it and build new ships to withstand it. He's done
+ that four times. And he's got a rifle now that will penetrate almost
+ anything. If you put two hundred Porsslanese of the same height in a
+ row it would go through all their heads at five hundred yards. I hope
+ they'll try the experiment before this affair is over."
+
+ The major-general had by this time exhausted all possible subjects of
+ conversation with his host and sat silent, and Sam felt obliged to turn
+ his attention to him, and was soon engaged in relating his experience
+ in the Cubapines. Meanwhile Cleary had been conversing with the brave
+ young lieutenant at his side and the reverend gentlemen beyond him.
+ They had been discussing the slaughter of the Porsslanese, the
+ lieutenant sitting back from the table while his neighbors talked
+ across him.
+
+ "I confess," said the Rev. Mr. Parker, "that I am not quite satisfied
+ with our position here. This wholesale killing of non-combatants is
+ revolting to me. Surely it can not be Christian."
+
+ "I have had some doubts about it too," said the young man. "I don't
+ mind hitting a man that hits back. I didn't object to the pig-sticking
+ in South Africa, and I believe that man-hunting is the best of all
+ sports; but this killing of people who don't resist, and even smile in
+ a sickly way while you do it and almost thank you--it really does go
+ against me."
+
+ "Yes," said Cleary, "perhaps there is something in that."
+
+ "Oh, my dear young friend!" cried the clergyman, turning toward the
+ lieutenant, "you don't know what joy it gives me to hear you say that.
+ I have spoken in this way again and again, and you are the first man I
+ have met who agrees with me. Won't you let your fellow officers know
+ what you think? It will come with so much more force from a military
+ man, and one of your standing as a V.C. Won't you now tell this company
+ that you think we are going too far?"
+
+ "Really, Doctor," said the young man, blushing, "really, I think you
+ exaggerate my importance. It wouldn't do any good. Perhaps I have said
+ a little more to you than I really meant. This champagne has gone to my
+ head a little."
+
+ "Just repeat what you said to us. I will get the attention of the
+ table."
+
+ "No, Doctor, for God's sake don't!" cried the lieutenant, laying his
+ right hand on the missionary's arm while he toyed with his cross with
+ the other. "To tell you the truth, I haven't the courage to say it.
+ They would think I was crazy. I would be put in Coventry. I have no
+ business to make suggestions when a general's present."
+
+ Mr. Parker sighed and did not return to the subject.
+
+ After dinner Sam was introduced to Canon Gleed, another missionary, who
+ seemed to be on very good terms with himself, and stood rubbing his
+ hands with a benignant smile.
+
+ "These are great days, Colonel Jinks," he said. "Great days, indeed,
+ for foreign missions. What would St. John have said on the island of
+ Patmos if he could have cabled for half-a-dozen armies and
+ half-a-dozen fleets, and got them too? He would have made short work of
+ his jailers. As he looks down upon us to-night, how his soul must
+ rejoice! The Master told us to go into all nations, and we are going to
+ go if it takes a million troops to send us and keep us there. You are
+ going on to the Capital to-morrow? You will meet a true saint of the
+ Lord there, your own fellow countryman, the Rev. Dr. Amen. He is a true
+ member of the Church Militant. Give him my regards when you see him."
+
+ "I see there is another clergyman here," said Sam, looking at Mr.
+ Parker.
+
+ "Yes, and I must say I am surprised to see him. Let me warn you,
+ Colonel. He is, I fear, altogether heterodox. I don't know what kind of
+ Christianity he teaches, but he has actually kept on good terms with
+ the Porsslanese near his mission throughout all these events. He is
+ disloyal to our flag, there can be no question of it, and he openly
+ criticizes the actions of our governments. He should not be received in
+ society. He ought to be sent home--but, hist! some one is going to
+ sing."
+
+ It was the young lieutenant who had seated himself at the piano and was
+ clearing his throat as he ran his hands over the keys. Then he began to
+ sing in a rather feeble voice:
+
+ "Let the Frenchy sip his cognac in his caffy,
+ Let the Cossack gulp his kvass and usquebaugh;
+ Let the Prussian grenadier
+ Swill his dinkle-doonkle beer,
+ And the Yankee suck his cocktail through a straw,
+ Through a straw,
+ And the Yankee suck his cocktail through a straw.
+
+ "Let the Ghoorka drink his pugaree and pukka,
+ Let the Hollander imbibe old schnapps galore.
+ Tommy Atkins is the chap
+ Who has broached a better tap,
+ For he takes his 'arf-and-'arf in blood and gore.
+ Blood and gore,
+ For he takes his 'arf-and-'arf in blood and gore.
+
+ "When at 'ome he may content himself with whisky,
+ But if once he lands upon a foreign shore--
+ On the Nile or Irrawady--
+ He forgets his native toddy,
+ And he takes his 'arf-and-'arf in blood and gore.
+ Blood and gore,
+ And he takes his 'arf-and-'arf in blood and gore.
+
+ "He's a connoisseur of every foreign vintage,
+ From the claret of the fat and juicy Boer
+ To the thicker nigger brand
+ That he spills upon the sand,
+ When he draws his 'arf-and-'arf in blood and gore.
+ Blood and gore,
+ When he draws his 'arf-and-'arf in blood and gore."
+
+ "Fine, isn't it!" exclaimed Sam's neighbor, the captain, who was
+ standing by him, as they all joined in hearty applause. "I tell you
+ Bludyard Stripling ought to be our poet laureate. He's the laureate of
+ the Empire, at any rate. Why, a song like that binds a nation together.
+ You haven't any poet like that, have you?"
+
+ "No-o," answered Sam, thinking in shame of Shortfellow, Slowell, and
+ Pittier. "I'm afraid all our poets are old women and don't understand
+ us soldiers."
+
+ "Stripling understands everything," said the captain. "He never makes a
+ mistake. He is a universal genius."
+
+ "I don't think we ever drink cocktails with a straw," ventured Sam.
+
+ "Oh, yes, you must. He never makes a mistake. You may be sure that,
+ before he wrote that, he drank each one of those drinks, one after
+ another."
+
+ "Quite likely," whispered Cleary to Sam, as he came up on the other
+ side.
+
+ "I wish I could hear it sung in Lunnon," said the captain. "A chorus of
+ duchesses are singing it at one of the biggest music-halls every
+ evening, and then they pass round their coronets, lined with velvet,
+ you know, and take up a collection of I don't know how many thousand
+ pounds for the wounded in South Africa. It stirs my blood every time I
+ hear it sung."
+
+ The party broke up at a late hour, and Sam and Cleary walked back
+ together to the hotel.
+
+ "Interesting, wasn't it?" said Cleary.
+
+ "Yes," said Sam.
+
+ "Canon is a good title for that parson, isn't it? He's a fighter. They
+ ought to promote him. 'Bombshell Gleed' would sound better than 'Canon
+ Gleed,'" said Cleary.
+
+ "'M," said Sam.
+
+ "And that old general looked rather queer in that red and gilt
+ bob-tailed Eton jacket," said Cleary.
+
+ "Yes, rather."
+
+ "Convenient for spanking, I suppose."
+
+ "The captain next to me told me a lot about Bobbets," said Sam. "Wasn't
+ he nearly kidnaped in South Africa?"
+
+ "Yes; that comes of sending generals away from home who only weigh
+ ninety-five pounds. We hadn't any such trouble with Laughter. They'd
+ have had to kidnap him with a derrick."
+
+ "I never thought of that," said Sam. "Perhaps that's the real reason
+ they selected him. I shouldn't wonder."
+
+ "Of course it was," responded Cleary.
+
+ "What sort of a chap was the one with the V.C. next to you?" asked Sam.
+
+ "A fine fellow," said Cleary. "But it does seem queer, when you think
+ of it, to wear a cross like that, that says 'I'm a hero,' just as plain
+ as the beggar's placard says, 'I am blind.'"
+
+ "I don't see why," said Sam.
+
+ "On the whole I think that a placard would be better," said Cleary.
+ "Everybody would be sure to understand it. 'I performed such and such
+ an heroic action on such and such a day, signed John Smith.' Print it
+ in big letters and then stand around graciously so that people could
+ read it through when they wanted to. I'll get the idea patented when I
+ get home."
+
+ "It's a pity we don't give more attention to decorations at home," said
+ Sam. "But I don't quite like the placard idea."
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XII
+
+ The Great White Temple
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+
+ On the following morning the two friends started on their journey up
+ the river toward the Imperial City. They went on a barge filled with
+ soldiers, some of them their own troops who had arrived earlier the
+ same morning. The barge was drawn by ropes pulled by natives, who
+ walked and ran along the banks of the river. It was a day of
+ ever-increasing horrors. All the desolation which they had remarked the
+ day previous was reproduced and accentuated, and as they were so much
+ nearer to the bank, and occasionally took walks on shore, they saw it
+ all more clearly. Sam was much interested in the foreign troops. Their
+ uniforms looked strange and uncouth.
+
+ "What funny pill-boxes those are that those Anglian soldiers have stuck
+ to the side of their heads," he said, pointing to two men at Gin-Sin
+ before they set sail.
+
+ "Yes," answered Cleary. "They'll put on their helmets when the sun gets
+ higher. They do look queer, tho. Perhaps they think our fellows look
+ queer too."
+
+ "I never thought of that," said Sam. "Perhaps they do," and he looked
+ at his fellow-countrymen who were preparing to embark, endeavoring to
+ judge of their appearance as if he had never seen them before. He
+ scrutinized carefully their slouch hats creased in four quarters, their
+ loose, dark-blue jackets, generally unbuttoned, and their easy-going
+ movements.
+
+ "Perhaps they do look queer," he said at last. "I never thought of
+ that."
+
+ The river was more full of corpses than ever, and there were many to be
+ seen on the shore, all of them of natives. Children were playing and
+ bathing in the shallows, oblivious of the dead around them. Dogs
+ prowled about, sleek and contented, and usually sniffing only at the
+ cadavers, for their appetites were already sated. At one place they saw
+ a father and son lying hand in hand where they had been shot while
+ imploring mercy. A dog was quietly eating the leg of the boy. The
+ natives who pulled the boat along with great difficulty under the hot
+ sun were drawn from all classes, some of them coolies accustomed to
+ hard work, others evidently of the leisure classes who could hardly
+ keep up with the rest. Soldiers were acting as task-masters, and they
+ whipped the men who did not pull with sufficient strength. Now and then
+ a man would try to escape by running, but such deserters were
+ invariably brought down by a bullet in the back. More than once one of
+ the men would fall as they waded along, and be swept off by the
+ current. None of them seemed to know how to swim, but no one paid any
+ attention to their fate. Parties were sent out to bring in other
+ natives to take the place of those who gave out. One of the men thus
+ brought in was paralyzed on one side and carried a crutch. The soldiers
+ made sport of him, snatched the crutch from him, and made him pull as
+ best he could with the rest. Sam, Cleary, and an Anglian officer who
+ had served through the whole war took a long walk together back from
+ the river during the halt at noon. They entered a deserted house, with
+ gables and a tiled roof, which by chance had not been burned. The house
+ had been looted, and such of its contents as were too large to carry
+ away were lying broken to bits about the floor. A nasty smell came from
+ an inner room, and they looked in and saw the whole family--father,
+ mother, and three daughters--lying dead in a row on the floor. A
+ bloody knife was in the hand of the man.
+
+ "They probably committed suicide when they saw the soldiers coming,"
+ said the Anglian, whose name was Major Brown. "They often do that, and
+ they do quite right. When they don't, the soldiers, and even the
+ officers sometimes, do what they will with the women and then bayonet
+ them afterward. Our people draw the line at that, and so do yours."
+
+ "We certainly conduct war most humanely," said Sam.
+
+ They heard a groan from another room, and opening the door saw an old
+ woman lying in a pool of blood, quite unconscious.
+
+ "I'll put her out of her misery," said the major, and he drew his
+ revolver and shot her through the head.
+
+ The journey was a very slow one and occupied three days, altho the
+ natives were kept at work as long as they could stand it, on one day
+ actually tugging at the ropes for twenty-one hours. At last, however,
+ the Imperial City was reached, and our two travelers disembarked and,
+ taking a donkey-cart, gave directions to carry them to the quarter
+ assigned to their own army. Here as everywhere desolation reigned. A
+ string of laden camels showed, however, that trade was beginning to
+ reassert itself. They drove past miles of burned houses, through the
+ massive city walls and beyond, until they saw the welcome signs of a
+ camp over which Old Gory waved supreme. Sam was received with much
+ cordiality by the commandant, General Taffy, and assigned to the
+ command of the 27th Volunteer Infantry. The general was a man well
+ known throughout the army for his courage and ability, but
+ notwithstanding this Sam took a strong prejudice against him, for he
+ seemed to be half-hearted in his work and to disapprove of the
+ prevailing policy of pacification by fire and sword. Sam ascribed this
+ feebleness to the fact that he had been originally appointed to the
+ army from civil life, and that he had not enjoyed the benefits of an
+ East Point education.
+
+ As soon as Sam was installed in his new quarters, in the colonel's
+ tent of his regiment, he started out with Cleary to see the great city
+ and examine the scene of the late siege. They found the Jap quarter the
+ most populous. The inhabitants who had fled had returned, and the
+ streets were taking on their normal aspect. Near the boundary of this
+ district they saw a house with a placard in the Jap language, and asked
+ an Anglian soldier who was passing what it meant.
+
+ "That's one of the Jap placards to show that the natives who live there
+ are good people who have given no offense," said he.
+
+ "Let's go in and pay them a call," said Cleary.
+
+ They entered, and passing into a back room found a woman nursing a man
+ who had evidently been recently shot in the side. She shrank from them
+ with terror as they entered, and made no answer to their request for
+ information. As they passed out they met a young native coming in, and
+ they asked him what it meant.
+
+ "Some Frank soldiers shot him because he could not give them money. It
+ had all been stolen already," said the lad in pigeon English.
+
+ "But the placard says they are loyal people," said Cleary.
+
+ "What difference does that make to them?" was the reply.
+
+ Farther on in a lonely part of the town they heard cries issuing from
+ the upper window of a house. They were the cries of women, mingled with
+ oaths of men in the Frank language. Suddenly two women jumped out of
+ the window, one after the other, and fell in a bruised mass in the
+ street. Sam and Cleary approached them and saw that they had received a
+ mortal hurt. They were ladies, handsomely dressed. The first impulse of
+ Sam and Cleary was to take charge of them, but seeing two natives
+ approach, they called their attention to the case and walked away.
+
+ "I suppose it's best not to get mixed up with the affairs of the other
+ armies," said Sam.
+
+ The quarter assigned to the Tutonians they were surprised to find quite
+ deserted by the inhabitants.
+
+ "I tell you, those Tutonians know their business," said Sam. "They
+ won't stand any fooling. Just see how they have established peace! We
+ have a lot to learn from them."
+
+ They saw a crowd collected in one place.
+
+ "What is it?" asked Sam of a soldier.
+
+ "They're going to shoot thirty of these damned coolies for jostling
+ soldiers in the street," he answered.
+
+ Sam regretted that they had no time to wait and see the execution.
+
+ As they reentered their own quarter they saw a number of carts loaded
+ down with all sorts of valuable household effects driven along. They
+ asked one of the native drivers what they were doing, and he replied in
+ pigeon English that they were collecting loot for the Rev. Dr. Amen.
+ Farther on some of their own soldiers were conducting an auction of
+ handsome vases and carved ornaments. Sam watched the sale for a few
+ minutes, and bought in one or two beautiful objects for a song for
+ Marian.
+
+ "Where did they get all this stuff?" he asked of a lieutenant.
+
+ "Oh, anywhere. Some of it from the houses of foreign residents even.
+ But we don't understand the game as well as old Amen. He's a corker.
+ He's grabbed the house of one of his old native enemies here, an
+ awfully rich chap, and sold him out, and now he's got his converts
+ cleaning out a whole ward. He's collected a big fine for every convert
+ killed and so much extra for every dollar stolen, and he's going to use
+ it all for the propagation of the Gospel. He's as good as a Tutonian,
+ he is."
+
+ "I'm glad we have such a man to represent our faith," said Sam.
+
+ "He's pretty hard on General Taffy, tho," said the lieutenant. "He says
+ we ought to have the Tutonian mailed fist. Taffy is much too soft, he
+ thinks."
+
+ Sam bit his lips. He could not criticize his superior officer before a
+ subaltern, but he was tempted to.
+
+ On reaching headquarters Sam found that he was to take charge of a
+ punitive expedition in the North, whose chief object was to be the
+ destruction of native temples, for the purpose of giving the
+ inhabitants a lesson. He was to have command of his own regiment, two
+ companies of cavalry, and a field-battery. They were to set out in two
+ days. He spent the intermediate time in completing the preparations,
+ which had been well under way before his arrival, and in studying the
+ map. No one knew how much opposition he might expect.
+
+ It was early in the morning on a hot summer day that the expedition
+ left the Capital. Sam was mounted on a fine bay stallion, and felt that
+ he was entirely in his element.
+
+ "What camp is that over there on the left?" he asked his orderly.
+
+ "That's the Anglian camp, sir."
+
+ "Are you sure. I can't see their colors. They must have moved their
+ camp."
+
+ "Yes, sir, I'm sure. I passed near there last night and I saw
+ half-a-dozen of the men blacking their officers' boots and singing,
+ 'Britons, Britons, never will be slaves!' It must be a tough job too,
+ sir, for everybody's boots are covered with blood. The gutters are
+ running with it."
+
+ "I wish we had them with us to-day," said Sam. "They have done such a
+ lot of burning in South Africa that they could show us the best way."
+
+ "Yes, sir. But then temple-burning is finer work than burning
+ farmhouses, sir."
+
+ "That is true," said Sam.
+
+ Before night they had visited three deserted towns and burned down the
+ temple in each with its accompanying pagoda. There is something in the
+ hearts of men that responds to great conflagrations, and the whole
+ force soon got into the spirit of it and burned everything they came
+ across. Sam enjoyed himself to the full. His only regret was that there
+ was no enemy to overcome. They camped out at night and continued the
+ same work for several days, all the natives fleeing as soon as they
+ came in sight. At last they reached the famous white temple of Pu-Sing,
+ which was the chief object of religious devotion in the whole
+ province. This was to be absolutely destroyed, notwithstanding its
+ great artistic beauty, and then they were to return to the city in
+ triumph. As they drew near to the building two or three shots were
+ fired from it, and one soldier was wounded in the arm. The usual
+ cursing began, and the men were restive to get at the Porsslanese
+ garrison. Sam ordered the infantry to fire a volley, and then, as the
+ return fire was feeble, he ordered the squadron of cavalry to charge,
+ leading it himself. The natives turned and fled as soon as they saw
+ them coming, and the cavalry, skirting the enclosure of the temple,
+ followed them beyond and cut them down without mercy.
+
+ "Give them hell!" cried Sam. "Exterminate the vermin!" and he swore,
+ quite naturally under the circumstances, like a trooper.
+
+ Some of the natives fell on their knees and begged for quarter, but it
+ was of no use. Every one was killed. They numbered about two hundred in
+ all. When the horsemen returned to the temple they found the infantry
+ already at work at the task of looting it. Everything of value that
+ could be carried was taken out, and the larger statues and vases were
+ broken to pieces. Then the woodwork was cut away and piled up for
+ firewood, and finally the whole pile set on fire. In all this work the
+ leader was a sergeant of infantry who seemed to have a natural talent
+ for it. Sam had noticed him before at the burning of the other temples,
+ but now he showed himself more conspicuously capable. As the work of
+ piling inflammable material against the walls of polished marble,
+ inlaid with ivory, was nearing completion, Sam sent for this man so
+ that he might thank and congratulate him. The soldier came up, his
+ hands black with charcoal and his face smudged as well.
+
+ "You've done well, sergeant," said Sam. "I will mention you to the
+ general when we return."
+
+ "Thank you, sir," said the man, and his voice sounded strangely
+ familiar. Sam peered into his face. He had certainly seen it before.
+
+ "What is your name, sergeant?"
+
+ "Thatcher, sir."
+
+ "Why, of course, you're Thatcher--Josh Thatcher of Slowburgh. Don't you
+ remember that night at the hotel when we had a drink together? Don't
+ you remember Captain Jinks?"
+
+ "Yes, sir, but I didn't know you was he--a colonel, too, sir," said the
+ man, as Sam shook his hand warmly.
+
+ "I'm glad to see that you're doing credit to your town," said Sam.
+
+ "They'll be surprised to hear it at home, sir," said Thatcher. "They
+ was always down on me. They never gave me a chance. Here they all
+ speaks to me like you do, sir. Why, Dr. Amen slapped me on the back and
+ called me a fine fellow when I brought him in a big load of stuff. I
+ got it from houses of people I didn't even know, and he said I was a
+ good fellow. At Slowburgh I took a chicken now and then, and only from
+ somebody who'd done me some mean trick, and they said I was a thief.
+ Once or twice I burned a barn there just for fun, and never anybody's
+ barn that wasn't down on me and rich enough to stand it, and they said
+ I was a criminal. And as for women, if they ever seed me with one, they
+ all said I was dissolute and a disgrace to the place, and here I have
+ ten times more of 'em than I want, and everybody says it's all right,
+ and they made me corporal and sergeant, and the generals talked to me
+ like I was somebody, and I swear as much as I like. I never shot
+ anybody at home. I suppose they'd have strung me up if I had, and here
+ I just pepper any pigtail I like. They called me a criminal at
+ Slowburgh, just think of that! I say that criminals are just soldiers
+ who ain't got a job--who ain't had any chance at all, I says. I wasn't
+ ever judged right, I wasn't."
+
+ There were tears in Thatcher's eyes as he ended this speech.
+
+ "You're a fine chap," said Sam. "I'll tell all about you when you get
+ home. This war has been the making of you. How are the other Slowburgh
+ boys?"
+
+ "They're all right, except my cousin Tom. He's down sick with
+ something. He's run about a little too much. He always was a-sparking.
+ He never knowed how to take care of himself. Jim Thomson was wounded
+ once, but he's all right now. We've all had fever, but that's over too.
+ But the fire's spreading, sir; we'd better get out of this."
+
+ As he spoke a heavy charred beam fell just in front of him, and the end
+ of it came down with its full weight on Sam's leg, snapping the bone in
+ two near the ankle. The foot lay at right angles, and the bone
+ protruded. Several soldiers lifted the log and Thatcher drew Sam out,
+ and they bore him in haste out of the building. He was laid on the
+ ground quite unconscious, at some distance from the temple, while the
+ flames roared and leaped toward heaven, wrapping the graceful, lofty
+ nine-story pagoda in their folds. It was in a beautiful garden that he
+ lay, near a pool filled with lotus flowers and at the end of a rustic
+ bridge. The air was heavy with the perfume of lilies. A surgeon was
+ called, and before long he was able to put the foot in place, but only
+ after sawing off a large piece of bone. A cart was obtained, Sam was
+ laid in it, a bottle of whisky was poured down his throat, and the
+ journey to the city began. The patient on coming to himself experienced
+ no pain. The liquor he had taken made him feel supremely happy. He was
+ in an ecstasy of exultation, and would have liked to embrace all
+ mankind. But gradually this feeling wore off and his leg began to pain
+ him, at first slightly, then more and more until it became
+ excruciating. The road was almost impassable, and every jolt caused him
+ agony. For twelve hours he underwent these tortures until he reached
+ the camp in the city, and was at once transferred to a temporary
+ hospital which had been improvised in a public building. Here he lay
+ for many weeks, suffering much, but gradually regaining the use of his
+ leg. He was in charge of a particularly efficient woman doctor from
+ home who had volunteered to serve with the Red Cross Society. Sam felt
+ most grateful to her for her care, but he strongly disapproved of her
+ attitude to things military. She seemed to have a contempt for the
+ whole military establishment, insisted on calling him "young man,"
+ altho he was a colonel, usually addressed lieutenants as "boys," and
+ laughed at uniforms, salutes, and ceremonies of all kinds.
+
+ "Men are the silliest things in the world," she said one day. "Do you
+ suppose women would have a War Department that spent a lot of money on
+ bombshells to blow people up and then a lot more on Red Cross Societies
+ to piece them together again? Why, we would just leave the soldiers at
+ home, and save all the money, and it would be just the same in the
+ end."
+
+ "Not the kind of women I know," said Sam, thinking of Marian.
+
+ "I mean my kind of woman," said the doctor. "Do you think we'd sell
+ guns and rifles to the Porsslanese and teach them how to use them, and
+ then go to work and fight them after having armed them?" And she
+ laughed a merry laugh.
+
+ "And do you think we'd pay men to invent all sorts of infernal machines
+ like the Barnes torpedo, and then have our big ships blown up by them
+ in time of peace. That is what brought on the whole Castalian and
+ Cubapine war. The idea of praising a man like Barnes! He's been a curse
+ to the world."
+
+ "It was really a blessing," said Sam. "It has spread civilization and
+ Christianity all over."
+
+ "Well, that's one way of doing it," said she. "But when there are more
+ women like me we'll take things out of the hands of you silly men and
+ run them ourselves. Now, young man, you've talked enough. Turn over and
+ go to sleep."
+
+ Cleary called on his friend almost every day and kept him informed. He
+ sent home glowing accounts of Sam as the conqueror of the Great White
+ Temple, and described his sufferings for his country with artistic
+ skill. He also began work on the series of articles which Sam was
+ expected to write for _Scribblers' Magazine_. His gossip about the
+ events in the various camps entertained Sam very much, altho he was
+ often irritated as well. In his capacity of correspondent Cleary saw
+ and knew everything.
+
+ "Sam," said he one day, as the invalid was sitting up in an easy-chair
+ at the window--"Sam, it's so long since I was at East Point that I'm
+ becoming more and more of a civilian. You army people begin to amuse
+ me. There's always something funny about you. The Tutonians are the
+ funniest of all. The little red-cheeked officers with their blond
+ mustaches turned up to their eyes are too funny to live. You feel like
+ kissing them and sending them to bed. And the airs they put on! One of
+ their soldiers happened to elbow a lieutenant the other day, and the
+ chap ran him through with his sword, and no one called him to account.
+ The officers jostle and browbeat any civilian who will submit to it,
+ and then try to get him into a duel, but I believe they're a cowardly
+ lot at bottom. No man of real courage would bluster all over the place
+ so."
+
+ "I admire their discipline," said Sam.
+
+ "And then there's the Franks. They're not quite so conceited, but
+ they're awfully touchy. I think the mustaches measure conceit. The
+ Tutonians' stick up straight, the Franks' stick right out at each side
+ waxed to a point, and ours droop downward."
+
+ Sam began to twist his mustache upward, but it would not stay.
+
+ "I was in to see a Frank military trial the other day," said Cleary.
+ "It was the most comical thing. There were three big generals on the
+ court. I mean big in rank. They were about four feet high in size, and
+ they kept looking at their mustaches in hand-glasses and combing their
+ hair with pocket-combs. They were trying one of their lieutenants for
+ having sold some secret military plans to a Tutonian attaché. Now the
+ joke of it is that military attachés are appointed just for the purpose
+ of buying secrets, and everybody knows it. They're licensed to do it.
+ And then when they do just what they're licensed for, everybody makes a
+ fuss. Well, the secrets were sold; there wasn't the slightest reason
+ for thinking this lieutenant had sold them, but they had to punish
+ somebody. They say they drew his name from a box. They had three
+ officers to testify against him, and they were the stupidest liars I
+ ever saw. They just blundered from beginning to end, and the president
+ of the court helped them out and told them what to say, and corrected
+ them. The third man said nothing at all except, 'Yes, my general; yes,
+ my general.' Then they called the witnesses for the accused, and two
+ officers stepped forward, when a couple of orderlies grabbed each of
+ them, stuffed a gag into their mouths, and carried them out, while the
+ court looked the other way, and the crowd shouted, 'Long live the
+ army!' The court adjourned on account of the 'contumacy of the
+ witnesses for the defense.' I went in again the next morning, and they
+ announced that both the witnesses had committed suicide. Then the
+ president took a judgment out of his pocket which I had seen him
+ fingering all the first day, and read it off just as it had been
+ written before the trial began, condemning the poor devil to twenty
+ years' imprisonment. I never saw such a farce. Everybody shouted for
+ the army, and the little generals kissed each other and cried, and
+ they had a great time of it. And the president made a speech in which
+ he said that they had saved the army and consequently the country too,
+ and that honor and glory and the fatherland had been redeemed. They've
+ all been promoted and decorated since. They're a queer lot, those Frank
+ officers."
+
+ "We ought not to be too quick in judging foreigners," said Sam. "Their
+ methods may seem strange to us, but we are not competent to criticize
+ them. Let each army judge for itself."
+
+ "As a matter of fact," said Cleary, "every army is down on the others.
+ If you believe what they say about each other they're a pretty bad lot.
+ They all say that the Mosconians are barbarians, and they call the
+ Tutonians thugs. The rest of them call the Franks woman-hunters, and
+ they all call us and the Anglians auctioneers and looters and
+ shopkeepers, and drunkards, and we're known as temple-burners and
+ vandals too."
+
+ "What an outrage!" ejaculated Sam.
+
+ "The Anglians are more like us, but they've got a few old generals and
+ then a lot of small boys, and nothing much between. I should think the
+ generals would feel like school-masters. I told one of their officers
+ that, and he said it was better than having second lieutenants
+ seventy-five years old as we do. We're loving each other a lot just
+ now, the Anglians and us, but one of our naval officers let on to me
+ that they were dying to have a war with them. You see, since South
+ Africa nobody's afraid of them except the Porsslanese, and they don't
+ read the papers. And how the Anglians despise the Franks! Why, we were
+ discussing lying in war at a lunch-party, and one of their generals was
+ there, a rather dense sort of a machine of a man. They had been saying
+ that lying was an essential part of war, and that an officer must be a
+ good liar and able to deceive the enemy well, as well as a good
+ fighter, and the conversation drifted off into the question of lying in
+ general. Somebody asked the general if he would say he was a Tutonian
+ to save his life. 'Of course,' he answered. 'But would you say you
+ were a Frank under the same circumstances?' asked some one else.
+ 'Certainly not,' he said. Everybody roared, but he didn't see any joke,
+ and looked as grave as an owl all the rest of the afternoon. Then the
+ commanders are all so jealous of each other. They are spying on each
+ other and putting sticks in each other's wheels. Officers are queer
+ people. There's only one profession that can compete with them for
+ feline amenities, and that is the actress profession."
+
+ "Cleary," said Sam, "I let you talk this way for old acquaintance's
+ sake, but I wouldn't take it from any one else."
+
+ "Fiddlesticks! You know I'm right. The Anglian officers like to hint at
+ the frauds in our quartermaster's department at Havilla, but I shut
+ them up by asking how much their officers made off the horses they
+ bought for South Africa in Hungary. Then they shut up like a
+ clasp-knife. Officers talk a lot about their 'brother officers,' and
+ you'd think they loved each other a lot, but I find they're all glad
+ so many were killed in South Africa because it gives them a lot of
+ promotion. I tell you the officers of all the armies like to have a
+ good list of dead officers after each battle, if they are only their
+ superiors in rank. I've been picking up all I can among the different
+ soldiers, and learning a lot. I was just talking to a lot of Anglian
+ soldiers now. They were sharpening sabers and bayonets on grindstones.
+ One of the older ones was telling me how they used to flog in the army.
+ They had a regular parade, and the drummers used to lay on the lash,
+ while a doctor watched so that they shouldn't go too far. Sometimes the
+ young subalterns who were in command would faint away at the sight.
+
+ "'But it was so manly, sir,' the fellow said to me. 'The army isn't
+ what it was. But the other armies keep it up still, and we still birch
+ youngsters in the navy so we needn't despair of the world.'"
+
+ "When will the campaign be over?" asked Sam.
+
+ "There's no telling. All the armies are afraid to leave, for fear the
+ ones that are left will get some advantage from the Porsslanese
+ Government. They're a high old lot of allies. It's a queer business.
+ But the missionaries are as queer as any of them. You ought to have
+ heard old Amen last Sunday. How he whooped things up! He took his text
+ from the Gospel of St. Loot, I think! He was trying to stir up Taffy to
+ be more severe. Amen ought to be a soldier. Our minister
+ plenipotentiary isn't a backward chap either. I went through the
+ Imperial palace with him and his party the other day, and they pretty
+ nearly cleaned it out, just for souvenirs, you know. He didn't take
+ anything himself, as far as I could see; but his women, bless my soul,
+ they filled their pockets with jade and ivory and what-not. There were
+ some foreign looters in there at the same time, great swells too, and
+ they just smashed the plate-glass over the cabinets and filled their
+ pockets and their arms too. One old Porsslanese official was standing
+ there, a high mandarin of some sort, and he had an emerald necklace
+ around his neck. Some diplomat or other walked up to him and quietly
+ took it off, and the old man didn't stir, but the tears were rolling
+ down his cheeks."
+
+ "He had no right to complain," said Sam. "We clearly have the right to
+ the contents of a conquered city by the rules of war."
+
+ "Perhaps. But there are some curious war rules. Some of the armies
+ shoot all natives in soldiers' uniforms because they are soldiers, and
+ then they shoot all natives who resist them in civil dress, because
+ they are not soldiers and have no right to fight. I suppose they ought
+ to go about naked. They used to kill their prisoners with the butt-end
+ of their rifles, but that breaks the rifles, and now they generally use
+ the bayonet."
+
+ "Here are some newspapers," said he on another occasion. "You've been
+ made a brigadier for capturing Gomaldo. Isn't that great? But they
+ _will_ call you 'Captain Jinks' at home, no matter what your rank is.
+ The papers say so. The song has made it stick."
+
+ "I'm sorry for that," said Sam. "It would be pleasanter to be called
+ 'General.'"
+
+ "It's all the same," said Cleary. "Wasn't Napoleon called the Little
+ Corporal? It's really more distinguished."
+
+ "Perhaps it is," said Sam contentedly.
+
+ "Some of the papers criticize us a little too," added Cleary. "They say
+ we are acting brutally here and in the Cubapines. Of course only a few
+ say it, but their number is increasing."
+
+ "They make themselves ridiculous," said Sam. "They don't see how
+ ludicrous their suggestions are that we should actually retire and let
+ these countries relapse into barbarism. As that fellow said at Havilla,
+ they have no sense of humor."
+
+ "And yet," retorted Cleary, "our greatest humorists, Mark Swain, Mr.
+ Tooley, and the best cartoonists, and our only really humorous paper,
+ _Knife_, are on that side."
+
+ "But they are only humorists," cried Sam, "mere professional jokers.
+ You can't expect serious sense from them. They are mere buffoons. The
+ serious people here, such as Dr. Amen, are with us to a man."
+
+ "I saw old Amen get caught the other day," said Cleary. "I was
+ interviewing the colonel of the 15th, and in came Amen and began
+ talking about the Porsslanese--what barbarians they were, no religion,
+ no belief, no faith. Why, the idea of self-sacrifice was utterly
+ unknown to them! Just then in came a young officer and said, 'Colonel,
+ the son of that old native we're going to shoot this afternoon for
+ looting, is bothering us and says he wants to be shot instead of his
+ father. What shall we do with him?' Amen said good-day and cleared out.
+ By the way, the colonel of the 15th is in a hole just now. He was shut
+ up in the legations, you know, and all the women there were down on him
+ because he wouldn't make the sentries salute them when the men were
+ dead tired with watching. They are charging him with cowardice.
+ There'll never be an end of this backbiting. It's almost as sickening
+ as the throat-cutting and stabbing. I confess I'm getting sick of it
+ all. When you see a private shoot an old native for not blacking his
+ boots, when the poor fellow was trying to understand him and couldn't,
+ and smiling as best he could, it's rather tough; and I've seen twenty
+ babies if I've seen one lying in the streets with a bayonet hole in
+ them. They have executions every day in one camp or another. I saw one
+ coolie, who had been working fourteen hours at a stretch loading carts,
+ shot down because he hadn't the strength to go on."
+
+ "I'm afraid the heat is telling on you, Cleary," said Sam. "This is all
+ sickly sentimentality. War is war. The trouble with you is that there
+ has been no regular campaign on to occupy your attention. This lying
+ about doing nothing is a bad thing for everybody. Wait till the
+ Tutonian Emperor comes out and we'll have something to do."
+
+ "He won't find any enemy to fight," said Cleary.
+
+ "Trust him for that," replied Sam. "He's every inch a soldier, and
+ he'll find the way to make war, depend upon it. He's a religious man
+ too, and he will back up the missionaries better than we've done."
+
+ "Yes. Amen thinks the world of him. Amen ought to have been a Tutonian
+ soldier. He says the best imagery of religion comes from war. I told
+ him I had an article written about a fight which said that our men
+ 'fought like demons' and 'yelled like fiends,' and I would change it to
+ read that they fought like seraphs and yelled like cherubim, but he
+ didn't think it was funny."
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XIII
+
+ The War-Lord
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+
+ As soon as Sam was well enough to be moved the doctors sent him down to
+ the coast, and Cleary, who had been up and down the river several times
+ in the course of his newspaper work, went with him. Sam still felt
+ feeble, and altho he could walk without a crutch, he now had a decided
+ limp which was sure to be permanent. They arrived at the port a few
+ days before the expected arrival of the Emperor, and the whole place
+ was overflowing with excitement. The Emperor, who had never seen a
+ skirmish, was notwithstanding considered the greatest general of his
+ time, and he was coming now to prove it before the world and
+ incidentally to wreak vengeance upon a people, one of whom had killed
+ his ambassador. The town was profusely decorated, the Tutonian garrison
+ was increased, and Count von Balderdash, the commander-in-chief,
+ himself took command. Six fleets were drawn up in the wide bay to await
+ the coming of the war-lord. It was announced that he would make his
+ entry at night, and that the hour of arrival had been timed for a dark
+ moonless night. This was asserted to be for the better display of
+ fireworks. Finally, one morning the Tutonian fleet of four or five
+ large vessels was sighted in the distance. They steamed slowly up and
+ down in the distance until night fell, and then, as their colored
+ electric lights, outlining the masts and funnels, became distinct in
+ the darkness, they began to approach. Each of the awaiting fleets was
+ distinguished with particular-colored lights, and they had taken their
+ position at a considerable distance from the shore, leaving a passage
+ near the ruined forts for the Emperor. Sam and Cleary found a good
+ lookout on a dismantled bastion, and saw the whole parade. As the
+ leading vessel came near the first fleet the latter saluted with its
+ guns. Suddenly the lights on the advancing ship were extinguished, and
+ a strong flash-light was throw from above upon the forward deck. There
+ in bold relief stood a single figure, brilliantly illuminated by the
+ light. Cleary and Sam turned their field-glasses upon it.
+
+ "By Jove! it's the Emperor," cried Cleary. "He's got on his admiral's
+ uniform, and now he's passing his own fleet that Balderdash brought
+ with him."
+
+ They looked at the striking scene for some minutes, and the crowds on
+ the wharves and shores murmured with surprise.
+
+ "Bless my soul! he has disappeared," said Cleary again.
+
+ Sure enough, he had suddenly passed out of sight, and as suddenly the
+ flash-light went out and the lights on the masts reappeared. In another
+ moment these lights were extinguished, and the flash-light revealed a
+ form standing in the same place in a theatrical attitude with raised
+ sword and uplifted face.
+
+ "I believe it's he again," said Cleary. "He must have a trap-door. He's
+ got on another uniform. I think it's a Frank admiral's uniform. There
+ go the Frank guns. He's passing their fleet."
+
+ "Yes, it is a Frank naval uniform," said a foreign officer near them,
+ as he scrutinized the deck with his glasses.
+
+ Before each of the fleets the same maneuvre was carried out. As their
+ guns fired, the Emperor would disappear for a few moments, and in an
+ incalculably short time he would appear again in the uniform of an
+ admiral of the fleet in question. When he had passed the last fleet he
+ disappeared once more, and came back to sight clad in the white and
+ silver armor of a general officer of his own army, with helmet and
+ plume. The flash-light now changed colors through the whole gamut of
+ the rainbow, and the Emperor knelt in the attitude of Columbus
+ discovering America.
+
+ Sam was immensely impressed.
+
+ "Oh, Cleary!" he said, "if we only had an Emperor."
+
+ "The President is doing his best," said Cleary. "Don't blame him."
+
+ "Oh, but what can he do? Why haven't we some one like that to embody
+ the ideal of the State, to picture us to ourselves, to realize our
+ aspirations?"
+
+ As he said this a strange noise arose from the crowd near the
+ landing-stage where the Emperor was about to alight. The far greater
+ part of this crowd was composed of natives, and they had been entirely
+ taken aback by the exhibition. They were just beginning to understand
+ it, and as the war-lord moved about the deck followed by the glare of
+ the flash-light, and again struck an attitude before descending into
+ the gig which was to take him ashore, some one of the Porsslanese in
+ the crowd laughed. His neighbor laughed too, then another and then
+ another, until the whole native multitude was laughing. The laugh
+ rippled along the shore through the long stretch of natives collected
+ there like the swells from a passing steamer. It seemed to extend back
+ from the shore through the whole town, and, tho it was undoubtedly
+ fancy, Sam thought he heard it spreading, like the rings from a stone
+ thrown into the water, over the entire land. The foreigners stood
+ aghast. The Porsslanese are not a laughing people. They had never been
+ known to laugh before except in the most feeble manner. The events of
+ the past year had not been especially humorous, and the coming of the
+ great war-lord was far from being a laughing matter. Yet with the
+ perversity of heathen they had selected this impressive occasion for
+ showing their incurable barbarism and bad taste. Sam fairly shuddered.
+
+ "It's a sacrilege," he cried. "I believe that nothing short of
+ extermination will reclaim this unhappy land. They are calling down the
+ vengeance of heaven upon them."
+
+ They walked back to town with the foreign officer.
+
+ "He's a wonderful man, the Emperor," said he, in indifferent English.
+ "How quickly he changed his clothes, and what a compliment it was!"
+
+ "A sort of lightning-change artist," said Cleary. "He could make his
+ fortune at a continuous performance."
+
+ In the dark Sam blushed for his friend, but fortunately their companion
+ did not understand the allusion.
+
+ "You should have seen him when he visited our Queen," he said. "She
+ came to meet him in the uniform of a Tutonian hussar, breeches and all.
+ You can imagine how he was touched by it. That very afternoon he called
+ upon her dressed in the costume of one of our royal princesses with a
+ long satin train. It made him wonderfully popular. Our Queen responded
+ at once by making his infant daughters colonels of several of our
+ regiments. One of them is colonel of mine," he added proudly.
+
+ "What would you do if you went to war with Tutonia, and one of the kids
+ should order you to shoot on your own army?" asked Cleary. "It might be
+ embarrassing."
+
+ But the foreigner did not understand this either.
+
+ "And to think that these Porsslanese dogs have received him with
+ laughter!" said he.
+
+ At eleven o'clock on the same evening the Emperor was closeted with his
+ aged field-marshal, von Balderdash, in a handsomely furnished
+ sitting-room. A Turk's head had been set up in the middle of the room,
+ and His Majesty, dressed in the uniform of a cavalry general, was
+ engaged in making passes at it with a saber. He had already taken a
+ ride on horseback with his staff. The field-marshal stood wearily
+ leaning against the wall at the side of a desk piled up with papers.
+
+ "We have avenged the death of our ambassador," Balderdash was saying.
+ "We have sent out five punitive expeditions in all. Our quarter of the
+ imperial city shows the power of arms more completely than any other.
+ We have set the highest standard, and our army is the admiration of
+ all."
+
+ The count watched the face of his master as he spoke, but there was no
+ sign of satisfaction in it. The Emperor was out of humor.
+
+ "We have not done enough," he said. "If we had, those pagans would not
+ have ventured to laugh--yes, actually to laugh--in our imperial
+ presence. Balderdash, you have not done your duty. I shall take command
+ myself at once. We must have a real punitive expedition, and not one of
+ your imitations. If they want war, let them have it."
+
+ "We can not have war, Your Majesty, without an enemy, and we can find
+ no enemy. All their armed men are killed or have fled, and the rest of
+ the population run away from us as soon as we appear."
+
+ "Count," said the Emperor sternly, "do you remember your oath to our
+ person? Do you know your duties as a field-marshal?"
+
+ "I think so, Your Majesty."
+
+ "Is it not your duty to provide every requisite for war at my command?"
+
+ "Yes, Your Majesty."
+
+ "Then I depend upon you to provide an enemy. What military requisite is
+ more important? Remember the fate of Fismark, and do your duty. We
+ must have a war. That is what I have come here for, and I do not
+ propose to be disappointed. We must have a punitive expedition at once.
+ What are my engagements for to-morrow?"
+
+ "Your Majesty's mustache artist is coming at 5:30," replied the count,
+ looking at a memorandum. "Breakfast at 6--inspection of infantry at
+ 6:30--naval maneuvres at 8--reception of our officers at
+ 10:30--reception of foreign officers at 11:30--reception of civilians
+ at 12--luncheon at 12:30--photographer from 1 to 3. We have made no
+ appointments after 3, Your Majesty."
+
+ "Then put down the punitive expedition for 3:15," said the war lord,
+ twisting his mustache in front of his eyes. "I propose to have this
+ whole nation kow-tow before me in unison before I leave their miserable
+ land. Take the necessary measures at once for the ceremony. Now I am
+ going to call out the whole garrison and see if they are kept in
+ readiness. You may go, and send me an aide-de-camp. You understand
+ that you must find me an enemy on whom I can wreak vengeance for all
+ these wrongs."
+
+ "I understand, Your Majesty," said the count, bending low before him.
+ "I accept this Gospel of Your Majesty's most blessed Person," and he
+ took his leave.
+
+ The expedition did not start promptly at 3:15, for unexpected
+ complications arose. The other powers wanted to send out punitive
+ expeditions too, and they sought to have it established that the
+ Porsslanese laugh was directed against all the fleets as well as
+ against the Emperor. A judicious distribution of decorations persuaded
+ all the armies to drop this pretension except the Anglian, and it was
+ finally arranged that the Tutonian and Anglian armies should cooperate
+ and take the field together under the Emperor's immediate command. A
+ week had elapsed before this force was prepared, but it finally started
+ out, General Fawlorn commanding the Anglian contingent.
+
+ Sam, who was still only convalescent and who had been assigned some
+ duties connected with forwarding despatches which left him a great deal
+ of leisure, looked with envious eyes upon the departing host. He had
+ never seen anything like the magnificence of the uniforms of the
+ Emperor's staff. He envied them their gilt and stars, and he envied
+ them the prospect of winning the great battles which Balderdash had
+ promised them. They marched at once upon a fortified town in which a
+ large force of Fencers were reported to be established. They besieged
+ it for six days according to all the rules of the Tutonian manual, and
+ finally entered it with great precautions, and found it absolutely
+ empty. At one village a regiment of Anglian Asiatics cut to pieces a
+ hundred natives who were alleged to be Fencers, but it transpired
+ afterward that none of them were armed. Balderdash was frightened half
+ to death, expecting his imperial master to protest against the lack of
+ opposition, but, strange to say, he took it very well and delivered
+ orations on all occasions extolling the prowess of his troops in
+ putting to flight the hordes of a vast empire. This campaign lasted a
+ month, and the expedition finally returned to the port and was received
+ with all the marks of glory that Tutonian officialism could command.
+ The Emperor at once cabled to several kings and all his relations that
+ Providence had graciously preserved him in the midst of great dangers
+ and brought his enterprise to a successful termination.
+
+ "They may be great soldiers," said Cleary one day to Sam, "but they
+ don't understand the newspaper business. The Emperor has a natural
+ talent for advertising, but it hasn't been properly cultivated. They
+ oughtn't to have let it leak out that there wasn't even a battle. Why,
+ Taffy says he could go from one end of the Empire to the other with a
+ squadron of cavalry! As for me, I shouldn't mind trying it without the
+ cavalry. When they did kill any people, it was like killing pheasants
+ at one of his famous battues. I wonder he wasn't photographed in the
+ middle of a pile of them, the way he is when he goes shooting at home.
+ Perhaps he'll get up some sport here in a big hen-coop. I'll suggest
+ it to Balderdash."
+
+ Sam refused to think ill of the great war-lord, and embraced every
+ opportunity to see him. He had been formally presented to him at a
+ reception of officers, but there was a crowd present, and Sam did not
+ expect him to recognize him again. On one occasion Sam happened to be
+ standing in the street when the Emperor, accompanied by some of his
+ officers, came past on foot. Sam stood on one side and saluted. To his
+ surprise the Emperor stopped and beckoned to him. Sam came forward,
+ bowing, blushing, and stammering.
+
+ "I am glad to see an officer of your country here, General," said His
+ Majesty. "May I ask your name? Ah, Jinks! I have heard your name
+ before. What do you think of expansion, General?"
+
+ "I beg Your Majesty's pardon," said Sam, "but I do not think. I obey
+ orders."
+
+ The Emperor gave an exclamation of surprise and delight.
+
+ "Hear that, gentlemen," said he in his own language, turning to his
+ officers. "He does not think; he obeys orders! There is a model for
+ you. There is a motto for you to learn. God has given you an Emperor to
+ think for you. Our friend here, with only a President to fall back on,
+ has perceived the truth that a soldier must not think. He thinks at his
+ peril. General," he added in English, "you have given my army a lesson
+ to-day which they will never forget. It will give me pleasure to
+ decorate you with the Green Cockatoo, third class."
+
+ Sam began to stammer something.
+
+ "Oh, yes, I remember. Your Government does not allow you to receive it.
+ If that restriction is ever removed, let me be informed," and the
+ Emperor passed on, while Sam determined to write to his uncle and have
+ this miserable civilian law changed. It so happened that there was a
+ great dearth of news at this time, and Cleary made the most of this
+ episode. It did almost as much to make General Jinks famous as anything
+ that he had done before, and he was widely advertised at home as the
+ officer who had astounded the Emperor by his wisdom and given a lesson
+ to the finest army in the world.
+
+ [Illustration: THE PERFECT SOLDIER
+ "THE EMPEROR GAVE AN EXCLAMATION OF SURPRISE AND DELIGHT"]
+
+ "Sam, your luck never gives out," said Cleary. "They'll make you a
+ major-general, I expect, now."
+
+ "I should rather like to have the thanks of Congress," answered Sam, as
+ if that were a mere bagatelle. This conversation occurred in a
+ restaurant. A young officer was sitting alone at the next table, and he
+ gave his order to the waiter in a high, penetrating voice.
+
+ "Bless my soul! if that isn't Clark," cried Cleary. "See, he's a second
+ lieutenant still. Let's ask him over to our table."
+
+ "Go ahead," said Sam, "but don't say anything about East Point."
+
+ Cleary invited him over as a fellow countryman, and the three men dined
+ together, never once saying anything to denote that they had met
+ before. Whether Clark noticed that Cleary was rather persistent in
+ offering him the red pepper for every course, it was impossible to
+ determine.
+
+ It was generally supposed that the Emperor had done all that could be
+ done in Porsslania, but those who believed this, knew little of the
+ resources of the first soldier of Christendom. Even Count von
+ Balderdash was ignorant of the card which his master had determined to
+ play in view of all mankind.
+
+ "Balderdash," said he one night, as the poor count sat trying to
+ repress his yawns and longing for bed,--"Balderdash, we have shown the
+ heathen here what we can do. We have exacted vengeance from them. Now I
+ wish to show to the civilized world, and especially to their armies
+ here, that we have the best army, the best discipline, the greatest
+ power on earth, and the bravest Christians in our ranks. I have not
+ told you yet what I propose to do, but the time has come to go ahead
+ with it. In our vessel, the _Eagle_, which we brought with us, there
+ are confined thirty persons convicted at home of the frightful crime of
+ lese-majesty, a crime which shows that the criminal is atheistic,
+ anarchistic, and unfit to live. I had them selected among those who
+ have near relations here in the army. They all have either sons,
+ brothers, or fathers enlisted here. Of course at home our wretched
+ parliamentary system would make it inadvisable to have them executed.
+ Here there is no such difficulty. You have often heard me at the annual
+ swearing in of recruits tell them that they are now my children and
+ must do what I say, even if I should order them to shoot down their own
+ parents. I wish to show the world that this is so, and that my soldiers
+ believe it and will act upon it. Such an army will inspire terror
+ indeed. Most of the prisoners are men, but I have included among them
+ two or three of the most abandoned women, who have been imprisoned for
+ criticizing my sacred person. You approve of my plan?"
+
+ "I approve of all that Your Majesty ever suggests."
+
+ "Of course it makes no difference whether you do or not, but I wish you
+ to have the prisoners brought ashore. You must seek out their
+ relatives among the troops, but do not let them know why. Then fix the
+ execution for some day next week, and have a general parade of all the
+ troops on that occasion."
+
+ The Emperor's secret was well kept, and, except that a special parade
+ was to be held, no one knew what the object was. A glittering array of
+ soldiers met the war-lord's eyes when he entered the public square
+ where the army was drawn up. In pursuance of his orders the enlisted
+ men who were related to the prisoners were alined in front of the
+ center with a captain in command of them. The Emperor directed his
+ horse to the spot and addressed the whole army, applying his remarks
+ particularly, however, to the detail immediately before him.
+
+ "My children," said he, "when you took the oath of allegiance as my
+ soldiers you became members of my family, and it became your solemn
+ duty to do my bidding, whatever that bidding might be. My word became
+ for you the Word of God. You gave your consciences into my keeping,
+ knowing that God had commissioned me to relieve you of that
+ responsibility. From that moment it was your aim to become perfect
+ soldiers, with your minds and consciences deposited in my hands for
+ safe-keeping. From that day forth you no longer had minds nor
+ consciences--your whole duty was summed up in the obligation to obey
+ orders. That is the soldier's only duty. And I know, my children, that
+ you are perfect soldiers and that you stand ever ready to do that duty.
+ Soldiers in other armies may occasionally forget their calling and
+ indulge in the forbidden fruits of reason and conscience, but the
+ Tutonian soldier never! We all know this. For us no proof is necessary.
+ But I wish to demonstrate the fact to the world. I have brought over
+ with me across the sea certain of your relations who have been guilty
+ of the unparalleled crime of lese-majesty. I have determined that they
+ deserve death, and that you shall carry out the execution. I have so
+ arranged it that each of the condemned shall be shot by his nearest
+ relation, be it father, son, or brother. You will show the world that
+ you are ready, nay, proud to carry out these my commands. I
+ congratulate you on being selected for this noble and patriotic task.
+ You are now before the footlights at the center of the world's stage.
+ Remember that the eyes of all mankind are upon you and that you are my
+ children. Field-marshal, carry out my orders!"
+
+ Count von Balderdash gave some orders in an undertone; the troops
+ opened on the left, and disclosed a row of prisoners, including several
+ women, standing bound and blindfolded against a wall, each one at a
+ distance of several yards from his neighbor. The captain ordered the
+ detail into position, gave the necessary orders to load, aim, and fire,
+ and the condemned men and women fell to the ground, each one pierced by
+ the bullet of his or her near relation.
+
+ The great concourse, composed largely of soldiers of the various
+ foreign armies (for most of them had now been withdrawn from the
+ Capital and Gin-Sin), looked on with wonder at this spectacle. Sam, who
+ was standing with the inventor Cope, scanned the faces of the
+ executioners with care, and was unable to detect the slightest sign of
+ emotion in them. They had not been prepared in the least for the
+ ordeal; they did not even know that their relations had been brought
+ from home, and yet they did their duty as soldiers without changing the
+ stolid expression of their faces.
+
+ "Wonderful, wonderful!" he said to Cope. "These are indeed perfect
+ soldiers. Why, they move like clockwork, like marvelous machines. And
+ what a remarkable man the Emperor is--without question the first
+ soldier of his time and of all time. Was there ever anything like it?"
+
+ "Never," answered the inventor.
+
+ Sam walked back to his lodgings alone. He wished to think, and
+ purposely avoided company. He did not notice the soldiers in the
+ streets, nor the natives in their round, pointed straw hats. He ran
+ into a man carrying water in two buckets hung from the ends of a pole
+ balanced on his shoulders, and nearly upset his load. He started back
+ and collided with a native woman with a baby tied to her back. When he
+ reached his house, he sat down in an easy-chair in his bedroom and
+ thought and thought and thought. For some hours his mind was filled
+ with unmixed admiration for the Emperor and his army. He felt like an
+ artist who had just seen a new masterpiece that surpassed all the
+ achievements of the ages, or a musician who had listened to a new
+ symphony that summed up and transcended all that had ever gone before.
+ Again and again he pictured to himself the great war-lord in his helmet
+ and white plume, explaining so eloquently and admirably the duties of a
+ soldier, and then his soldiers obeying his orders as if their service
+ were a religion to them, as indeed it was. It grew dark, but Sam did
+ not heed the darkness. Dinner-time came and went, but he was in a
+ region far above such vulgar bodily needs.
+
+ "Oh, if we only had an emperor," he thought,--"and such an emperor! Why
+ was I not born a Tutonian?"
+
+ This was an unpatriotic thought, and Sam was ashamed of it. Yet it was
+ true, he would gladly have found himself one of His Majesty's subjects
+ and a member of his incomparable army. Then he recalled his memorable
+ interview with the Emperor, and rejoiced in the remembrance that he had
+ deserved and received his commendation. He tried to imagine how it
+ would feel to be one of his officers, or even one of his privates. If
+ he had been selected as one of the squad to show the perfection of
+ their discipline, how gladly he would have taken his place in line with
+ the rest! He would have obeyed without flinching, he was sure of it. He
+ put himself in the place of one of the squad. He is ordered to take his
+ position opposite one of the condemned. He looks and sees that it is
+ his Uncle George. Would he obey the order to shoot? Most certainly. The
+ musket goes off and his uncle falls. He goes through the list of his
+ friends and relations. He does not quite like to shoot the girls, but
+ he does it. It is his duty. His commander-in-chief, who represents his
+ Creator, has ordered it. He can rely implicitly on his wisdom. Then he
+ thinks of Cleary. Yes, he would shoot Cleary down without hesitation.
+ And then comes the turn of his father and mother. He has no trouble
+ with the former, for he is sure that his father as a man must
+ understand his feelings, and he sees a smile of approval on his face as
+ he, too, falls prostrate. With his mother it is more difficult. There
+ had not been much sympathy between them in recent years, yet he
+ recalled his early boyhood on the farm, and it went against him to aim
+ his piece at her. But after all it was his duty, and with an inaudible
+ sigh he pulled the trigger. It was done. No one could have noticed his
+ reluctance. It was quite likely that some of the soldiers that
+ afternoon felt as much compunction as that. But as Sam went over all
+ this long list of tests and passed them successfully, he felt, almost
+ unconsciously, that he was coming to a precipice. His sense of
+ happiness had left him, and he began to dread the end of his
+ cogitations. There was a trial in store that he was afraid of facing.
+ In order to postpone it he went over all his friends and relations
+ again, and added mere acquaintances to the list. He busied himself in
+ this way for an hour or two, but at last the final question forced
+ itself upon him and insisted upon an answer. Would he be willing to
+ shoot Marian under orders? It was with misgivings that he began to
+ imagine this episode. As before, he marched to his place and lifted his
+ rifle to aim. He sees before him the figure which had been haunting his
+ dreams ever since he left East Point. She is bound; a handkerchief is
+ tied over her eyes, but he sees the mouth and longs to kiss it. He has
+ a strong impulse to run forward and throw his arms around her. The
+ command "Fire!" is given, but--he does not shoot. He can not. He has
+ disobeyed orders! He, the man whose one aim in life has been to become
+ a perfect soldier, who only just now was considering himself fit to be
+ a soldier of the war-lord, had disobeyed orders; he had shown himself a
+ mutineer, a deserter, a traitor; he had lost his patriotism and
+ loyalty; he had dishonored the flag; he had trampled under foot all the
+ gods that he had worshiped now for many years. He had flatly broken
+ the only code of morals that he knew--he was a coward, a hypocrite, a
+ mere civilian, masquerading in the uniform of an officer! Sam buried
+ his face in his hands and the tears trickled down through his fingers.
+ Then he sprang up and walked to and fro for a long time. At last he
+ took Marian's photograph from his pocket and put it on his
+ dressing-table. He must be a man. He must hold true to his faith. He
+ screwed up his courage and went through the forms of the afternoon in
+ his room dimly lighted by lanterns in the street. He stood up in the
+ line before the Emperor, and again listened to his inspiring speech.
+ Now he felt sure that he would not fail. He placed himself opposite the
+ photograph when the order was given. He raised an imaginary gun and
+ aimed with assurance--but just then his eye fell upon the face which he
+ could barely distinguish. He saw Marian again as she had been when he
+ bade her farewell. True, she was as much a believer in the military
+ scheme of life as he was, but he knew by instinct that she would draw
+ the line somewhere. She was not created to be a martyr to her faith.
+ The order "Fire!" came, but Sam, instead of obeying, threw down his
+ musket and ran forward, seized the photograph and kissed it. He looked
+ up, half expecting to see a crowd of spectators eying him with
+ derision. He cast himself upon his bed with his clothes on and tossed
+ about for a long time, until at last sleep came to his relief.
+
+ When he awoke in the morning the sun had long been up. In the first
+ moments of waking and before he opened his eyes, he could not recall
+ what it was that was troubling him. Suddenly the whole situation came
+ back to him, tenfold clearer than before. He saw at once beyond all
+ possibility of contradiction that he could not shoot Marian, no matter
+ who ordered him to do it; that for him the ideal of a perfect soldier
+ was altogether unattainable, and that he was obliged to admit to
+ himself that his entire life was a failure. The public might praise and
+ acclaim him, but he was essentially a fraud and could never secure his
+ own approval.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XIV
+
+ Home Again
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+
+ When Sam got up and began to undress to take his bath, his head swam so
+ that he was obliged to lie down again. He tried again two or three
+ times, but always with the same result, and finally he rang for a
+ servant and sent for an army surgeon. The doctor came at once, took his
+ temperature with a thermometer, and, after examining him, pronounced
+ that he had a bad attack of fever, probably typhoid. He advised him to
+ go to the hospital, and before noon Sam found himself comfortably
+ installed in a hospital bed, screened off by a movable partition from a
+ ward of fever patients. The doctor's surmise proved to be correct, and
+ for weeks he was dangerously ill, much of the time being delirious. He
+ suffered once or twice also from relapses, and showed very little
+ recuperative force when the fever finally left him. Meanwhile he was
+ very low-spirited. The idea preyed upon his mind that he was no soldier
+ and could never be one, and he felt that the resulting depression had a
+ great deal to do with his protracted illness. Cleary was assiduous in
+ his attentions, but, intimate as they were, Sam could never bring
+ himself to confess his culpable weakness to him. As he became
+ convalescent he had other visitors, and among them Mr. Cope, the
+ inventor of explosives and artillery.
+
+ "I am at work at a great invention which I shall owe partly to you and
+ partly to the Emperor," said he on one occasion. "Do you remember that
+ at that execution the Emperor said that the perfect soldier has no
+ conscience or reason?" Sam winced. "And then you called my attention to
+ the fact that the men performed their part like machines. That set me
+ thinking. I am always on the lookout for suggestions, and there was one
+ ready-made. Do you see? Why shouldn't a machine be made to take the
+ place of a soldier? A great idea, isn't it? Now you see we've already
+ done something in that line. A torpedo is simply an iron soldier that
+ swims under water and needs no breath, and does as he is told. Think
+ how absurd it is in battle to have a field-battery come up under fire
+ at a gallop! They swing round, unlimber, load, and fire, then harness
+ again, swing round again, and off they are. Meanwhile perhaps half the
+ men and horses have been killed. Wouldn't it be better to have the
+ whole battery a machine, instead of only the guns? The general could
+ stay behind out of range, as he does to-day, and direct the whole thing
+ with an electric battery and a telescope. It is not a difficult matter
+ when you once accept the principle, and the principle can be extended
+ to cavalry and infantry just as well. It will be a great thing for the
+ nations that are best at mechanics, and that means you and us."
+
+ "I don't see," said Sam, "how you can get on without the courage of
+ brave men."
+
+ "Courage! Why, what is more courageous than a piece of steel? It
+ wouldn't be easy to frighten it. And it is just so with all soldierly
+ qualities. Do you want obedience? What is more obedient than a machine?
+ I suppose you admit that a human soldier may disobey orders sometimes."
+
+ "Perhaps," said Sam, blushing uneasily.
+
+ "You may be sure that a steel soldier won't unless he is disabled, and
+ a human soldier may be disabled too. Then the Emperor said a soldier
+ should not reason. There's no danger of a steel soldier trying that.
+
+ "'Theirs not to reason why.
+ Theirs but to do and die.'
+
+ "Why, the Light Brigade at Balaklava won't be in it with them. And it's
+ just the same with regard to conscience. A piece of steel has no
+ conscience. What we want is a machine soldier. A soldier must be
+ obedient, and he must be without fear, conscience, or a mind of his
+ own. In all these respects a machine can surpass a man. Why, you
+ yourself, in praising those Tutonian soldiers, said that they went like
+ clockwork. That's the highest military praise possible."
+
+ Sam was much disturbed by this conversation. Mr. Cope went on to tell
+ how his Government had spent £23,000 to fire a single shot and test one
+ of his new projectiles, but Sam was not interested. Then the inventor
+ began to rally him about the lack of interest of soldiers in the
+ inventions which they used.
+
+ "If you had had to depend on yourselves for inventions," he said, "you
+ would still be fighting with cross-bows, or perhaps more likely with
+ your teeth and finger-nails. No soldier ever invented anything. We
+ inventors are the real military men."
+
+ At last Sam's unconscious tormentor took his departure, and the invalid
+ rang for the hospital orderly so that he might tell him not to let him
+ in again. To his surprise a new orderly appeared, a negro whose face
+ was strangely familiar.
+
+ "What is it, sah?" he said.
+
+ "Is that you, Mose?" cried Sam. "Why, it's almost as good as being at
+ home again."
+
+ "Bress my soul, Massa Jinks--I mean General, have you been a-hurtin'
+ yourself again?" and the man chuckled to himself till his whole body
+ shook. Under Mose's care Sam made more rapid progress and soon was able
+ to go out in a sedan-chair, borne by three men, like a mandarin. The
+ winter passed away and spring was about to set in. There was no
+ prospect of active service in Porsslania, the Powers being unable to
+ agree upon any policy. The Emperor had already gone home, and the
+ various armies were much reduced in strength. Cleary had been ordered
+ to return by his newspaper, and had taken passage in a passenger
+ steamer for the first of May.
+
+ "Why can't you come with me?" he said to Sam. "You're entitled to a
+ leave of absence, and when you get to Whoppington you can apply for
+ some other berth."
+
+ Sam followed this wise advice and obtained a furlough of three months,
+ and on the day fixed for sailing they embarked for home.
+
+ Sam was still an invalid, but the voyage did him a great deal of good,
+ and before they had been a week at sea he began to look quite like his
+ old self. There were few passengers who interested him, but he became
+ acquainted with one man of note, a Porsslanese literatus, who was
+ attached to the legation at Whoppington, and sat on the other side of
+ the captain of the steamer at meals. This gentleman, who bore the name
+ of Chung Tu, was greatly interested in military matters and listened to
+ Sam's accounts by the hour. The night before their arrival at St.
+ Kisco, the regular dinner was, as usual, converted into a banquet, and
+ a band was improvised for the occasion. At the close of dinner the
+ martial hymns of all nations were played, ending with "Yankee Doodle."
+ It was impossible to resist the impulse to laugh as this national jig
+ brought up the rear, and Sam was much displeased that the foreigners
+ on board, and there were many, should have laughed at his country. When
+ he went up on deck he found Cleary conversing with Chung Tu, and he
+ placed his steamer-chair beside theirs and joined the conversation.
+
+ "It's a great pity," said he, "that we have such a national air as
+ 'Yankee Doodle.' It holds us up to ridicule."
+
+ "Do you think so?" answered Chung Tu, who spoke English perfectly.
+ "That depends upon the point of view. You see you take the military
+ point of view. We Porsslanese are not a military nation. We do not
+ think much of armies. We do not try to spread our territory by force,
+ and we never encroach on our neighbors' land, altho we are really
+ overcrowded. Perhaps that is the reason people dislike us. We are not
+ much of an empire either. We have very little central authority, and
+ only a handful of officials. We have free speech, and even the Emperor
+ can be freely criticized without fear. We have no conscription, and no
+ one need carry a passport, as they have to in some countries. We are
+ almost a democracy. We have no exclusive hereditary rank. Any one may
+ become a mandarin if he learns enough to deserve it. We only wanted to
+ be left alone without armies, and we did not want to buy guns and
+ ships. That is all. We are almost a democracy, and that is the reason
+ that I have always studied your history with care. I have studied your
+ state papers and your hymns. I have made a special study of them, and I
+ have come to the opposite conclusion from you as to 'Yankee Doodle.' It
+ seems to me to be the work of a great poet and prophet."
+
+ "What do you mean?" asked Sam.
+
+ "Let us consider it seriously," said Chung Tu. "Have you a copy of it?"
+
+ "No," said Sam, laughing.
+
+ "Then please repeat it for us, and I will write it down."
+
+ Sam began to recite, but he found it difficult to keep his face
+ straight:
+
+ "'Yankee Doodle went to town,
+ Riding on a pony.
+ He stuck a feather in his crown
+ And called him macaroni.'"
+
+ "That is not like my version," said the attaché, pulling a piece of
+ paper from the pocket of his silk jacket. "Here is mine," and he read
+ it solemnly and with emphasis:
+
+ "'Yankee Doodle came to town,
+ A-riding on a pony.
+ He stuck a feather in his cap
+ And called it macaroni.'
+
+ "Which reading is correct?" he asked of Cleary.
+
+ "I'm sure I don't know," said Cleary, laughing.
+
+ "How careless you are of your country's literature! In Porsslania we
+ would carefully guard the sayings of our ancestors and preserve them
+ from alteration. You have what you call the 'higher criticism.' You
+ should direct it to the correction of this most important poem. I have
+ studied the matter as carefully and accurately as a foreigner can, and
+ I am satisfied that my version is the most authentic. Come now, let us
+ study it. Take the first two lines:
+
+ "'Yankee Doodle came to town
+ A-riding on a pony.'
+
+ "There is nothing difficult in that. You may say that the name is a
+ strange one, and I admit that 'Doodle' is a curious surname, but 'Yang
+ Kee' is a perfectly reasonable one from a Porsslanese point of view,
+ and leads me to suppose that the wisdom contained in this poem came
+ originally from our wise men. Perhaps the name is put there as an
+ indication of the fact. However, let us accept the name. The hero came
+ to town riding on a pony. That was a very sensible thing to do.
+ Remember that those lines were written long before the discovery of
+ railways or tram-cars or bicycles or automobiles. You may say that he
+ might have taken a carriage or one of your buggies, but you forget that
+ the roads were exceedingly bad in those days, as bad as our roads near
+ the Imperial City, and it would have been dangerous perhaps to attempt
+ the journey in a vehicle of any kind. In riding to town on a pony,
+ then, he was acting like a rational man. But let us read the rest of
+ the verse:
+
+ "'He stuck a feather in his cap
+ And called it macaroni.'
+
+ "For some reason or other which is not revealed, he puts a feather in
+ his cap, and immediately he begins to act irrationally and to use
+ language so absurd that the reading itself has become doubtful. What is
+ the meaning of this? A man whose conduct has always been reasonable and
+ unexceptionable, suddenly adopts the language of a lunatic. What does
+ it mean? You have sung this verse for a century and more, and you have
+ never taken the trouble to seek for the meaning."
+
+ Sam and Cleary did not attempt to defend their neglect.
+
+ "It is clear to me," proceeded the philosopher, "it is very clear to me
+ that it is an allegory. What is the feather which he puts in his cap?
+ It is the most conspicuous feature of the military uniform, the plume,
+ the pompon, which marks all kinds of military dress-hats. When he
+ speaks of his hero as having assumed the feather, he means that he has
+ donned the uniform of a soldier. He has come to town, in other words,
+ to enlist. Then behold the transformation! He begins at once to act
+ irrationally. The whole epic paints in never-fading colors the
+ disastrous effect upon the intellect of putting on soldier-clothes. You
+ will pardon me, my friends, if I speak thus plainly, but I must open to
+ you the hidden wisdom of your own country."
+
+ Sam smiled. The idea of taking offense at any nonsense which an
+ ignorant pagan should say was quite beneath him.
+
+ "But that is not all. The style of the language and of the music is
+ most noteworthy. It is highly comical, and its object evidently is to
+ provoke a laugh, and at dinner this evening we saw that its object was
+ attained. All the other martial hymns to which we listened were grave,
+ ponderous compositions from which the element of humor was rigidly
+ excluded. It was left for the author of 'Yang Kee' to uncover the
+ ludicrous character of militarism--he has virtually committed your
+ nation to it. He was a genius of marvelous insight. He saw clearly then
+ what but few of your fellow citizens are even now aware of, that there
+ is nothing more comical than a soldier. I am convinced that he was a
+ Porsslanese who had the good fortune to sow in your literature the seed
+ of truth. You think that as a nation you have a sense of humor. I have
+ studied your humorous literature. You laugh at mothers-in-law and
+ messenger-boys and domestic servants, and many other objects which are
+ altogether serious and have no element of humor in them, and at the
+ same time you are blind to the most absurd of spectacles, the man who
+ dresses up in feathers and gold lace and thinks it is honorable to do
+ nothing for years but wait for a pretext to kill somebody," and Chung
+ Tu leaned back in his chair and smiled.
+
+ "It is we who have the sense of humor," he added. "When our common
+ people laughed at the Emperor in his uniforms, they showed the same
+ sound sense that appears in 'Yang Kee.' I thank you, my dear friends,
+ for listening to me so kindly and without anger, but I hope to preach
+ these ideas to your people, and as I take my text from your national
+ hymn, they must listen to me. Then there is another common expression
+ among you which shows, as so many proverbs do, the fundamental truth.
+ When a story is incredible you say 'Tell that to the marines,'
+ signifying that only a marine would be stupid enough to believe it. Now
+ what is a marine? As the Anglian poet says, he is 'soldier and sailor
+ too,' in other words, he epitomizes the army and navy. It is the
+ military man who is foolish enough to believe anything and who keeps
+ alive the most absurd superstitions and customs. The ancient Greeks
+ cast a side-light on this truth, for their word for private soldier was
+ 'idiot.' And on account of this strange stupidity of soldiers, things
+ that would be disgraceful in private life become glorious in war. Their
+ one virtue is obedience, unqualified by any of the balancing virtues,
+ and they wear liveries to show that they are servile. And then the
+ foolish things they try to do! You are familiar with the Peace
+ Conference--generals and admirals spending weeks in uniform with swords
+ at their sides to determine how to stop fighting, as if there were
+ anything to do but to stop! I believe they had the grace to turn the
+ war pictures in the conference room to the wall. But fancy sending
+ butchers to a conference in the interests of vegetarianism! Of course
+ nothing was done or could be done there. And the Emperor in his
+ uniform, drunk with militarism, wanted us--all our nation--wanted
+ _me_--to kow-tow before him as if he were a god! But he did not get
+ what he wanted from us. His own people may grovel before him, but we
+ will not. Oh, these soldiers, these soldiers! You look down on your
+ hangmen and butchers. We look down on our men-butchers, the soldiers,
+ in the same way. We have soldiers just as you have police, but it is a
+ low calling with us, and most people would be ashamed to have a soldier
+ in the family. Pardon me, my dear sirs. Perhaps I have spoken too
+ plainly. I mean nothing personal, but when I think of these wars, I
+ can not control my tongue. Good-night."
+
+ So saying, the attaché gathered up his robes and went below.
+
+ "Queer chap," said Sam. "He must be crazy."
+
+ "We've treated them rather badly, tho," said Cleary. "I'm glad Taffy
+ hasn't had any executions, but our minister and all the rest have been
+ insisting on executions of their big people, and no one talks of
+ executing any of ours, altho they have suffered ten times as much as we
+ have."
+
+ "You forget how the affair began," said Sam. "Suppose the Porsslanese
+ had sent us missionaries to teach us their religion, and these
+ missionaries had gradually got possession of land and also some local
+ power of governing, and then we had ruthlessly murdered some of them
+ and they had seized all our ports for the purpose of benefiting us, do
+ you suppose that we would have risen like those miserable Fencers and
+ massacred anybody? It is inconceivable. They have the strangest
+ aversion to foreigners too."
+
+ "Some of them haven't," said Cleary. "Chung Tu is a friendly old soul,
+ if he is cracked. He says he believes the Powers have been turned loose
+ on his country to punish them for having invented gunpowder. He laughs
+ at Cope's inventions. He says his people set the fashion, and then
+ wisely stopped when they found that such inventions did more harm than
+ good. I think they have a right to complain of us. Why, there's one of
+ our soldiers in the steerage with seventeen of their pigtails with the
+ scalps still fastened to them as trophies! Old Chung says our ribbons
+ and decorations are the equivalent of the scalps dangling at a savage's
+ belt. I didn't tell him we had the genuine article. But, come, you had
+ better turn in. You'll have a hard day to-morrow. I've advertised your
+ coming for all I was worth, and if they don't give you a send-off at
+ St. Kisco, it isn't my fault. I'm glad you're well enough to stand it."
+
+ "I'm not as well as I look," said Sam. "I've lost all my nerve. I'm
+ even worrying a little about all my loot in those cases in the hold. It
+ sometimes seems that I oughtn't to have taken it."
+
+ "What!" cried Cleary. "Well, you are getting squeamish! After all the
+ fellows you've killed or had killed, I shouldn't mind an ornament or
+ two."
+
+ "Killing is a soldier's main business," said Sam. "Oh, well, I suppose
+ looting is, too. I won't think anything more about it. Good-night."
+
+ While Sam and his friend were conversing on deck, another conversation
+ which was to have a portentous effect upon the former's destiny was
+ taking place in the upper corridor of the Peckham Young Ladies'
+ Seminary at St. Kisco.
+
+ "He's perfectly lovely," said a young lady, standing barefoot before
+ her door in her night-dress to a group of young ladies similarly
+ attired. "I've got his photograph. And I'm not just going to stand
+ still and see him pass. It's all very well to have the school drawn up
+ in line on the wharf--that's better than nothing--but I want something
+ more, and I'm going to have it."
+
+ "What will you do, Sally?" they all cried.
+
+ "I'm going to kiss him--there!" said she.
+
+ "Oh, Sally!"
+
+ "Yes, I will too."
+
+ "I believe she will if she says so," said one of the girls. "She won't
+ stop at anything. Well, Sally Watson, if you kiss him, I will to."
+
+ "And I!" "And I!" exclaimed the others; but at that moment a step was
+ heard on the stairs, and the Peckham young ladies sought their beds and
+ pretended very hard to be asleep, altho their hearts were thumping
+ against their ribs at the mere thought of their daring resolution.
+
+ It was at ten o'clock the next morning that the steamer came alongside
+ the wharf. The city was in gala dress and flags waved everywhere. The
+ day was observed almost as a holiday, and many schools permitted their
+ pupils to take part in the procession which awaited the arrival of
+ Captain Jinks, as Sam was now commonly known in his native land. A
+ reception was arranged for him at the City Hall, and the Mayor came
+ down to the steamer in a carriage with four horses to escort him
+ thither. From the deck Sam could see a banner stretched across the
+ street, on which was an inscription to the "Hero of San Diego, the
+ Subduer of the Moritos, the Capturer of Gomaldo, the Conqueror of the
+ Great White Temple, and the Friend and Instructor of the Emperor." A
+ few months before, Sam would have enjoyed this display without alloy,
+ but now his health was really shattered, and in the bottom of his heart
+ he felt that he was unworthy of it all, for he was not the perfect
+ soldier he had believed he was, and under his uniform beat the heart of
+ a vulgar civilian. His military instincts had their limit; his
+ obedience could only be relied upon under certain circumstances. He was
+ a mere amateur, and had no claim to rank as a military hero at all.
+
+ A swarm of reporters settled down upon General Jinks as soon as they
+ could get on board, insisting upon having his opinion as to the growth
+ of the city since he had seen it, the superiority of its climate to
+ that of any part of the world, and the beauty of its women. Sam
+ answered all these questions satisfactorily, and surrendered himself to
+ the committee of citizens who had come on deck to welcome him. His
+ luggage was passed without delay by the Custom House officials, and he
+ was conducted down the wharf toward the carriage which awaited him.
+ With true chivalry young ladies' schools had been given the best
+ positions on the wharf, and Sam soon found himself passing through a
+ double row of pretty girls. He could hear such remarks as this:
+
+ "Isn't he good-looking!"
+
+ "What a lovely uniform!"
+
+ "Hasn't he got a fascinating limp!"
+
+ "How pale he is!"
+
+ "He does look just like a hero."
+
+ Sam flushed slightly at these comments, but suddenly, before he had
+ time to collect his thoughts, a slight form sprang forward from the
+ left and an inviting face presented itself to his, and with the words,
+ "May I, please?" a hearty kiss was planted on his lips. Sam had no
+ time to decline, if he had wished to. A murmur of surprise and delight
+ arose from the crowd, and in another moment another damsel rushed upon
+ him, and then another and another. Before long he was the center of a
+ throng of elbowing young ladies of all kinds, fair, plain, and
+ indifferent, all bent upon giving him a kiss. Sam had indeed lost his
+ nerve; for the first time in his life he capitulated absolutely and let
+ the attacking party work its sweet will. It was with great difficulty
+ that he was rescued by the reception committee and finally seated next
+ to the Mayor in the landau.
+
+ "What a lot of cab-drivers you have there on the wharf!" said Sam to
+ the Mayor, after their first greetings. "I never saw so many. Hear them
+ crying out to the passengers coming ashore!"
+
+ "They're not cab-drivers," he answered. "They're pension agents.
+ They're not crying 'Want a cab?' but 'Want a pension?'"
+
+ "So they are," said Sam. "What is that tune the young ladies are
+ beginning to sing?"
+
+ "Don't you know?" said the Mayor, laughing. "It's 'Captain Jinks.'
+ You'll know it well enough before you are here long. Listen."
+
+ Sam listened and heard sung for the first time lines that were to be
+ imprinted upon his tympanum until they became a torture:
+
+ "I'm Captain Jinks of the Cubapines,
+ The pink of human war-machines,
+ Who teaches emperors, kings, and queens
+ The way to run an army."
+
+ The news of the kissing reached the City Hall before the procession,
+ and when he alighted there Sam had to kiss an immense number of women
+ who were determined not to be outdone by their sisters at the wharf,
+ while the whole crowd sang "Captain Jinks" in a frenzy of enthusiasm.
+ The reception accorded to Sam at St. Kisco was so elaborate, and the
+ arrangements made to do him honor were so extended, that he was obliged
+ to stay there for several days. Meanwhile the news of his arrival and
+ of his gallantry in kissing his countrywomen, young and old, spread all
+ over the land and took hold of the popular imagination. Invitations to
+ visit various cities on his way across the Continent began to come in,
+ and everywhere Sam was acclaimed as the hero and idol of the people.
+
+ "It's great, it's great, old man!" cried Cleary. "Why, that kissing
+ business is worth a dozen victories! The people here say that no
+ general or admiral has had such a send-off in St. Kisco. Look at
+ to-day's papers! Thirteen places have petitioned to have their
+ post-offices named after you. There will be Jinksvilles and Jinkstowns
+ everywhere, and one is called Samjinks. Then they're naming their
+ babies after you like wildfire. Samuela is becoming a common girl's
+ name, and one chap has called his girl Samjinksina. All the girls are
+ practising the Jinks limp, too. I saw one huge picture of you painted
+ on the dead side of a house. It was an ad. of the 'Captain Jinks 5-cent
+ Cigar.' That's the limit of a man's ambition, I should say. And now
+ they're beginning to nominate you for President. I'm going to try to
+ work that up. I'm sending a despatch to _The Lyre_ this morning. If
+ they take it up, we can put it through. The Republicrats hold their
+ convention at St. Lewis next month, and they've been looking around for
+ a military candidate, and you're just the thing. Every woman in the
+ country will be for you. They won't dare to put up a candidate against
+ you. You'll just have a walk-over. That song, 'Captain Jinks,' will do
+ it alone. Everybody is singing it."
+
+ "I thought I was too young," said Sam. "Isn't there an age limit?"
+
+ "Not a bit of it. They abolished that when they amended the
+ Constitution and made the President's term six years, and made him
+ ineligible for reelection."
+
+ "I'd rather have a military position," said Sam. "I'd rather be general
+ of the army. But I've lost my nerve--I'm not well; and perhaps it's
+ just as well that I should take a civilian position."
+
+ "Civilian position! Nonsense! The President is commander-in-chief of
+ the army and navy, and the marines, too, for that matter."
+
+ "But he hasn't a uniform," said Sam sorrowfully. "And as for all this
+ kissing, I'm sick of it. It tires me to death, and I don't know what
+ Marian will think of it. I've written to explain that I can't help it,
+ but she will see the reports first in the papers and she may not like
+ it at all."
+
+ "Oh, she's a sensible woman," said Cleary. "She will understand a
+ political and military necessity. She won't mind."
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XV
+
+ Politics
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+
+ But Marian did mind, and for once Cleary was mistaken. She was
+ delighted at the prominence which Sam had achieved, and saw him
+ mentioned as a candidate for President with pride and gratification,
+ but she did not see how that excused his promiscuous osculation of the
+ female population of the country, and she determined that it should
+ cease. She wrote to him frequently and decidedly on the subject, and he
+ reported her protests to Cleary, who absolutely refused to allow them.
+
+ "It won't do," said he, as they discussed the subject at a hotel in a
+ small city on their line of progress. "This kissing is your strong
+ point. _The Lyre_ is backing you up on the strength of it. So is the
+ Benevolent Assimilation Trust, Limited. In every city and town the
+ girls have turned out, and you've captured them hands down. If you stop
+ now it will upset the whole business. The Convention delegates are
+ coming out for you by the dozen. Our committee is working it up so that
+ it will be nearly unanimous. There won't be another serious candidate,
+ and I doubt if they put anybody up against you when you're nominated.
+ You're as good as President now, but you must go on kissing. That's all
+ there is of it."
+
+ Sam wrote to Marian rehearsing these arguments, and he got Cleary to
+ write too, but the letters had no effect. At last he received a
+ telegram from her announcing her intention of meeting him at St. Lewis.
+ She reached that city before him and was present at the station when he
+ arrived, altho he did not know it, and from a good point of vantage
+ she saw him kissing the young ladies of that city by wholesale to an
+ accompaniment of "Captain Jinks." It was more than she could stand, and
+ when she joined her _fiancé_ at the hotel the meeting was very
+ different from the one he had so often pictured to himself. It was a
+ stormy scene, intermixed with tender episodes, but she gave it as her
+ ultimatum that the kissing must cease forthwith, and, in order to give
+ a good reason for it, she insisted that they be married at once. Sam
+ was willing to take this course, and Cleary was called into their
+ counsels. At first he bitterly opposed the project, but Marian's
+ blandishments finally succeeded, and she gained him as an ally. He was
+ sent as an emissary to the campaign committee and presented the case as
+ strongly as he could for her. The proposition really seemed most
+ plausible. Could anything help the chances of a candidate more than his
+ marriage to a handsome young woman? The committee had doubts on the
+ subject and waited in person on Miss Hunter, but she persuaded them as
+ she had persuaded Cleary, and furthermore convinced them that whether
+ they were persuaded or not the marriage would take place. Marian
+ determined to fix the hour for the next day. She pledged the committee
+ to secrecy, and no word of the proposed wedding got into the papers. At
+ noon a clergyman was called into the hotel, and in Sam's private
+ sitting-room the pair were married with Cleary and a few of the members
+ of the committee as witnesses. Almost before the ceremony was over they
+ could hear the newsboys crying out the tidings of the event.
+
+ "It's out of the question to talk about a wedding-tour," said Sam,
+ after the ceremony. "I can't walk in the streets alone without being
+ mobbed, and with Marian we could not keep the clothes on our backs.
+ Just hear them singing 'Captain Jinks' now!"
+
+ "Mark my words, dear," said his wife. "You will see when we get the
+ papers to-morrow with the news of our marriage, that it has made you
+ more popular than ever. Now send out word to the reporters that you
+ will not do any more public kissing."
+
+ In obedience to these orders Cleary, acting as go-between, conveyed the
+ information as gently as he could to the representatives of the press,
+ that as a married man General Jinks expected to be spared the ordeal of
+ embracing all the young ladies of the country.
+
+ No one was prepared for the striking effect which this news, coupled
+ with that of the marriage, had upon the newspapers and their readers.
+ The first papers which Sam and his wife saw on the following morning
+ were those of St. Lewis. They expressed sorrow at the fact that Captain
+ Jinks had taken such a resolution when only a handful of the fair women
+ of St. Lewis had had the opportunity of saluting him. Were they less
+ beautiful and attractive than the ladies of St. Kisco who had kissed
+ him to their hearts' content? Marian was visibly annoyed when she saw
+ these articles, but she advised her husband to wait till they received
+ the papers from other cities. These journals came, but, alas! they went
+ rapidly from bad to worse. The Eastern papers with scarcely an
+ exception took up the strain of those of St. Lewis. Why did Captain
+ Jinks discriminate against the women of the East? He had kissed the
+ whole West. Probably he had also kissed all the women of the Cubapines
+ and Porsslania. It was only the women of the East that he could not
+ find heart to salute in the same way. Here was a hero indeed, who
+ insulted one-half of his own nation! It might have been expected that
+ the Western press would have come to Sam's support, but they did not.
+ They accused him of gross deception in not announcing that he had been
+ from the first engaged to be married. Their young women had been
+ fraudulently induced to kiss lips which had already been monopolized,
+ but which they had been led to believe to be as free as the air of
+ heaven. Black indeed must be the soul of a man who could stoop to such
+ deception! As the days went on the public became more excited and the
+ attacks more ferocious. It was rumored that his _fiancée_ had married
+ him against his will, that she was a virago and a termagant. Would the
+ country be contented to see the Executive Mansion ruled by petticoats,
+ and by those of a hussy at that? What sort of a hero was the man who
+ could be ordered about by a woman and could not call his soul his own?
+ Then they began to overhaul his record. Was he really the hero of San
+ Diego? Was it not the mistakes of Gomaldo which caused his defeat? Was
+ it not true that the boasted subjugation of the Moritos was brought
+ about by the superstitious fear of the savages inspired by the figures
+ tattooed on the captain's body? And the capture of Gomaldo, was it
+ anything but a green-goods game on a large scale? What, too, was the
+ burning of the great White Temple but an act of vandalism? And as for
+ the friendship and praise of the Emperor, who was the Emperor, anyway,
+ but an effete product of an exhausted civilization? Then had not
+ Captain Jinks opposed the promotion of men from the ranks? What sort of
+ a democrat was this? Sam felt these thrusts keenly. He had had no idea
+ of the fickleness of the people, and it was hard to believe that in a
+ single day they had ceased to adore him and begun to revile him; and
+ yet such was the case. Marian was also overcome with mortification, and
+ she heaped reproaches upon him for their forlorn condition. Cleary
+ proved himself to be a stanch friend.
+
+ "It's too bad, old man," he said. "It'll blow over, but you'll have to
+ withdraw a while for repairs. The bottom has dropped out of your boom,
+ and of course you can't be a candidate for President. Let's go quietly
+ home. I'll go along with you. _The Lyre_ has had to drop you for the
+ time. _Scribblers'_ has sent back the first article I wrote for you,
+ and they say your name has lost its commercial value. I've seen Jonas.
+ He's here to make sure of a friendly candidate, and he says you're out
+ of the question. He's doing well, I tell you. I asked him how it paid
+ to run a war for half a million a day and get a trade in return of a
+ few millions a year? 'It's the people pay for the war and we get the
+ trade,' said he. He'd like to have you President to help them along,
+ but he says it won't be possible. It's a shame. You'd have run so well,
+ if----Your platform of 'Old Gory, the Army and Navy,' would have swept
+ everything before it. But never mind. We'll try it again some day. I
+ suppose your luck couldn't hold out forever."
+
+ "Thanks, my dear Cleary," said Sam, grasping his hand. "You've been a
+ true friend. I don't think it makes much difference. I am a sick man,
+ and I must go home as soon as I can."
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XVI
+
+ The End
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+
+ Sam was indeed a sick man, and the journey to the East proved to be a
+ severe strain upon him. Cleary saw that it would be unwise to let him
+ travel alone with his wife, and accordingly he accompanied him to
+ Slowburgh, which was on the way to Homeville. They arrived in the
+ afternoon, and Sam could hardly walk to the carriage which awaited him.
+ He was put to bed as soon as he reached his uncle's house, and on the
+ advice of his uncle's doctor they sent at once to the county town for a
+ trained nurse to take charge of him, for it was out of the question for
+ him to travel farther. There was no train which Cleary could
+ conveniently take that evening to the metropolis, and he accepted the
+ urgent invitation of Congressman Jinks to spend the night. It so
+ happened that it was a gala day for Slowburgh. Four of her soldier sons
+ had returned a few days before from Porsslania and the Cubapines, and
+ this day had been set aside for a great celebration and a mass-meeting
+ at the Methodist church to welcome them. The procession was to take
+ place early in the evening, and after supper Cleary went out alone to
+ watch the proceedings, leaving his friend to the care of his relatives.
+ He took his place on the curbstone of the principal street and was soon
+ conversing with his neighbors on each side, one of whom was our old
+ friend, Mr. Reddy, and the other the young insurance agent whose
+ acquaintance Sam had made at the hotel.
+
+ "It's going to be a great show," said the former. "I wish I was spry
+ enough to parade too. It's going to be splendid, but it won't come up
+ to the time we had when I came back from the war. They've kept them
+ four boys drunk three days for nothing, but we was drunk a month."
+
+ "They've sobered them down for this evening, I believe," said the young
+ man.
+
+ "They've done their best," said Reddy, "and I think they'll go through
+ with it all right. It's a great time for them, but they'll have their
+ pension days all the rest of their lives to remind them of it, four
+ times a year."
+
+ "Who are going to take part in the procession?" asked Cleary.
+
+ "They're going to have all the military companies and patriotic
+ societies of these parts," answered Reddy, "and then the firemen too of
+ course; but they won't amount to much, for most of them are in the
+ societies, and they'd rather turn out in them."
+
+ "What societies are there?" said Cleary.
+
+ "Oh, there's the Grandsons of the Revolution and the Genuine Grandsons
+ of the Revolution, and the Daughters of Revolutionary Camp-Followers
+ and the Genuine Daughters, and then the Male Descendants of Second
+ Cousins of Heroes, and the Genuine Male Descendants, and the
+ Connections by Marriage of Colonial Tax-Collectors, and then the
+ Genuine Connections, and a lot of others I can't remember."
+
+ "The names seem to go in pairs," said Cleary.
+
+ "Well, you see, they always have a fight about something in these
+ military societies, and then they split, and the party that splits away
+ always takes the same name and puts 'Genuine' in front of it. That's
+ the way it is."
+
+ "I suppose these societies do a lot of good, don't they?" asked Cleary.
+ "These splits and quarrels remind me of the army. They must spread the
+ military spirit among the people."
+
+ "Yes, they do," said the young man. "It's what they call _esprit de
+ corps_. If fighting is military, they fight and no mistake, and the
+ women fight more than the men. I don't know how many lawsuits they've
+ had. Half of them won't speak to the other half. But they're all united
+ on one thing, I can tell you, and that is in wanting to put down the
+ Cubapinos."
+
+ "That they are," cried Reddy. "That's why they call 'em 'Patriotic
+ Societies.' It was our ancestors as fought for freedom that they made
+ the societies for. Our ancestors were patriotic and fought for freedom
+ oncet, and now we're going to be patriotic and stick by the government
+ just like they did."
+
+ "Yes, they fought for freedom, that's true. And what are the Cubapinos
+ fighting for?" asked the young man.
+
+ "Oh, shucks!" cried Reddy. "I ain't a-going to argher with you. What
+ were we talking about? Oh, yes. We were saying that them societies
+ fight together. They do fight a good deal, that's a fact, and there's
+ no end of trouble in our militia battalion too. They all want to be
+ captain, and they don't get on somehow as well as the fire companies.
+ But still it's a fine thing to see all this military spirit. I didn't
+ see a uniform for years, and now you can't hire a man to dig a ditch
+ who hasn't got a stripe on one leg of his trousers at any rate. Girls
+ like soldiers, I tell you, and they like pensions too. I've just got
+ married myself. My wife is seventeen. Now I've drawed my pension for
+ nearly forty years, and she'll draw it for sixty more if she has any
+ luck; that'll make over a hundred. That's something like. Why, if one
+ of these fellows is twenty now and marries a girl of seventeen when
+ he's ninety, and she lives till she's ninety, they can keep drawing
+ money for a hundred and fifty years, and no mistake. It's better than a
+ savings bank. Here they come!"
+
+ The procession had formed round the corner at the other end of the main
+ street, and now the band began to play, and the column could be seen
+ advancing. First the band passed with an escort of small boys running
+ along in the gutter on either side. Then came two carriages containing
+ the heroes, two in each. They held themselves stiffly and took off
+ their hats, and no one would have supposed that they had drunk too much
+ if the fact had not been universally understood by the public. Behind
+ them came a line of other carriages in which were seated the magnates
+ of the town, including the office-holders and the prominent business
+ men. They all had that self-important air which is inseparable from
+ such shows and which denotes that the individual is feeling either like
+ a great man or a fool. Then came the militia battalion, a rather
+ shamefaced lot of young men who seemed to be painfully aware that they
+ were not at all real heroes like the soldiers in the carriages, but
+ merely make-believe imitations. The patriotic societies followed,
+ genuine and non-genuine, resplendent in "insignia," sashes, and badges.
+
+ "There's my wife, she's a G.C.M.C.T.C.," said Reddy proudly, pointing
+ out a very plain young woman with gold spectacles. "And here come the
+ Genuine Ancestors of Future Veterans. See that old woman there on the
+ other side? She made all the fuss. You see when anybody wants to get
+ into a society and finds they can't get in they go off and start
+ another. And some people that hadn't any tax collectors or connections
+ or anything, they just got up the 'Ancestors of Future Veterans,' and
+ everybody in town wanted to get into that. And old Miss Blunt there,
+ she wanted to come in too, and she's over seventy, and they said she
+ couldn't be an ancestor nohow, and she said she could and she would,
+ and they voted forty-one to forty against her, and the forty went off
+ and founded the Genuine Ancestors, and they're twice as big as the
+ others now. Hear 'em applaud?"
+
+ The old lady walked along with a martial tread, and was loudly cheered
+ as she passed.
+
+ "Now we'd better get into the church if we want seats," said the young
+ man, and Cleary followed him, leaving the ancient warrior behind. The
+ church was very crowded and very hot, and Cleary had to sit on a step
+ of the platform, but it was an exhibition of patriotism worth
+ beholding. The band played with great gusto, and the whole audience was
+ at the highest pitch of excitement. The chairman made an address, and
+ Josh Thatcher responded in a few words for himself and his three
+ companions. Then flowers were presented to them, and a little girl
+ recited the "Charge of the Light Brigade," but the main feature of the
+ program was the oration of Dr. Taylor, the pastor of the church. He was
+ famed as an orator not only in his denomination and in the county but
+ in the National Order of Total Abstinence, of which he was a leading
+ light. In his address he welcomed the four heroes back to their hearths
+ and firesides. He thanked them for having conquered so many lands and
+ spread the blessings of civilization and Christianity to the ends of
+ the earth.
+
+ "We have been told, my friends, by wicked and unpatriotic scoffers,
+ that these wars have stirred up the passions of our people, that there
+ are more lynchings and deeds of violence than ever before, and that
+ negro soldiers returning from the war have shot down citizens from
+ car-windows. I have even been told that its effect is to be seen in the
+ attempts of worthy citizens, including a distinguished judge, to have
+ the whipping-post reestablished in our midst. I can only say for myself
+ that such traitors and traducers should be the first victims of the
+ whipping-post. (Cheers.) So far from crime having increased since the
+ departure of these young heroes, I can testify that there has been a
+ marked decrease in our community. Since they left, not a single barn
+ has been burned, not a chicken stolen. My friend, Mrs. Crane, informs
+ me that she keeps more chickens than ever before, and that she has not
+ missed one in over a year. I am also told that during the absence of
+ these young men the amount of liquor drunk in our town has sensibly
+ diminished. The war then has been a blessing to us and to our nation."
+
+ During these remarks Josh Thatcher, who was sitting in the front row,
+ gave sundry digs in the ribs to his cousin Tom, and they both laughed
+ aloud.
+
+ "We welcome our heroes back," continued the orator. "We open our arms
+ to them. All that we have is theirs. We applaud their manly courage and
+ Christian self-sacrifice. We shall never, never forget their services,
+ and we shall recite their noble deeds to our children and to our
+ children's children."
+
+ The meeting broke up with three cheers and a tiger for each of the four
+ heroes. For an hour later the crowds stood in the street talking over
+ the great events of the day, each of the young veterans forming the
+ center of an admiring group, Tom Thatcher being surrounded by a bevy of
+ pretty girls who seemed to find nothing objectionable in his pimpled
+ face and hoarse voice. Cleary stood for a long time watching them and
+ talking with the insurance man.
+
+ "It's their night," said the latter, "but it won't last long. We know
+ them too well. When the barns begin to burn again, folks'll all know
+ what it means. I wish they'd keep a war going a long way off forever
+ for these fellows. It would be a good riddance. And that's all talk of
+ old Taylor's anyway. He won't take them to his heart, not by a great
+ deal. I heard Dave Black ask him for a job to-day, and he wants a man
+ too, and he said, 'What--an ex-soldier? Not much!' The words were out
+ of his mouth before he knew what he'd said. He's a slick one."
+
+ When Cleary returned to Mr. Jinks' house, he found Sam much worse, and
+ the gravest fears were entertained as to his recovery. In the morning
+ he was a little easier, and Cleary was able to have a little talk with
+ him before he left. Sam had been told by the doctor that his condition
+ was serious, and he had no desire to get well.
+
+ "You must brace up, old man," said Cleary cheerily. "I'll come back in
+ a few days and we'll lay out our plans for the future. You're the
+ finest soldier that ever lived, and I haven't done with you yet."
+
+ "Don't say that, don't say that!" cried Sam. "I'm no soldier at all. I
+ wanted to be a perfect soldier, and I can't. It's that that's breaking
+ my heart. I don't mind the nomination for President nor anything else
+ in comparison. My poor wife! Why did I let her marry a coward like me?
+ I can't tell you now, but if I'm alive when you come here again I'll
+ tell you all."
+
+ "Nonsense, old man," said Cleary. "You've got the fever on you again.
+ It's in your blood. When it gets out, you'll be all right."
+
+ It was with tears in his eyes that Cleary bade his friend good-by, for
+ he could see that he was a very sick man. It was impossible, however,
+ for him to remain longer, and as Sam's wife and cousin were there to
+ nurse him, and his father and mother had been telegraphed for, he felt
+ that there was no necessity for him to remain.
+
+ After the lapse of three weeks Cleary received the sad news that Sam
+ had shown unmistakable signs of insanity and had been removed to an
+ insane asylum. His father wrote that while his insanity was of a mild
+ form, the doctors thought it best for him to be placed in an
+ institution where he could receive the most scientific treatment. Six
+ months later Cleary, who was now one of the editors of the _Lyre_,
+ went on a sad pilgrimage to see his friend. The asylum was several
+ hours away from the metropolis beyond East Point, and was none other
+ than the great building which they had described to the chief of the
+ Moritos. Cleary took a carriage at the station and drove to his
+ destination, and at last arrived at the huge edifice in the midst of
+ its wide domain. He went into the reception-room and explained his
+ errand. After a while a young doctor came to him, and told him that he
+ could have an interview with Captain Jinks at once, and offered to act
+ as his guide. It was a long walk through corridors and passages and up
+ winding stairs to Sam's apartment, and Cleary questioned the doctor as
+ they went.
+
+ "Captain Jinks is a dear fellow," said the doctor in response to his
+ inquiries. "We are all fond of him. At first he was a little
+ intractable and denied our right to direct him, but now that we've got
+ it all down on a military basis, he will do anything we tell him. I
+ believe he would walk out of the window if I ordered him too. But I
+ have to put on a military coat to make him obey. We keep one on
+ purpose. As soon as he sees it on anybody he's as obedient as a child.
+ He's such a perfect gentleman, too. It's a very sad case. Here's his
+ room."
+
+ The doctor knocked.
+
+ "Who goes there?" cried a husky voice, which Cleary hardly recognized
+ as Sam's.
+
+ "A friend," answered the doctor.
+
+ "Advance, friend, and give the countersign," said the same voice.
+
+ "Old Gory!" cried the doctor, with most unmilitary emphasis, and he
+ opened the door and they entered.
+
+ Cleary saw what seemed to be the shadow of Sam, pale, haggard, and
+ emaciated, sitting in a shabby undress uniform before a large deal
+ table. Upon the table was a most elaborate arrangement of books and
+ blocks of wood, apparently representing fortifications, which were
+ manned by a dilapidated set of lead soldiers--the earliest treasures of
+ Sam's boyhood, which had been sent to him from home at his request.
+ Sam did not lift his eyes from the table, and moved the men about with
+ his hand as if he were playing a game of chess.
+
+ "Here is a friend of yours to see you, Captain," said the doctor.
+
+ Sam slowly raised his head and looked at Cleary for some time without
+ recognizing him. Gradually a faint smile made its appearance.
+
+ "I know you," he said in the same strained voice. "I know you.
+ You're----"
+
+ "Cleary," said Cleary.
+
+ "Cleary? Cleary? Let me see. Why, to be sure, you're Cleary." And he
+ rose from his chair unsteadily and took the hand that Cleary offered
+ him.
+
+ "How are you, old man? I'm so glad to see you again," said Cleary.
+
+ "And so am I," said Sam, who now seemed to be almost his old self
+ again. "Sit down."
+
+ Cleary drew up a chair to the table, while the doctor retired and shut
+ the door.
+
+ "How are you getting on?" said Cleary. "You're going to get well soon,
+ aren't you?"
+
+ "I am well now," said Sam. "I was awfully ill, I know that, but it all
+ came from my mind. I think I told you that. My heart was breaking
+ because I couldn't be a perfect soldier. I had to face the question and
+ grapple with it. It was an awful experience; I can't bear to speak of
+ it or even think of it. But I won. I'm a perfect soldier now! I can do
+ anything with my men here, and I will obey any order I receive, I don't
+ care what it is."
+
+ As he spoke of his experience a pained expression came over his face,
+ but he looked proud and almost happy when he announced the result of
+ the conflict.
+
+ "They say I'm a lunatic, I know they do," he continued, looking round
+ to see that no one else was present, and lowering his voice to a
+ whisper. "They say I'm a lunatic, but I'm not. When they say I'm a
+ lunatic they mean I'm a perfect soldier--a complete soldier. And they
+ call those fine fellows lead soldiers! Lunatics and lead soldiers
+ indeed! Well, suppose we are! I tell you an army of lead soldiers with
+ a lunatic at the head would be the best army in the world. We do what
+ we're told, and we're not afraid of anything."
+
+ Sam stopped talking at this juncture and went on for some time in
+ silence maneuvering his troops. Finally he picked up the colonel with
+ the white plume, and a ray of light from the afternoon sun fell upon
+ it, and he held it before him, gazing upon it entranced. The door
+ opened, and the doctor entered.
+
+ "I fear you must go now, Mr. Cleary. He can't stand much excitement.
+ He's quiet now. Just come out with me without saying anything," and
+ Cleary followed him out of the room, while Sam sat motionless with his
+ eyes fixed on his talisman.
+
+ "He sits like that for hours," said the doctor. "It's a kind of
+ hypnotism, I think, which we don't quite understand yet. I am writing
+ up the case for _The Medical Gazette_. It's a peculiar kind of
+ insanity, this preoccupation with uniforms and soldiers, and the
+ readiness to do anything a man in regimentals tells him to."
+
+ "It's rather more common, perhaps, out of asylums than in them,"
+ muttered Cleary, but the doctor did not hear him. "Do you think he
+ will ever recover, doctor?" he continued.
+
+ The doctor shook his head ominously.
+
+ "And will he live to old age in this condition?"
+
+ "He might, if there were nothing else the matter with him, but there
+ is, and perhaps it's a fortunate thing. He's got a new disease called
+ filariasis, a sort of low fever that he picked up in the Cubapines or
+ Porsslania. There's a good deal of it among the soldiers who have come
+ back. We have a lot of lunatics from the army here and several of them
+ have this new fever too. It wouldn't kill him alone, either, but the
+ two things together will surely carry him off. He will hardly live
+ another half-year."
+
+ "I suppose his family is looking out for him?" said Cleary.
+
+ "His mother visits him pretty regularly, and his father comes
+ sometimes," said the doctor, "but I think his wife has only been here
+ twice. And she's living at East Point, too, only an hour or two away.
+ She's a born flirt, and I think she's tired of him. I'm told that
+ one of this year's graduates there, a fellow named Saunders, is paying
+ attention to her, and when the poor captain dies, I doubt if she
+ remains long a widow."
+
+ [Illustration: HARMLESS
+ "HE SITS LIKE THAT FOR HOURS"]
+
+ "Then I suppose there is nothing I can do for the dear old chap?" asked
+ Cleary, with tears in his eyes, as he took his leave of the doctor at
+ the door of the building.
+
+ "Nothing at all, my dear sir. He has everything he wants, and in fact
+ he wants nothing but his lead soldiers. He won't even let us give him a
+ new set of them. And he has all the liberty he wants on the grounds
+ here, and he can walk or even take a drive if he wishes to, for he is
+ perfectly harmless."
+
+ "Perfectly harmless!" repeated Cleary to himself, as he got into his
+ carriage. "What an idea! A perfectly harmless soldier!"
+
+
+ THE END
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Transcriber's Notes
+ For consistency the following changes have been made.
+
+ Page 3 firearms changed to fire-arms
+ 10 field marshal changed to field-marshal
+ 134 got here? changed to got here?"
+ 168 out on at once on changed to out at once on
+ 202 exclamed changed to exclaimed
+ 202 out of it? changed to out of it.
+ 219 you along.' changed to you along."
+ 237 "'Im a changed to 'I'm a
+ 273 exclamed changed to exclaimed
+ 295 bomb-shells changed to bombshells
+ 349 "'He stuck changed to 'He stuck
+ 357 "and I!" And I!" changed to "And I!" "And I!"
+ 382 denommination changed to denomination
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Captain Jinks, Hero, by Ernest Crosby
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+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
+ <head>
+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=iso-8859-1" />
+ <title>
+ The Project Gutenberg eBook of Captain Jinks, Hero, by Ernest Crosby
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css">
+/*<![CDATA[ XML blockout */
+<!--
+ p { margin-top: .75em;
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Captain Jinks, Hero, by Ernest Crosby
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Captain Jinks, Hero
+
+Author: Ernest Crosby
+
+Illustrator: Dan Beard
+
+Release Date: September 22, 2006 [EBook #19353]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CAPTAIN JINKS, HERO ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Jacqueline Jeremy, Suzanne Shell and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<p class="figcenter"><img src="images/cover.jpg" title="cover" id="cover" height="630" width="400" alt="cover" /><br /><br /><br /><br /></p>
+
+
+
+
+
+<p class="figcenter"><br /><br /><br /><br /><a name="frontispiece" id="frontispiece"></a><img src="images/frontispiece.png" title="frontispiece" height="670" width="400" alt="frontispiece" /></p>
+
+<h4>CAPTAIN JINKS, HERO</h4>
+<h6>"SAM WAS TAKEN STRADDLING A CHAIR" &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#Page_124">[<i>Page 124</i>]</a></h6>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p class="figcenter"><img src="images/title.png" title="title" id="title" height="99" width="300" alt="title" /></p>
+<h3>BY</h3>
+
+<h2>ERNEST CROSBY</h2>
+
+<h4><i>Author of<br />
+"Plain Talk in Psalm and Parable"</i><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /></h4>
+
+<h4><i>Illustrations by</i></h4>
+<h2>DAN BEARD<br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /></h2>
+
+<p class="figcenter"><img src="images/logo.png" title="logo" id="logo" height="61" width="99" alt="logo" /></p>
+
+<h5><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />NEW YORK AND LONDON</h5>
+<h4>FUNK &amp; WAGNALLS COMPANY</h4>
+<p class="center">1902</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h5>COPYRIGHT, 1902,</h5>
+<h4>By FUNK &amp; WAGNALLS COMPANY</h4>
+
+<hr style="width: 10%;" />
+
+<p class="center"><i>Registered at Stationers' Hall, London</i></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 10%;" />
+
+<p class="center"><i>Printed in the United States</i></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 10%;" />
+
+<p class="center"><i>Published February, 1902</i></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h4><i>TO</i></h4>
+<h3>F. C.</h3>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum">[Page v]</span></p>
+
+<h3>CONTENTS AND CARTOONS</h3>
+
+<table summary="table of contents">
+<colgroup span="3">
+<col width="5%"></col>
+<col width="80%"></col>
+<col width="15%"></col>
+</colgroup>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdaa">CHAPTER</td>
+<td class="tdb"></td>
+<td class="tdc">PAGE</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tda"><a href="#CHAPTER_I">I.</a></td>
+<td class="tdb"><a href="#CHAPTER_I"><span class="smcap">A Bombshell</span>,</a></td>
+<td class="tdc"><a href="#CHAPTER_I">1</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tda"><a href="#CHAPTER_II">II.</a></td>
+<td class="tdb"><a href="#CHAPTER_II"><span class="smcap">East Point</span>,</a></td>
+<td class="tdc"><a href="#CHAPTER_II">14</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tda"><a href="#CHAPTER_III">III.</a></td>
+<td class="tdb"><a href="#CHAPTER_III"><span class="smcap">Love and Combat</span>,</a></td>
+<td class="tdc"><a href="#CHAPTER_III">34</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tda"><a href="#CHAPTER_IV">IV.</a></td>
+<td class="tdb"><a href="#CHAPTER_IV"><span class="smcap">War and Business</span>,</a></td>
+<td class="tdc"><a href="#CHAPTER_IV">60</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tda"><a href="#CHAPTER_V">V.</a></td>
+<td class="tdb"><a href="#CHAPTER_V"><span class="smcap">Slowburgh</span>,</a></td>
+<td class="tdc"><a href="#CHAPTER_V">89</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tda"><a href="#CHAPTER_VI">VI.</a></td>
+<td class="tdb"><a href="#CHAPTER_VI"><span class="smcap">Off for the Cubapines</span>,</a></td>
+<td class="tdc"><a href="#CHAPTER_VI">117</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tda"><a href="#CHAPTER_VII">VII.</a></td>
+<td class="tdb"><a href="#CHAPTER_VII"><span class="smcap">The Battle of San Diego</span>,</a></td>
+<td class="tdc"><a href="#CHAPTER_VII">151</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tda"><a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">VIII.</a></td>
+<td class="tdb"><a href="#CHAPTER_VIII"><span class="smcap">Among the Moritos</span>,</a></td>
+<td class="tdc"><a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">185</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tda"><a href="#CHAPTER_IX">IX.</a></td>
+<td class="tdb"><a href="#CHAPTER_IX"><span class="smcap">On Duty at Havilla</span>,</a></td>
+<td class="tdc"><a href="#CHAPTER_IX">216</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tda"><a href="#CHAPTER_X">X.</a></td>
+<td class="tdb"><a href="#CHAPTER_X"><span class="smcap">A Great Military Exploit</span>,</a></td>
+<td class="tdc"><a href="#CHAPTER_X">240</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tda"><a href="#CHAPTER_XI">XI.</a></td>
+<td class="tdb"><a href="#CHAPTER_XI"><span class="smcap">A Dinner Party at Gin-Sin</span>,</a></td>
+<td class="tdc"><a href="#CHAPTER_XI">250</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tda"><a href="#CHAPTER_XII">XII.</a></td>
+<td class="tdb"><a href="#CHAPTER_XII"><span class="smcap">The Great White Temple</span>,</a></td>
+<td class="tdc"><a href="#CHAPTER_XII">277</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tda"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIII">XIII.</a></td>
+<td class="tdb"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIII"><span class="smcap">The War-Lord</span>,</a></td>
+<td class="tdc"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIII">310</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tda"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIV">XIV.</a></td>
+<td class="tdb"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIV"><span class="smcap">Home Again</span>,</a></td>
+<td class="tdc"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIV">338</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tda"><a href="#CHAPTER_XV">XV.</a></td>
+<td class="tdb"><a href="#CHAPTER_XV"><span class="smcap">Politics</span>,</a></td>
+<td class="tdc"><a href="#CHAPTER_XV">365</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tda"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVI">XVI.</a></td>
+<td class="tdb"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVI"><span class="smcap">The End</span>,</a></td>
+<td class="tdc"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVI">374</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vii" id="Page_vii">[Page vii]</a></span></p>
+
+<h3>FULL-PAGE ILLUSTRATIONS</h3>
+
+<table summary="illustrations">
+<colgroup span="2">
+<col width="80%"></col>
+<col width="25%"></col>
+</colgroup>
+<tr>
+<td class="tda"></td>
+<td class="tdc">PAGE</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdb"><a href="#frontispiece"><span class="smcap">Captain Jinks, Hero</span>,</a></td>
+<td class="tdc"><a href="#frontispiece"><i>Frontispiece</i></a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdb"><span style="margin-left: 3em;"><i>"Sam was taken straddling a chair."</i></span></td>
+<td class="tdc"></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdb"><a href="#page6"><span class="smcap">War's Demand</span>,</a></td>
+<td class="tdc"><a href="#page6">6</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdb"><span style="margin-left: 3em;"><i>"But what did he want of soldiers?"</i></span></td>
+<td class="tdc"></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdb"><a href="#page56"><span class="smcap">The Manly Sport at East Point</span>,</a></td>
+<td class="tdc"><a href="#page56">56</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdb"><span style="margin-left: 3em;"><i>"Starkey stood off and gave him his 'coup de grace.'"</i></span></td>
+<td class="tdc"></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdb"><a href="#page120"><span class="smcap">A Blood Brotherhood</span>,</a></td>
+<td class="tdc"><a href="#page120">120</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdb"><span style="margin-left: 3em;"><i>"A big company to grab everything.... The </i></span></td>
+<td class="tdc"></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdb"><span style="margin-left: 3em;"><i>Benevolent Assimilation Company, Limited."</i></span></td>
+<td class="tdc"></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdb"><a href="#page206"><span class="smcap">Two of a Kind</span>,</a></td>
+<td class="tdc"><a href="#page206">206</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdb"><span style="margin-left: 3em;"><i>"There are four marks."</i></span></td>
+<td class="tdc"></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdb"><a href="#page238"><span class="smcap">Consent of the Governed</span>,</a></td>
+<td class="tdc"><a href="#page238">238</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdb"><span style="margin-left: 3em;"><i>"What business have these people to talk about </i></span></td>
+<td class="tdc"></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdb"><span style="margin-left: 3em;"><i>equal rights?"</i></span></td>
+<td class="tdc"></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdb"><a href="#page266"><span class="smcap">Winners of the Cross</span>,</a></td>
+<td class="tdc"><a href="#page266">266</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdb"><span style="margin-left: 3em;"><i>"He got the Victorious Cross in South Africa."</i></span></td>
+<td class="tdc"></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdb"><a href="#page324"><span class="smcap">The Perfect Soldier</span>,</a></td>
+<td class="tdc"><a href="#page324">324</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdb"><span style="margin-left: 3em;"><i>"The Emperor gave an exclamation of surprise</i></span></td>
+<td class="tdc"></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdb"><span style="margin-left: 3em;"><i> and delight."</i></span></td>
+<td class="tdc"></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="tdb"><a href="#page392"><span class="smcap">Harmless</span>,</a></td>
+<td class="tdc"><a href="#page392">392</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdb"><span style="margin-left: 3em;"><i>"He sits like that for hours."</i></span></td>
+<td class="tdc"></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[Page 1]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_I" id="CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I</a></h2>
+
+<h1>A Bombshell</h1>
+
+<div class="wrap_area">
+
+<img src="images/chap_1.png" alt="chap_1" height="277" width="400" />
+
+ <div class="shape_wrap">
+ <div style="width: 310px;">&nbsp;</div>
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+
+<p><br /><br /><br /><br />
+LESS my soul! I nearly forgot," exclaimed Colonel Jinks, as he came
+back into the store. "To-morrow is Sam's birthday and I promised Ma to
+bring him home something for a present. Have you got anything for a boy
+six years old?"</p>
+
+<p>"Let me see," answered the young woman behind the counter, turning round
+and looking at an upper shelf. "Why, yes; there's just the thing. It's a
+box of lead soldiers. I've never seen anything like them before"&mdash;and
+she reached up and pulled down a large card<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[Page 2]</a></span>board box. "Just see," she
+added as she opened it. "The officers have swords that come off, and the
+guns come off the men's shoulders; and look at the&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Never mind," interrupted the colonel. "I'm in a hurry. That'll do very
+well. How much is it?"</p>
+
+<p>And two minutes later he went out of the store with the box in his hand
+and got into his buggy, and was soon driving through the streets of
+Homeville on his way to his farm.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>No one had ever asked Colonel Jinks where he had obtained his title. In
+fact, he had never put the question to himself. It was an integral part
+of his person, and as little open to challenge as his hand or his foot.
+There are favored regions of the world's surface where colonels, like
+poets, are born, not made, and good fortune had placed the colonel's
+birthplace in one of them. For the benefit of those of my readers who
+may be prejudiced against war, and in justice to the colonel, it should
+be stated that the only military thing about him was his title. He was a
+mild-man<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Page 3]</a></span>nered man with a long thin black beard and a slight stoop, and
+his experience with fire-arms was confined to the occasional shooting of
+depredatory crows, squirrels, and rats with an ancient fowling-piece.
+Still there is magic in a name. And who knows but that the subtle
+influence of the title of colonel may have unconsciously guided the
+searching eyes of the young saleswoman among the Noah's arks and
+farmyards to the box of lead soldiers?</p>
+
+<p>The lad for whom the present was intended was a happy farmer's boy, an
+only child, for whom the farm was the whole world and who looked upon
+the horses and cows as his fellows. His little red head was constantly
+to be seen bobbing about in the barnyard among the sheep and calves, or
+almost under the horses' feet. The chickens and sparrows and swallows
+were his playmates, and they seemed to have no fear of him. The black
+colt with its thick legs and ruffled mane ran behind its gray dam to
+hide from every one else, but it let Sam pat it without flinching. The
+first new-hatched chicken which had been given to him for his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Page 4]</a></span> very own
+turned out to be a rooster, and when he found that it had to be taken
+from him and beheaded he was quite inconsolable and refused absolutely
+to feast upon his former friend. But with this tenderness of disposition
+Sam had inherited another still stronger trait, and this was a deep
+respect for authority, and such elements of revolt as revealed
+themselves in his grief over his rooster were soon stifled in his little
+heart. He bowed submissively before the powers that be. From the time
+when he first lisped he had called his parents "Colonel Jinks" and "Mrs.
+Jinks." His mother had succeeded with great difficulty in substituting
+the term "Ma" for herself, but she could not make him address his father
+as anything but "Colonel," and after a time his father grew to like it.
+No one knew how Sam had acquired the habit; it was simply the expression
+of an inherently respectful nature. He reverenced his father and loved
+his father's profession of farmer. His earliest pleasure was to hold the
+reins and drive "like Colonel Jinks," and his earliest ambition was to
+become<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Page 5]</a></span> a teamster, that part of the farm work having peculiar
+attractions for him.</p>
+
+<p>In the afternoon on which we were introduced to the Colonel, Sam was
+watching on the veranda for his father's return, and was quick to spy
+the parcel under his arm, and many were the wild guesses he made as to
+its contents. The Colonel left it carelessly upon the hall table, and
+Sam could easily have peeped into it, but he would as soon have thought
+of cutting off his hand.</p>
+
+<p>"What's in that box in the hall, Colonel Jinks?" he asked in an
+embarrassed voice at supper, as he fingered the edge of the tablecloth
+and looked blushingly at his plate.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, that?" replied his father with a wink&mdash;"that's a bombshell." And a
+bombshell indeed it proved to be for the Jinks family.</p>
+
+<p>The box was put upon a table in the room in which little Sam slept with
+his parents, and he was told that he could have it in the morning. He
+was a long time going to sleep that night, trying to imagine the
+contents of the mysterious box. Not until he had quite made<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Page 6]</a></span> up his mind
+that it was a farmyard did he finally drop off. At the first break of
+day Sam was out of bed. With bare feet he walked on tiptoe across the
+cold bare floor and seized the precious box. He lifted the lid at one
+corner and put in his hand and felt what was there, and tried to guess
+what it could be. Perhaps it was a Noah's Ark; but no, if those were
+people there were too many of them. He would have to give it up. He took
+off the cover and looked in. It was not a farmyard, at any rate, and the
+corners of his mouth became tremulous from disappointment. No, they were
+soldiers. But what did he want of soldiers? He had heard of such things,
+but they had never been anything in his life. He had never seen a real
+soldier nor heard of a toy-soldier before, and he did not quite know
+what they were for. He crept back to bed crestfallen, his present in his
+arms. Sitting up in bed he began to investigate the contents of the box.
+It was a complete infantry battalion, and beautiful soldiers they were.
+Their coats were red, their trousers blue, and they<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Page 7]</a></span> wore white
+helmets and carried muskets with bayonets fixed. Sam began to feel
+reconciled. He turned the box upside-down and emptied the soldiers upon
+the counterpane. Then he noticed that they were not all alike. There
+were some officers, who carried swords instead of rifles. He began to
+look for them and single them out, when his eye was caught by a
+magnificent white leaden plume issuing from the helmet of one of them.
+He picked up this soldier, and the sight of him filled him with delight.
+He was taller and broader than the rest, his air was more martial&mdash;there
+was something inspiring in the way in which he held his sword. His
+golden epaulets were a miracle of splendor, but it was the plume, the
+great white plume, that held the boy enthralled. A ray of light from the
+morning sun, reflected by the window of the stable, found its way
+through a chink in the blind and fell just upon this plume. The effect
+was electric. Sam was fascinated, and he continued to hold the lead
+soldier so that the dazzling light should fall on it, gazing upon it in
+an ecstasy.</p>
+
+<p class="figcenter"><a name="page6" id="page6"></a><img src="images/page6.png" title="page6" alt="page6" height="636" width="400" /></p>
+<h4>WAR'S DEMAND</h4>
+<h6>"BUT WHAT DID HE WANT OF SOLDIERS?"<br /><br /><br /><br /></h6>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Page 8]</a></span>Sam spent that entire day in the company of his new soldiers,&mdash;nothing
+could drag him away from them. He made his father show him how they
+should march and form themselves and fight. He drew them up in hollow
+squares facing outward and in hollow squares facing inward, in column of
+fours and in line of battle, in double rank and single rank.</p>
+
+<p>"What are the bayonets for, Colonel Jinks?"</p>
+
+<p>"To stick into bad people, Sam."</p>
+
+<p>"And have the bad people bayonets, too?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Sam."</p>
+
+<p>"Do they stick their bayonets into good people?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I suppose so. Do stop bothering me. If I'd known you'd ask so many
+questions, I'd never have got you the soldiers."</p>
+
+<p>His parents thought that a few days would exhaust the boy's devotion to
+his new toys, but it was not so. He deserted the barnyard for the lead
+soldiers. They were placed on a chair by his bed at night, and he could
+not sleep unless his right hand grasped the white-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Page 9]</a></span>plumed colonel. The
+smell of the fresh paint as it peeled off on his little fingers clung to
+his memory through life as the most delicious of odors. He would tease
+his father to play with the soldiers with him. He would divide the force
+in two, and one side would defend a fort of blocks and books while the
+other assaulted. In these games Sam always insisted in having the plumed
+colonel on his side. Once when Sam's colonel had succeeded in capturing
+a particularly impregnable fortress on top of an unabridged dictionary
+his father remarked casually:</p>
+
+<p>"He's quite a hero, isn't he, Sam?"</p>
+
+<p>"A what?" said Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"A hero."</p>
+
+<p>"What is a hero, Colonel Jinks?" And his father explained to him what a
+hero was, giving several examples from history and fiction. The word
+took the boy's fancy at once. From that day forward the officer was
+colonel no longer, he was a "hero," or rather, "the hero." Sam now began
+to save his pennies for other soldiers, and to beg for more and more as
+suc<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Page 10]</a></span>cessive birthdays and Christmases came round. He played at soldiers
+himself, too, coaxing the less warlike children of the neighborhood to
+join him. But his enthusiasm always left them behind, and they tired
+much sooner than he did of the sport. He persuaded his mother to make
+him a uniform something like that of the lead soldiers, and the stores
+of Homeville were ransacked for drums, swords, and belts and toy-guns.
+He would stand on guard for hours at the barnyard gate, saluting in the
+most solemn manner whoever passed, even if it was only a sparrow. The
+only interest in animals which survived his change of heart was that
+which he now took in horses as chargers. He would ride the farm-horses
+bare-back to the trough, holding the halter in one hand and a tin sword
+in the other with the air of a field-marshal. When strangers tapped him
+on the cheek and asked him&mdash;as is the wont of strangers&mdash;"What are you
+going to be, my boy, when you grow up?" he answered no longer, as he
+used to do, "A driver, sir," but now invariably, "A hero."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Page 11]</a></span>It so happened some two or three years after Sam's mind had begun to
+follow the paths of warfare that his father and mother took him one day
+to an anniversary celebration of the Methodist Church at Homeville, and
+a special parade of the newly organized "John Wesley Boys' Brigade" of
+the church was one of the features of the occasion. If Mrs. Jinks had
+anticipated this, she would doubtless have left Sam at home, for she
+knew that he was already quite sufficiently inclined toward things
+military; but even she could not help enjoying the boy's unmeasured
+delight at this, his first experience of militarism in the flesh. The
+parade was indeed a pretty sight. There were perhaps fifty boys in line,
+ranging from six to eighteen years of age. Their gray uniforms were
+quite new and the gilt letters "J.W.B.B." on their caps shone brightly.
+They marched along with their miniature muskets and fixed bayonets,
+their chubby, kissable faces all a-smile, as they sang "Onward,
+Christian Soldiers," with words adapted by their pastor:</p>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 15em;">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Page 12]</a></span>
+"Onward, Christian soldiers,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">'Gainst the heathen crew!</span><br />
+In the name of Jesus<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Let us run them through."</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>By a curious coincidence their captain had a white feather in his cap,
+suggesting at a considerable distance the plume of the leaden "hero."
+Sam was overcome with joy. He pulled the "hero" from his pocket (he
+always carried it about with him) and compared the two warriors. The
+"hero" was still unique, incomparable, but Sam realized that he was an
+ideal which might be lived up to, not an impossible dream, not the
+denizen of an inaccessible heaven. From that day he bent his little
+energies to the task of removing his family to Homeville.</p>
+
+<p>It is not so much strength as perseverance which moves the world.
+Colonel Jinks had laid up a competence and had always intended to
+retire, when he could afford it, to the market town. Among other things,
+the school facilities would be much better in town than in the country.
+Mrs. Jinks in a moment of folly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Page 13]</a></span> took the side of the boy, and, whatever
+may have been the controlling and predominating cause, the fact is that,
+when Sam had attained the age of twelve, the Colonel sold the farm and
+bought one of the best houses in Homeville. Sam at once became a member
+of the John Wesley Brigade and showed an aptitude for soldiering truly
+amazing. Before he was fourteen he was captain, and wore, himself, the
+coveted white feather, and his military duties became the absorbing
+interest of his life. He thought and spoke of nothing else, and he was
+universally known in the town as "Captain Jinks," which was often
+abbreviated to "Cap." No one ever passed boyhood and youth in such
+congenial surroundings and with such complete satisfaction as "Cap"
+Jinks of the John Wesley Boys' Brigade.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Page 14]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_II" id="CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II</a></h2>
+
+<h1>East Point</h1>
+
+<div class="wrap_area">
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+
+<p><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
+UT our relation to our environments will change, however much pleased
+we may be with them, and "Cap" Jinks found himself gradually growing too
+old for his brigade. The younger boys and their parents began to
+complain that he was unreasonably standing in the way of their
+promotion, and a fiery mustache gave signs to the world that he was now
+something more than a boy. Still he could not bring himself to
+relinquish the uniform and the white plume. A life without<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Page 15]</a></span> military
+trimmings was not to be thought of, and there was no militia at
+Homeville. Consequently he remained in the Boys' Brigade as long as he
+could. When at last he saw that he must resign&mdash;he was now
+two-and-twenty&mdash;he felt that there was only one course open to him, and
+that was to join the army; and he broached this plan to his parents. His
+mother did not like the idea of giving up her only son to such a
+profession, but Colonel Jinks took kindly to the suggestion. It would
+bring a little real militarism into the family and give a kind of <i>ex
+post facto</i> justification to his ancient title. "Sam, my boy," said he,
+"you're a chip of the old block. You'll keep up the family tradition and
+be a colonel like me. I will write to your Uncle George about it
+to-morrow. He'll get you an appointment to East Point without any
+trouble. Sam, I'm proud of you."</p>
+
+<p>Uncle George Jinks, the only brother of the Colonel, was a member of
+Congress from a distant district, who had a good deal of influence with
+the Administration. The Colonel<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Page 16]</a></span> wrote to him asking for the cadetship
+and rehearsing at length the young captain's unusual qualifications and
+his military enthusiasm. A week later he received the answer. His
+brother informed him that the request could not have come at a more
+opportune moment, as he had a vacancy to fill and had been on the point
+of calling a public examination of young men in his district for the
+purpose of selecting a candidate; but in view of the evident fitness of
+his nephew, he would alter his plans and offer him the place without
+further ceremony. He wished only that Sam would do credit to the name of
+Jinks.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>It was on a beautiful day in June that "Cap" Jinks bade farewell to
+Homeville. The family came out in front of the house, keeping back their
+tears as best they could at this the first parting; but Sam, tho he
+loved them well, had no room in his heart for regret. There was a vision
+of glory beckoning him on which obliterated all other feelings. The
+Boys' Brigade was drawn up at the side of the road and presented arms as
+he drove by, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Page 17]</a></span> he saw in this the promise of greater things. As he
+sat on the back seat of the wagon by himself behind the driver, he took
+from his pocket the old original "hero," the lead officer of his
+boyhood, and gazed at it smiling. "Now I am to be a real hero," he
+thought, "and all the world will repeat the name of Sam Jinks and read
+about his exploits." He put the toy carefully back in his breast pocket.
+It had become the talisman of his life and the symbol of his ambitions.</p>
+
+<p>The long railway journey to East Point was full of interest to the young
+traveler, who had never been away from home before. His mind was full of
+military things, but he saw no uniforms, no arms, no fortifications
+anywhere. How could people live in such a careless, unnatural fashion?
+He blushed with shame as he thought to himself that a foreigner might
+apparently journey through the country from one end to the other without
+knowing that there was such a thing as a soldier in the land. What a
+travesty this was on civilization! How baseless the proud<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Page 18]</a></span> boasts of
+national greatness when only an insignificant and almost invisible few
+paid any attention to the claims of military glory! The outlook was
+indeed dismal, but Sam was no pessimist. Obstacles were in his
+dictionary "things to be removed." "I shall have a hand in changing all
+this," he muttered aloud. "When I come home a conquering general with
+the grateful country at my feet, these wretched toilers in the field and
+at the desk will have learned that there is a nobler activity, and
+uniforms will spring up like flowers before the sun." Where Sam acquired
+his command of the English language and his poetic sensibility it would
+be difficult to say. It is enough to know that these faculties
+endeavored, not without success, to keep pace with his growing ambition
+for glory.</p>
+
+<p>Sam's first weeks at East Point were among the happiest in his life.
+Here, at any rate, military affairs were in the ascendant. His ideal of
+a country was simply an East Point infinitely enlarged. His neat gray
+uniform seemed already to transform him into a hero.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Page 19]</a></span> When he thought of
+the great soldiers who had been educated at this very place, he felt a
+proud spirit swelling in his bosom. One night in a lonely part of the
+parade-ground he solemnly knelt down and kissed the sod. The military
+cemetery aroused his enthusiasm, and the captured cannon, the names of
+battles inscribed here and there on the rocks, and the portraits of
+generals in the mess-hall, all in turn fascinated him. As a new arrival
+he was treated with scant courtesy and drilled very hard, but he did not
+care. Tho his squad-fellows were almost overcome with fatigue, he was
+always sorry when the drill came to an end. He never had enough of
+marching and counter-marching, of shouldering and ordering arms. Even
+the "setting-up" exercises filled him with joy. When cavalry drills
+began he was still more in his element. His old teamster days now stood
+him in good stead. In a week he could do anything with a horse,&mdash;he
+understood the horse, and the horse trusted him. When he first emerged
+from the riding-school on horseback in a squadron and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Page 20]</a></span> took part in a
+drill on the great parade-ground, he was prouder than ever before. He
+went through it in a delirium, feeling like a composite photograph of
+Washington and Napoleon. When the big flag went up in the morning to the
+top of the towering flag-staff, Sam's spirits went up with it, and they
+floated there, vibrating, hovering, all day; but when the flag came down
+at night, Sam did not come down. He was always up, living an ecstatic
+dream-life in the seventh heaven.</p>
+
+<p>One night as Sam lay in his tent dreaming that he had just won the
+battle of Waterloo, he heard a voice close to his ears.</p>
+
+<p>"Jinks!"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"Here is an order for you to report at once up in the woods at old Fort
+Hut. The password is 'Old Gory'; say that, and the sentinel will let you
+out of camp. Go along and report to the colonel at once."</p>
+
+<p>"What is it?" cried Sam. "Is it an attack?"</p>
+
+<p>"Very likely," said the voice. "Now wake<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Page 21]</a></span> up your snoring friend there,
+for he's got to go too. What's his name?"</p>
+
+<p>"Cleary," answered Sam, and he proceeded gently to awaken his tent-mate
+and break the news to him that the enemy was advancing. It was not easy
+to rouse the young man, but finally they both succeeded in dressing in
+the dark, and hastened away between the tents across the most remote
+sentry beat. They were duly challenged, whispered the countersign, and
+in a few moments were climbing the rough and thickly wooded hill to the
+fort.</p>
+
+<p>"I wonder who the enemy is," said Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"Enemy? Nonsense," replied Cleary. "They're going to haze us."</p>
+
+<p>"Haze us? Good heavens!" said Sam. He had heard of hazing before, but he
+had been living in such a realm of imagination for the past weeks that
+the gossip had never really reached his consciousness, and now that he
+was confronted with the reality he hardly knew how to face it.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Cleary, "they're going to haze<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Page 22]</a></span> us, and I wonder why I ever
+came to this rotten place anyhow."</p>
+
+<p>"Don't, don't say that," cried Sam. "You were at Hale University for a
+year or two, weren't you? Did they do any hazing there?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not a bit. They stopped it all long ago. The professors there say it
+isn't manly."</p>
+
+<p>"That can't be true," said Sam, "or they wouldn't do it here. But why
+has it kept up here when they've stopped it at all the universities?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know," said Cleary, "but perhaps it's wearing uniforms. I feel
+sort of different in a uniform from out of it, don't you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Of course I do," exclaimed Sam. "I feel as if I were walking on air and
+rising into another plane of being."</p>
+
+<p>"Well&mdash;ye-es&mdash;perhaps, but I didn't mean that exactly," answered Cleary.
+"But somehow I feel more like hitting a fellow over the head when I'm in
+uniform than when I'm not, don't you?"</p>
+
+<p>"I hadn't thought of that," said Sam, "but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Page 23]</a></span> I really think I do. Do you
+think they'll hit us over the head?"</p>
+
+<p>"There's no telling. There's Captain Clark of the first class and
+Saunders of the third who are running the hazing just now, they say, and
+they're pretty tough chaps."</p>
+
+<p>"Is that Captain Clark with the squeaky voice?" asked Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, he spoiled it taking tabasco sauce when he was hazed three years
+ago. They say it took all the mucous membrane off his epiglottis."</p>
+
+<p>There was silence for a time.</p>
+
+<p>"Saunders is that fellow with the crooked nose, isn't he?" asked Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; when they hazed him last year they made him stand with his nose in
+the crack of a door until they came back, and they forgot they had left
+him, and somebody shut the door on his nose by mistake. But he's an
+awfully plucky chap. He just went on standing there as if nothing had
+happened."</p>
+
+<p>"Splendid, wasn't it?" cried Sam, beginning to see the heroic
+possibilities of hazing. "Do<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Page 24]</a></span> you suppose that they have always hazed
+here?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, of course."</p>
+
+<p>"And that General German and General Meriden and all the rest were hazed
+here just like this?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, to be sure."</p>
+
+<p>Sam felt his spirits soaring again.</p>
+
+<p>"Then I wouldn't miss it for anything," said he. "It has always been
+done and by the greatest men, and it must be the right thing to do. Just
+think of it. Meriden has walked up this very hill like you and me to be
+hazed!" There was exultation in his tone.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I only hope Meriden looked forward to it with greater joy than I
+do," said Cleary, with a dry laugh. "But here we are."</p>
+
+<p>Before them under the ruined walls of the old redoubt called Fort Hut,
+stood a small group of cadets, indistinctly lighted by several moving
+dark-lanterns. While they were still twenty yards away, two men sprang
+out from behind a tree, grasped them by the arms, tied their elbows
+behind them, and, leading them<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Page 25]</a></span> off through the woods for a short
+distance, bound them to a tree out of sight of the rest, and left them
+there with strict injunctions not to move. It never entered into the
+head of either of the prisoners that they might disobey this order, and
+they waited patiently for events to take their course. As far as they
+could make out by listening, some others of their classmates were
+already undergoing the ordeal of hazing. They could hear water
+splashing, suppressed screams and groans, and continual whispering. The
+light of the lanterns flickered through the trees, now and then
+illuminating the topmost branches. Presently a man came and sat down
+near them, and said:</p>
+
+<p>"Don't get impatient. We're nearly ready for you." It was the voice of
+one of their two captors.</p>
+
+<p>"May I ask you a question, sir?" said Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"Blaze away," responded the man.</p>
+
+<p>"Was General Gramp hazed at this same place, do you know?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said the man. "In this very same<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Page 26]</a></span> place. And while he was waiting
+he sat on that very log over there."</p>
+
+<p>Sam peered with awe into the darkness.</p>
+
+<p>"May I&mdash;do you think I might&mdash;just sit on it, too?" asked Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly," said the cadet affably, untying the rope from the tree and
+leading Sam over to the log, where he tied him again.</p>
+
+<p>Sam sat down reverently.</p>
+
+<p>"How well preserved the log is," said Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said the guard; "of course they wouldn't let it decay. It's a
+sort of historical monument. They overhaul it every year. Anyway it's
+ironwood."</p>
+
+<p>Sam thought to himself that perhaps some day the log might be noted as
+the spot where the great General Jinks sat while awaiting his hazing,
+and tears of joy rolled softly down over his freckles. He was still lost
+in this emotion when steps were heard approaching and the lantern-light
+drew nearer.</p>
+
+<p>"Come, Smith, bring the prisoners in," said the same voice that had
+waked Sam in his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Page 27]</a></span> tent. He looked at the speaker and recognized the
+tall, hatchet-faced, crook-nosed Saunders. Two or three cadets
+unfastened Sam and Cleary, still, however, leaving their arms bound
+behind them, and brought them to the open place under the wall where Sam
+had first seen them. Sam now saw nothing; walking in the steps of
+Generals Gramp and German, he felt the ecstasy of a Christian martyr. He
+would not have exchanged his lot with any one in the world. Cleary,
+however, who possessed a rather mundane spirit, took in the scene.
+Twenty or thirty cadets were either standing or seated on the ground
+round a circle which was illuminated by several dark-lanterns placed
+upon the ground. In the center of the circle were a tub of water, some
+boards and pieces of rope, and two large baskets whose contents were
+concealed by a cloth.</p>
+
+<p>"Come, boys," squeaked Captain Clark, a short, thickset fellow who
+looked much older than the others and who spoke in a peculiar cracked
+voice. "Come, let's begin by bracing them up."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Page 28]</a></span>"Bracing" was a process adopted for the purpose of making the patient
+assume the position of a soldier, only very much exaggerated&mdash;a position
+which after a few minutes becomes almost intolerable. Cleary and Sam
+were promptly taken and tied back to back to an upright stake which had
+escaped their observation. They were tied at the ankle, knee, waist,
+under the arms, and at the chin and forehead. By tightening these ropes
+as desired and placing pieces of wood in between, against the back, the
+hazers made each victim stand with the chest pushed preternaturally
+forward and the chin and abdomen drawn preternaturally back. Cleary
+found this position irksome from the start, and soon decidedly painful,
+but Sam was proof against it. In fact, he had been practising just this
+position for eight or ten years, and it now came to him naturally.
+Cleary soon showed marks of discomfort. It was a warm night, and the
+sweat began to stand out on his forehead. As far as he was concerned the
+hazing was already a success, but Sam evidently needed something more.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Page 29]</a></span>"Here, give me the tabasco bottle," whispered Clark to Smith.</p>
+
+<p>As the latter brought the article from one of the baskets, Sam said to
+him in a low voice,</p>
+
+<p>"Did General Gramp take it out of that same bottle?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Smith; "strange to say, it's the very same one, and all
+through his life afterward he took tabasco three times a day."</p>
+
+<p>Sam rolled his eyes painfully to catch a glimpse of the historic bottle.
+Clark took it and applied it to Sam's lips. It was red-hot stuff, and
+the whole audience rose to watch its effect upon the victim at the
+stake. Sam swallowed it as if it had been lemonade. In fact, he was only
+aware of the honor that he was receiving. He had only enough earthly
+consciousness left to notice that one of the cadets in the crowd was
+photographing him with a kodak, and accordingly he did not even wink.</p>
+
+<p>"By Jove, he's lined with tin," ejaculated Saunders, whose deflected
+nose gave him a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Page 30]</a></span> sinister expression. "You ought to have had his
+plumbing, Clark."</p>
+
+<p>"Shut up and mind your own business," said Clark. "Come, let's give him
+the tub. This won't do. That other chap's happy enough where he is."</p>
+
+<p>Sam was untied again and led forward to the middle of the ring, the
+faithful Smith still keeping close to him.</p>
+
+<p>"Is that an old tub?" whispered Sam, still standing stiffly as if his
+body had permanently taken the "braced" shape.</p>
+
+<p>"I should say so. All the generals were ducked in it. Kneel down there
+and look in. Do you see that round dent in the middle? That's where
+General Meriden bumped his head in it. He never did things by halves."</p>
+
+<p>Sam did as he was told, and he felt that he was in a proper attitude
+upon his knees at such a shrine. To him it was holy water.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, Jinks," squeaked Clark.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir," answered Sam.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Page 31]</a></span>"Stand on your head now in that tub, and be quick about it."</p>
+
+<p>Sam fixed his mind upon General Meriden in the same circumstances, drew
+in his breath, and endeavored to stand on his head in a foot of water,
+holding on to the rim of the tub with his hands. His legs waved
+irresolutely in the air with no apparent unity of motive, and bubbles
+gurgled about his neck and shoulders.</p>
+
+<p>"Grab his legs!" shouted Clark.</p>
+
+<p>Two cadets obeyed the order, and Clark took out his watch to time the
+ordeal. The instants that passed seemed like an age.</p>
+
+<p>"Isn't time up?" whispered Saunders.</p>
+
+<p>"Shut up, you fool, haven't I got my watch open?" replied Clark. "But,
+good heavens!" he added, "take him out&mdash;I believe my watch has stopped."
+And he shook it and put it to his ear.</p>
+
+<p>Sam was hauled out and laid on the grass, but he was entirely
+unconscious. His tormentors were thoroughly scared. Fortunately they had
+all gone through a course of "first aid to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Page 32]</a></span> the injured," and they
+immediately took the proper precautions, holding him up by the feet
+until the water ran out of his mouth and nose, and then rolling him on
+the tub and manipulating his arms. At last some faint indications of
+breathing set in, and they concluded to carry him down to his tent.
+Using two boards as a stretcher, six of them acted as bearers, and the
+procession moved toward the camp. Cleary would have been forgotten, had
+he not asked them to untie him, which they did, and he followed behind,
+walking most stiffly. As they neared the camp the party separated. Two
+of the strongest took Sam, whose mind was wandering, to his tent, and
+Clark made Cleary come and spend the night with him, lest anxiety at
+Sam's condition might impel him to report the matter to the authorities.
+How they all got to their tents in safety, and how the password happened
+to be known to all of them, we must leave it to the officers in command
+at East Point to explain. Sam was dropped upon his bunk without much
+consideration. The two cadets waited long enough<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Page 33]</a></span> to make sure that he
+was breathing, and then they decamped.</p>
+
+<p>"It's really a shame," said Smith to Saunders, who tented with him,
+before he turned over to sleep; "it's really a shame to leave that
+fellow there without a doctor, but we'd all get bounced if it got out."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Page 34]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_III" id="CHAPTER_III"></a>CHAPTER III</h2>
+
+<h1>Love and Combat</h1>
+
+
+
+<div class="wrap_area">
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+ </div>
+
+<p><br /><br />
+T reveille the next morning, as the roll was called in the company
+street, Private Jinks did not answer to his name. They found him in his
+tent delirious and in a high fever. His pillow was a puddle of water. It
+was necessary to have him taken to the hospital, and before long he was
+duly installed there in a small separate room. The captain of his
+company instituted an inquiry<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Page 35]</a></span> into the causes of his illness and
+reported that he had undoubtedly fainted away and thrown water over
+himself to bring himself to. The surgeon in charge of the hospital
+thereupon certified that this was the case, and in this way bygones
+officially became bygones. It was late in the afternoon before Sam
+recovered consciousness. A negro soldier, who had been detailed to act
+as hospital orderly, was adjusting his bed-clothes, and Sam opened his
+eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Gettin' better, Massa Jinks?" said the man, smiling his good will.</p>
+
+<p>"Company Jinks, all present and accounted for," cried Sam, saluting as
+if he were a first sergeant on parade.</p>
+
+<p>"You're here in de hospital, Massa," said the man, who was known as
+Mose; "you ain't on parade sure."</p>
+
+<p>Sam looked round inquiringly.</p>
+
+<p>"Is this the hospital?" he asked. "Why am I in the hospital?"</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p>"You've been hurtin' yourself somehow," answered Mose with a low
+chuckle. "There's<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Page 36]</a></span> lots of fourth-class men hurts themselves. But you'll
+be all right in a week."</p>
+
+<p>"In a week!" exclaimed Sam. "But I can't skip drills and everything for
+a week!"</p>
+
+<p>"Now, don't you worry, Massa Jinks. You're pretty lucky. We've had some
+men here hurted themselves that had to go home for good, and some of
+'em, two or three, never got well, and died. But bless you, you'll soon
+be all right. Doctor said so."</p>
+
+<p>Sam had to get what consolation he could from this. His memory began to
+come back, and he recalled the beginning of the hazing.</p>
+
+<p>"Is Cadet Cleary in the hospital?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"No, sah."</p>
+
+<p>"Won't you try to get word to him to come and see me here, if he can?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Massa, I'll try. But they won't always let 'em come. Maybe they'll
+let him Sunday afternoon."</p>
+
+<p>Sure enough, Cleary succeeded in getting permission to pay Sam a call on
+Sunday.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, old man, I've got to thank you for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Page 37]</a></span> letting me out of a lot of
+trouble," he cried as he clasped Sam's hand and sat down by the bedside.</p>
+
+<p>"Did they duck you, too?" asked Sam. "You must be stronger than I am.
+It's a shame I couldn't stand it."</p>
+
+<p>"No. When they'd nearly killed you they let me off. Don't you be ashamed
+of anything. They kept you in there five minutes&mdash;I'm not sure it wasn't
+ten. If you weren't half a fish, you'd never have come to, that's all
+there is of that. And after you'd drunk all that tabasco, too!"</p>
+
+<p>"Is my voice quite right?" asked Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, thank fortune, there's no danger of your squeaking like Captain
+Clark."</p>
+
+<p>Sam sighed.</p>
+
+<p>"And is my nose quite straight?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, of course; why shouldn't it be?"</p>
+
+<p>Sam sighed again.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm afraid," he said, "that no one will know that I've been hazed."</p>
+
+<p>He was silent for a few minutes. Then a smile came over his face.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Page 38]</a></span>"Wasn't it grand," he went on, "to think that we were following in the
+steps of all the great generals of the century! When I put my head into
+the tub and felt my legs waving in the air, I thought of General Meriden
+striking his head so manfully against the bottom, and I thanked heaven
+that I was suffering for my country. I tried to bump my head hard too,
+and it does ache just a little; but I'm afraid it won't show."</p>
+
+<p>He felt his head with his hand and looked inquiringly at Cleary, but his
+friend's face gave him no encouragement, and he made no answer.</p>
+
+<p>"I think I saw somebody taking a snap-shot of me up there," said Sam.
+"Do you think I can get a print of it? I wish you'd see if you can get
+one for me."</p>
+
+<p>"It's not so easy," said Cleary. "He was a third-class man, and of
+course we are not allowed to speak to him. They've just divided us
+fourth-class men up among the rest to do chores for them. My boss is
+Captain Clark, and he's the only upper-class man I can speak<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Page 39]</a></span> to, and he
+would knock me down if I asked him about it. You'd better try yourself
+when you come out."</p>
+
+<p>"Who am I assigned to?" asked Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"To Cadet Smith, and he's a much easier man. You're in luck. But my
+time's up. Good-by," and Cleary hurried away.</p>
+
+<p>Sam Jinks left the hospital just one week after his admission. He might
+have stayed a day or two longer, but he insisted that he was well enough
+and prevailed upon the doctor to let him go. He set to work at once with
+great energy to make up for lost time and to learn all that had been
+taught in the week in the way of drilling. The morning after his
+release, when guard-mounting was over, Cleary told him that Cadet Smith
+wished to speak to him, and Sam went at once to report to him.</p>
+
+<p>"Jinks," said Smith, when Sam had approached and saluted, "I am going
+down that path there to the right. Wait till I am out of sight and then
+follow me down. I don't want any one to see us together."</p>
+
+<p>"All right, sir," said Sam.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Page 40]</a></span>When Smith had duly disappeared, Sam followed him and found him awaiting
+him in a secluded spot by the river. Sam saluted again as he came up to
+him.</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose you understand, Jinks, that none of us upper-class men can
+afford to be seen talking to you fourth-class beasts?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"Of course, it wouldn't do. Don't look at me that way, Jinks. When an
+upper-class man is polite enough to speak to you, you should look down,
+and not into his face."</p>
+
+<p>Sam dropped his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, Jinks, I wanted to tell you that you've been assigned to me to do
+such work as I want done. I'm going to treat you well, because you seem
+to be a pretty decent fellow for a beast."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you, sir," said Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, you seem disposed to behave as you should, and I don't want to
+have any trouble with you. All you'll have to do is to see that my boots
+are blacked every night, keep my shirts and clothes in order, take my
+things to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Page 41]</a></span> the wash, clean out my tent, and be somewhere near so that
+you can come when I call you; do you understand?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, then, of course, you must make my bed, and bring water for me, and
+keep my equipments clean. If there's anything else, I'll tell you. If
+you don't do everything I tell you, I'll report it to the class
+committee and you'll have to fight, do you understand?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"That will do, Jinks; you may go."</p>
+
+<p>"I beg your pardon, sir. May I ask you a question?"</p>
+
+<p>"What?" shouted Smith. "Do you mean to speak to me without being spoken
+to?"</p>
+
+<p>"I know it's very wrong, sir," said Sam, "but there's something I want
+very much, and I don't know how else to get it."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I'll forgive you this time, because I'm an easy-going fellow. If
+it had been anybody else but me, you'd have got your first fight. What
+is it? Out with it."</p>
+
+<p>"Please, sir, when I was haz&mdash;I mean exer<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Page 42]</a></span>cised the other night, I saw
+somebody taking photographs of it. Do you think I could get copies of
+them?"</p>
+
+<p>"What do you want them for?" asked Smith suspiciously.</p>
+
+<p>"I'd like to have something to remember it by," said Sam. "I want to be
+able to show that I did just what Generals Gramp and German did."</p>
+
+<p>Smith smiled. "All right," he replied. "I'll get them for you if I can,
+and I'll expect you to work all the better for me. Now go."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, thank you, sir&mdash;thank you!" cried Sam; and he went.</p>
+
+<p>That night he and Cleary talked over the situation in whispers as they
+lay in their bunks.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't like this business at all," said Cleary. "I didn't come to East
+Point to black boots and make beds. It's a fraud, that's what it is."</p>
+
+<p>"Please don't say that," said Sam. "They've always done it, haven't
+they?"</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose so."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Page 43]</a></span>"Then it must be right. Do you think General Meriden would have done it
+if it had been wrong? We must learn obedience, mustn't we? That's a
+soldier's first duty. We must obey, and how could we learn to obey
+better than by being regular servants?"</p>
+
+<p>"And how about obeying the rules of the post that forbid the whole
+business, hazing and all?" asked Cleary.</p>
+
+<p>Sam was nonplussed for a moment.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm not a good hand at logic," he said. "Perhaps you can argue me down,
+but I <i>feel</i> that it's all right. I wouldn't miss this special duty
+business for anything. It will make me a better soldier and officer."</p>
+
+<p>"Sam," said Cleary, who had now got intimate enough with him to use his
+Christian name,&mdash;"Sam, you were just built for this place, but I'll be
+hanged if I was."</p>
+
+<p>The summer hastened on to its close, and the first-and third-class men
+had a continual round of social joys. The hotel on the post was full of
+pretty girls who doted on uniforms, and there were hops, and balls, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Page 44]</a></span>
+flirtations galore. The "beasts" of the fourth class were shut out from
+this paradise, but they could not help seeing it, and Sam used his eyes
+with the rest of them. He had never before seen even at a distance such
+elegance and luxury. The young women especially, in their gay summer
+gowns, drew his attention away sometimes even from military affairs.
+There was a weak spot in his make-up of which he had never before been
+aware. There was one young woman in particular who caught his eye, a
+vision of dark hair and black eyes which lived on in his imagination
+when it had vanished from his external sight. Sam actually fancied that
+the young woman looked at him with approving eyes, and he was emboldened
+to look back. It was impossible for social intercourse between a young
+lady in society and a fourth-class "beast" to go further than this, and
+at this point their relations stood, but Sam was sure that the maiden
+liked his looks. It so happened that her most devoted admirer was none
+other than Cadet Saunders, who was continually hovering<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Page 45]</a></span> about her. Sam
+was devoured with jealousy. In his low estate he was even unable to find
+out her name for a long time. He could not speak to upper-class men, and
+his classmates knew nothing of the gay world above them. However, he
+discovered at last that she was a Miss Hunter from the West. His
+informant was a waiter at the hotel whom he waylaid on his way out one
+night, for cadets were forbidden to enter the hotel.</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose she has her father and mother with her?" Sam suggested.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no, sir. She's all alone. She's been here all alone every summer
+this six years."</p>
+
+<p>"That's strange," said Sam. "Hasn't she a protector?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes! she has protectors enough. You see, she's always engaged."</p>
+
+<p>"Engaged!" exclaimed the unhappy youth. "How long has she been engaged,
+and to whom?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, this time she's only been engaged two weeks," said the waiter,
+"and it's Cadet Saunders she's engaged to; but don't worry,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Page 46]</a></span> sir, it's
+an old story. She's been engaged to a different man every summer for six
+years, and at first she generally had two men a summer. She began with
+officers of the first class, two in a year; then she fell off to one in
+a season; then she dropped to third class; and now she has Mr. Saunders
+because his nose isn't just right, sir, if I may say so."</p>
+
+<p>Sam hardly knew what to think. The news of her engagement had plunged
+him into despair, but the information that engagement was with her a
+temporary matter was decidedly welcome; and even if it were couched in
+language that could hardly be called flattering, still he was glad to
+hear it. Sam thanked the waiter and gave him a silver coin which he
+could ill spare from his pay, but he was satisfied that he had got his
+money's worth.</p>
+
+<p>Sam ruminated deep and long over this hard-wrung gossip. He could not
+believe that the object of his dreams was no longer in her first
+girlhood. There was some mistake. Then it was absurd to suppose that she
+was reduced to the acceptance of inferior third-class men.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Page 47]</a></span> How could a
+waiter understand the charms of Saunders' historical nose? Evidently she
+had selected him from the whole corps on account of his exploits as an
+object of hazing. Sam almost wished that Saunders' nose was a blemish,
+for it would help his chances, but candor obliged him to admit that it
+was, on the contrary, one of his rival's strong points, and he sighed
+once again to think that he bore no marks on his own person of the
+hazing ordeal. All that Sam could do now was to wait. He recognized the
+fact that no girl with self-respect would speak to a "beast," and he
+determined to be patient until in another twelvemonth he should have
+become a full-fledged third-class man himself. The other engagements had
+proved ephemeral, why not that with Saunders? Fortunately this new
+sentiment of Sam's did not interfere with his military work. Instead of
+that it inspired him with new fervor, and he now strove to be a perfect
+soldier not only for its own sake, but for her sake too.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile Saunders began to imagine that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Page 48]</a></span> Sam looked at his <i>fianc&eacute;e</i> a
+little too frequently and long, and he determined to punish him for it.
+How was this to be done? In his deportment toward the upper-class men
+Sam was absolutely perfect, and had begun to win golden opinions from
+instructors and cadets alike. He always did more than was required of
+him, and did it better than was expected. He treated all upper-class men
+with profound respect, and he did it without effort because it came
+natural to him. He never ventured to look them in the eye, and he
+blushed and stammered when they addressed him. Saunders tried to find a
+flaw in his behavior so that he might have the matter taken up by the
+class committee, but there was no flaw to be found. Self-respect
+prevented him from giving the real reason, his jealousy; besides, it was
+out of the question to drag in the name of a lady.</p>
+
+<p>One day Saunders, Captain Clark, Smith, and some other cadets were
+discussing the matter of fourth-class discipline, and the merits of some
+recent fights which had been<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Page 49]</a></span> ordered between fourth-class men and their
+seniors for the purpose of punishing the former, when Saunders tried
+skilfully to lead the conversation round to the case of Sam Jinks.</p>
+
+<p>"There are some fellows in the fourth class that need a little taking
+down, don't you think so?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"If there are, take them down," said Clark laconically. "Who do you
+mean?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, there's that Jinks fellow, for instance. He struts about as if he
+were a major-general."</p>
+
+<p>"He is pretty well set up, that's a fact," said Smith, "but you can't
+object to that. I must say he does his work for me up to the handle.
+Look at that for a shine"; and he exhibited one of his boots to the
+crowd.</p>
+
+<p>"I wonder if he can fight?" said Saunders, changing his tactics. "He's a
+well-built chap, and I'd like to see what he can do. How can we get him
+to fight if we can't haul him up for misbehaving?"</p>
+
+<p>"It's easy enough, if he's a gentleman," an<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Page 50]</a></span>swered Clark, who was a
+recognized authority in matters of etiquette.</p>
+
+<p>"How?" asked Saunders.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, all you've got to do is to insult him and then he'll have to
+fight."</p>
+
+<p>"How would you insult him?" asked Saunders eagerly.</p>
+
+<p>"The best way," said Clark sententiously, "is to call him a hog in
+public, and then, if he is a gentleman, he will be ready to fight."</p>
+
+<p>"I'll do it," said Saunders. "I'm dying to see that fellow fight. Of
+course, I don't care to fight him. We can get Starkie to do that, I
+suppose."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Clark. "We'll select somebody that can handle him and teach
+him his place, depend on that."</p>
+
+<p>Saunders set out at once to carry out the program. As soon as he found
+Jinks in a group of fourth-class men, he went up to him, and cried in a
+loud voice,</p>
+
+<p>"Jinks, you're a hog."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir," said Sam, saluting respectfully.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Page 51]</a></span>"Do you hear what I say? you're a wretched hog."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"You're a hog, and if you're a gentleman you'll be ready to fight if
+you're asked to."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir," responded Sam, as Saunders turned on his heel and walked
+away. Somehow Clark's plan did not seem to have worked to perfection,
+but it must be all right, and he hastened to report the affair to his
+class committee, who promptly determined that Cadet Jinks must fight,
+and that their classmate Starkie be requested to represent them in the
+encounter. Starkie weighed at least thirty pounds more than Sam, was
+considerably taller, had several inches longer reach of arm, and was a
+practised boxer. Sam had never boxed in his life. These facts seemed to
+the committee only to enhance the interesting character of the affair.</p>
+
+<p>"We're much obliged to you, Saunders," said the chairman. "You've done
+just right to call our attention to this matter. These<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Page 52]</a></span> beasts must be
+taught their place. The only manly way to settle it is by having Starkie
+fight him. You have acted like a gentleman and a soldier."</p>
+
+<p>The fight was arranged for a Saturday afternoon on the familiar
+hazing-ground near the old fort. Sam selected Cleary and another
+classmate for his seconds, and Starkie chose Saunders and Smith.</p>
+
+<p>"Jinks," said Smith in a moment of unwonted affability, "you've got a
+chance now to distinguish yourself. I'll see that you get fair play. Of
+course, you'll have to fight to a finish, but you must take your
+medicine like a man."</p>
+
+<p>"Did General Gramp ever have to fight here?" asked Sam, touching his
+cap.</p>
+
+<p>"Of course," said Smith, "and on that very ground, too. You don't seem
+to have read much history."</p>
+
+<p>The prospect of the fight gave Sam intense joy. His sense of glory
+seemed to obliterate all anticipation of pain. This was his first
+opportunity to become a real hero. When he was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Page 53]</a></span> hazed he only had to
+suffer; now, on the other hand, he was called upon to act. He got Cleary
+to show him some of the simplest rules of boxing, and he practised what
+little he could during the three intervening days. He was quite
+determined to knock Starkie out or die in the attempt.</p>
+
+<p>At four o'clock on the day indicated a crowd of first-and third-class
+men were collected to see the great event. No fourth-class men were
+allowed to attend except the two seconds. A ring was formed; Captain
+Clark was chosen as referee; and the two combatants, stripped to the
+waist, put on their hard gloves and entered the ring. Starkie eyed his
+antagonist critically, while Sam with a heavenly smile on his face did
+not focus his eyes at all, but seemed to be dreaming far away. When the
+word was given, however, he dashed in and made some desperate lunges at
+Starkie. It was easy to see in a moment that Sam could do nothing. He
+could not even reach his opponent, his arms were so much shorter. If
+Starkie held one of his arms out stiffly, Sam could not get<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Page 54]</a></span> near him
+and was entirely at his mercy. The third-class man consequently set
+himself leisurely to work at the task of punishing the unfortunate
+Jinks. Two or three blows about the face and jaw which started the blood
+in profusion ended the first round. Sam did not recognize the inevitable
+result of the fight, and was anxious to begin again. He did not seem to
+feel any pain from the blows. Two or three rounds had the same result,
+and Sam became weaker and weaker. At last he could only go into the ring
+and receive punishment without making an effort to avert it, but he did
+not flinch.</p>
+
+<p>"Did you ever see such a chap?" said Smith to Saunders. "Let's call the
+thing off."</p>
+
+<p>"Nonsense," said the latter. "Wait till he's knocked insensible"; and
+the rest of the spectators expressed their agreement with him.</p>
+
+<p>Just then a sound of marching was heard, and a company of cadets were
+seen coming up the hill in command of an army officer.</p>
+
+<p>"Hullo, Clark," whispered Smith. "Stop<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Page 55]</a></span> the fight. Here comes old Blair,
+and he may report us."</p>
+
+<p>"Not much," said Clark. "He'll mind his own business."</p>
+
+<p>The company approached within a few yards of the ring.</p>
+
+<p>"Eyes right!" shouted Captain Blair, and every man in the company turned
+his eyes away from the assembled crowd, and Blair himself stared into
+the woods on the other side of the path. The company had almost passed
+out of sight when Blair's voice was heard again.</p>
+
+<p>"Front!" and the danger of detection had blown over.</p>
+
+<p>After this faint interruption, Sam was brought up once more, pale and
+bloody, and hardly able to stand. Yet he smiled through the blood.
+Starkie stood off and gave him his <i>coup de grace</i>, a full blow in the
+solar plexus, which doubled him up quite unconscious on the ground.
+Clark declared the fight finished, and the crowd broke up hastily,
+leaving Cleary and his associate to get Sam away as best they could.
+They had a pail of water, sponges and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Page 56]</a></span> towels, and they bathed his face;
+and after half an hour's work were rewarded by having him open his eyes.
+In another half-hour he was able to stand, and supporting him on each
+side, they led him slowly down to the hospital.</p>
+
+<p>"What's the matter?" said the doctor as they entered the office. "Oh! I
+see. You found him lying bleeding up by Fort Hut, didn't you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir," said Cleary.</p>
+
+<p>"He must have fallen down and hit his head against a stone, don't you
+think so?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"That's a dangerous place; the pine-needles make it very slippery," said
+the doctor, as he entered the case in his records. "Here, Mose, put
+Cadet Jinks to bed."</p>
+
+<p>This time Sam was laid up for two weeks, but he felt amply repaid for
+this loss of time by a visit from no less a person than Cadet Smith.</p>
+
+<p>"Mind you never tell any one I came here," said Smith, "and treat me
+just the same when you come out as you did before; but I wanted<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Page 57]</a></span> to
+tell you you're a brick. I never saw a man stand up to a dressing the
+way you did, and that's the truth."</p>
+
+<p class="figcenter"><a name="page56" id="page56"></a><img src="images/page56.png" title="page56" alt="page56" height="578" width="400" /></p>
+<h4>THE MANLY SPORT AT EAST POINT</h4>
+<h6>"STARKEY STOOD OFF AND GAVE HIM HIS COUP DE GRACE"<br /><br /><br /><br /></h6>
+
+
+<p>Tears of joy rolled down Sam's damaged face.</p>
+
+<p>"I've brought you those photographs of the hazing, too," said Smith with
+a laugh. And he produced two small prints from his pocket. Sam took them
+with trembling hands and gazed at them with rapture. One of them
+represented Cleary and Jinks tied to the stake, apparently about to be
+burned to death, and Sam was delighted to see the ultra-perfect position
+which he had assumed. The other photograph had been taken the moment
+after Sam's immersion in the tub. He could see his hands clutching the
+rim, while his legs were widely separated in the air.</p>
+
+<p>"It might be General Meriden as well as me," he cried joyously. "Nobody
+could tell the difference."</p>
+
+<p>"That's so," said Smith.</p>
+
+<p>"I shall always carry them next my heart," said Sam. "How can I thank
+you enough?<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Page 58]</a></span> I am sorry that I can't black your boots this week."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! never mind," said Smith magnanimously, looking down at his feet.
+"Cleary does them pretty well. You'll be out before long."</p>
+
+<p>When Sam was discharged from the hospital the cadet corps had struck
+camp and gone into barracks for the year. The summer maidens, too, had
+fled, and East Point soon settled down to the monotony of winter work.
+Every cadet looked forward already to the next summer: the first class
+to graduation; the second to the glories of first-class supremacy in
+camp and ballroom; the third class to their two months' furlough as
+second-class men; but the fourth class had happier anticipations than
+any of the rest, for they were to be transformed in June from "beasts"
+into men, into real third-class cadets, with all the rights and
+privileges of human beings. Sam's dream was also irradiated with the
+hope of winning the affections of the fair Miss Hunter, to whom he had
+never addressed a word, but of whose in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Page 59]</a></span>terest he felt assured. He did
+not know where the assurance came from, but he had little fear of
+Saunders now. Next summer Saunders would be away on leave, anyhow. Sam
+knew, if no one else did, that he had actually fought for the hand of
+Miss Hunter; and, tho he had been defeated, had not Smith admitted that
+his defeat was a practical victory? He felt that he had won Miss
+Hunter's hand in mortal combat, and he dismissed from his mind all doubt
+on the subject.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Page 60]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IV" id="CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV</a></h2>
+
+<h1>War and Business</h1>
+
+
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+
+<p>ARIAN Hunter was, as we have already surmised, a lady of experience.
+She was possessed, as is not uncommonly the case with young ladies at
+East Point, of an uncontrollable passion for things military. Manhood
+and brass buttons were with her interconvertible terms, and the idea of
+uniting her young life to a plain civilian seemed to her nothing less
+than shocking. The pleasures of her first two or three sum<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Page 61]</a></span>mers at East
+Point and of her first half-dozen engagements had partaken of the bliss
+of heaven. The engagements had never been broken off, they had simply
+dissolved one into the other, and she had felt herself rising from step
+to step in happiness. Naturally her conquests filled her with a supreme
+confidence in her charms. She was not especially fickle by nature, but
+she discovered that a first-class cadet, particularly if he was an
+officer and had black feathers in his full-dress hat, was far more
+attractive to think of than a supernumerary second lieutenant assigned
+to duty in some Western garrison. Gradually, however, she found herself
+less certain of winning whom she would. The competition of young girls
+some two or three years her junior became threatening. She was obliged
+to give up cadet officers for privates, and then first-class privates
+for third-class privates, as the hotel waiter had explained to Sam. At
+the time of Sam's arrival at the Point she was having more difficulty
+than ever before, and she became thoroughly frightened.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Page 62]</a></span> She took up
+with Saunders because he alone came her way, but the engagement was a
+poor makeshift, and she could not get up any enthusiasm over it. She
+could hardly pretend to be in love with him, and she felt conscious that
+she had a foolish prejudice in favor of straight noses. What was she to
+do? If she was to marry at all in the army&mdash;and how could she marry
+anywhere else?&mdash;she must soon make up her mind. Her experience now stood
+her in good stead. Had she not seen these very first-class cadet
+officers only three years before as mere despised "beasts," doing all
+kinds of drudgery for their oppressors? Had she not seen her <i>fianc&eacute;</i>,
+Saunders, himself, a short twelvemonth ago, with nose intact, slinking
+like a pariah about the post? She had learned the lesson which the
+younger girls had yet to learn, that from these unpromising chrysalises
+the most gorgeous butterflies emerge, and like a wise woman she began to
+study the fourth class. Sam stood out from his fellows, not indeed as
+supremely handsome, altho he was not bad-looking, but rather<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Page 63]</a></span> as the
+soldier <i>par excellence</i> of his class. Marian was an expert in judging
+the points of a soldier, and she saw at once that he was the coming man.
+She could not make his acquaintance or speak to him, but she could smile
+and thus lay the foundations of success for next year. It would be easy
+thus to reach the heart of a lonely "beast." And she smiled to a
+purpose, and it was that smile that won the untried affections of Sam
+Jinks.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p>When June at last came and the new fourth-class men began to arrive, Sam
+felt a new life surge into his soul. For a year he had been duly meek
+and humble, for such it behooved a fourth-class man to be. Now, however,
+he began to entertain a measureless pride, such being the proper frame
+of mind of a man in the upper classes. He watched the hotel sedulously
+to learn when Miss Hunter had made her appearance. One morning he saw
+her, and she smiled more distinctly than ever. He knew that his felicity
+was only a short way off. He must wait two weeks until the graduation
+ball and the departure of the old first class;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Page 64]</a></span> then he could undertake
+to supplant the absent Saunders, who probably knew the history of Miss
+Hunter and was not unprepared for his fate.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile great events had occurred, and thrown East Point into a state
+of excitement. The country was at war. Congress had determined to free
+the downtrodden inhabitants of the Cubapine Islands from the tyranny of
+the ancient Castalian monarchy. A call for volunteers had been issued,
+and the graduating cadets were to be hurried to the seat of war. During
+this agitation news arrived of a great naval victory. The mighty
+Castalian fleet had been annihilated with great loss of life, while the
+conquerors had not lost a man and had scarcely interrupted their
+breakfast in order to secure this crushing triumph. It was in the midst
+of such reports as these that the susceptible hearts of Sam Jinks and
+Marian Hunter came together. The graduating class had gone, and Sam had
+for two days been a full third-class man. For the first time he had
+occupied the front rank at dress-parade, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Page 65]</a></span> seen clearly the officer
+in command, the adjutant flitting about magnificently, the band parading
+up and down and turning itself inside out around the towering
+drum-major, the line of spectators behind, the bright faces and gay
+parasols, and among them the black eyes of Marian looking unmistakably
+at him. When at the end of the parade the company officers marched up to
+salute and the companies were dismissed, Sam saw a member of the new
+first class talking to her. He was now on an equality with all the
+cadets, and he boldly advanced and asked for an introduction. At last he
+had her hand in his, and as he pressed it rather harder than the
+occasion warranted, he felt his pressure returned. Sam's fate was
+sealed. He made no formal proposal, it was unnecessary. The engagement
+was a thing taken for granted. It was a novel experience for Marian as
+well as for Sam, as now for the first time she meant business. It is
+impossible in cold ink to reproduce the ecstasies of those many hours on
+Flirtation Walk, during which Sam opened his heart. For the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Page 66]</a></span> first time
+in his life he had found a person as deeply interested in military
+matters as he was, and as much in love with military glory. He told her
+his whole history, including the lead soldiers and the Boys' Brigade. He
+laid bare to her his ambition to be a perfect soldier&mdash;a hero. He told
+her how disappointed he was to find no other cadet so completely wrapped
+up in his profession as he was, and how in her alone he had now realized
+his ideal not only of womanhood, but also of appreciation of the
+soldier's career. He rehearsed the thrilling experiences of hazing, and
+went over the fight in detail and told her how Saunders had brought it
+about.</p>
+
+<p>"The horrid wretch!" she exclaimed, throwing her arms about his neck and
+kissing him. "I'm so glad they didn't break your nose."</p>
+
+<p>"Are you really?" he asked, and as he read the truth in her eyes a
+weight was rolled from his soul.</p>
+
+<p>He showed her the little lead officer with the plume, which he always
+carried as a mascot in his breast-pocket, and also the two hazing
+pho<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Page 67]</a></span>tographs which kept it company. She was delighted with them all.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! you will be a hero," she cried. "I am sure of it, and what a time
+we shall have of it, you dear thing!"</p>
+
+<p>With his spare time thus occupied Sam did not see much of Cleary, who
+now shared another tent. One afternoon late in September he was on the
+way to the gate of the hotel grounds where he was accustomed to wait
+until Miss Hunter came out and joined him, when Cleary called him aside.</p>
+
+<p>"Sam," he said, "I've got something of importance to say to you. Can't
+you come with me now?"</p>
+
+<p>"Can't," said Sam. "Miss Hunter's waiting for me."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, then, beg off to-morrow afternoon. I must have a long talk with
+you."</p>
+
+<p>"All right," answered Sam reluctantly. "If I must, I must, I suppose."</p>
+
+<p>The next day found Sam and Cleary walking alone in the woods engaged in
+deep conversation.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Page 68]</a></span>"Sam, what would you say to going to the war?" asked
+Cleary.</p>
+
+<p>"I'd give anything to go!" exclaimed Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"You wouldn't want to stay on account of that girl of yours?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, indeed; she would be the first to want me to go."</p>
+
+<p>"Then why don't you go?"</p>
+
+<p>"How can I?" said Sam. "We've got three more years here. That ties us
+down for that time, and by the time that's over the war will be over
+too."</p>
+
+<p>"That's what I think, and I'm sick of this place anyhow. I'm going to
+resign."</p>
+
+<p>"Resign!" cried Sam. "Resign and give up your career!"</p>
+
+<p>"Not altogether, old man. Don't get so excited. What's the use of
+staying here? We'll get sent off to some out-of-the-way post when we
+graduate, and perhaps we'll get to be captains before our hair is white,
+and perhaps we shan't; and then if a war breaks out we'll have
+volunteers young enough to be our sons made brigadiers over our heads.
+Aren't<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Page 69]</a></span> they doing it every day? I'm not going to waste my life that
+way. I want to go to the war now, and I mean to go as a newspaper
+correspondent."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Cleary!" exclaimed Sam reproachfully.</p>
+
+<p>"Tut, tut, Sam. You're not up to date. We've got no field-marshals in
+our army and the newspaper correspondents take their place. Their names
+are better known than the generals, and they advertise each other and
+get a big share of the glory; and then they can always decently step
+aside when they've got enough. They needn't stay on the fighting-line,
+and that's a consideration. No, I'm sick of ordinary soldiering, but I'm
+willing to be a field-marshal. My father has an interest in the
+<i>Metropolitan Daily Lyre</i>, and I've written to him for an appointment as
+correspondent in the Cubapines. What I've learned here will help me a
+lot. But I want you to go with me."</p>
+
+<p>"Me? Go with you? Do you think I'd be a newspaper correspondent?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, of course not. It never entered my<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Page 70]</a></span> head. But why don't you get a
+commission in the volunteers from your uncle? He can get just what he
+wants, and they're talking of him for Secretary of War. All you've got
+to do is to resign here and apply for a commission as colonel. Then
+you'll probably land as a major, or a captain at any rate. By the time
+the war is over, you'll be a general, if I know you, and then you can be
+appointed captain in the regular army on retiring from the volunteers,
+when our class is just graduating. You're just made for a successful
+soldier. You've got the ambition and the courage, and you've got just
+the brains for a soldier. You don't want to remain a lieutenant until
+you are fifty, do you?"</p>
+
+<p>There was great force in Cleary's argument, and Sam knew it. East
+Pointers were scandalized at the manner in which outsiders were jumped
+into important commands in the field, and when engagements took place
+the volunteers came in for all the praise, while the regulars who did
+almost all the work were hardly mentioned.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Page 71]</a></span> "I'll think it over," said
+Sam. "I'll speak to Marian about it. It's very kind of you to think of
+me."</p>
+
+<p>"Not a bit," said Cleary. "I'm looking out for myself. If you go as a
+major and I go as correspondent, I'll just freeze to you and make a hero
+of you whether you will or not. I'll make your fortune, and you'll make
+mine. I'll see that you get a chance, and I know that you'll take it if
+you get it. You're just cut out for it. Now get permission from the
+young woman and we'll call it a go."</p>
+
+<p>The following afternoon Sam walked over the same ground, but this time
+it was Marian who accompanied him. She was enthusiastic over Cleary's
+proposition.</p>
+
+<p>"Just think of it! You'll come back a hero and a general, and I don't
+know what not, and we'll get married, and the President will come to the
+wedding; and then we'll have our wedding tour up here, and the corps
+will turn out and fire a salute, and we'll be the biggest people at East
+Point. Won't it be splendid?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Page 72]</a></span>"Perhaps, dear, I'll never come back at all. Who knows? I may get
+killed."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Sam! if you did, how proud I'd be of it. I'd wear black for a whole
+year, and they'd put up a monument to you over there in the cemetery and
+have a grand funeral, and I'd be in the first carriage, and the flag
+would be draped, and the band would play the funeral march. Oh, dear!
+how grand it would be, and how all the girls would envy me!"</p>
+
+<p>Tears came to her eyes as she spoke.</p>
+
+<p>"Just think of being the <i>fianc&eacute;e</i> of a hero who died for his country!
+Oh, Sam, Sam!"</p>
+
+<p>Sam took her in his arms.</p>
+
+<p>"You're my own brave soldier's wife," he said. "I'd be almost ready to
+die for you, but if I don't, I'll come back and marry you. I'll write to
+uncle for a commission to-night, and ask his advice about resigning here
+either now or later. It hardly seems true that I may really go to a real
+war." And his tears fell and mingled with hers.</p>
+
+<p>Sam's uncle fell in readily with Cleary's scheme. He was a politician
+and a man of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Page 73]</a></span> the world, and he saw what an advantage it would be for
+his nephew to seek promotion in the volunteers, and how much a close
+friend among the war correspondents could help him. Furthermore, he had
+heard of Sam's excellent record at East Point and was disposed to lend
+him what aid could be derived from his influence with the
+Administration. When Sam's father learned that his brother approved of
+the project, he offered no objection, and a few weeks after Cleary had
+broached the subject, both of the young men sent in their resignations,
+and these were accepted. Cleary left at once for the metropolis to
+perfect his plans, while Sam remained for a few days at the Point to bid
+farewell to his betrothed. His uncle had at once sent in his name to the
+War Department as a candidate for colonel of volunteers with letters of
+recommendation from the most influential men at the Capital. While Sam
+was still at East Point he saw in the daily paper that his name had been
+sent in to the Senate as captain of volunteers with a long list of
+others, and almost immediately he received<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Page 74]</a></span> a telegram from his uncle
+announcing his confirmation without question. On the same morning came a
+letter from Cleary telling him to come at once to town and make the
+final arrangements before receiving orders to join his regiment. We
+shall draw a veil over the last interview between Sam and Marian. She
+was proficient in the art of saying farewell, and nothing was lacking on
+this occasion to contribute to its romantic effect. They parted in
+tears, but they were tears of hope and joy.</p>
+
+<p>Cleary met Sam at the station in the city and took him to a modest
+hotel.</p>
+
+<p>"It's going to be bigger thing than I thought," he said, as they sat
+down together for a good talk in the hotel lobby, after Sam had made
+himself at home in his room. "I'm going to run a whole combination. I've
+got in with a man who's a real genius. His name's Jonas. He represents
+the brewers' trust, and he's going out to start saloons with chattel
+mortgages on the fixtures. It's a big thing by itself. But then besides
+that he's got orders to apply for street-railroad franchises wherever<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Page 75]</a></span>
+he can get them, and he is going to start agencies to sell typewriters
+and bicycles and some patent medicines, and I don't know what else. You
+see he wanted to represent the Consolidated Press as a sort of business
+agent, and <i>The Daily Lyre</i> belongs to the Consolidated, and that's the
+way I came across him. The fact is he represents pretty much all the
+capital in the country. It's a big combination. I'll boom him and you,
+and you'll help us, and then we can get in on the ground floor with him
+in anything we like. It's a good outlook, isn't it, hey? Have you got
+your commission yet?"</p>
+
+<p>"No," said Sam, "not yet. My uncle wants me to come and spend a few days
+with him at Slowburgh to make my acquaintance, and the commission will
+go there. I'm to be in the 200th Volunteer Infantry. I don't quite
+understand all your plans, but I hope I'll get a chance at real fighting
+for our country, and I should like to be a great soldier. You know that,
+Cleary."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, old man, I know it, and you will be, if courage and newspapers can
+do it. I'm<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Page 76]</a></span> sorry you didn't get a colonelcy, but captain isn't bad, and
+we'll skip you up to general in no time. You've always wanted to be a
+hero, haven't you? Well, the first chance I get I'll nickname you 'Hero'
+Jinks, and it'll stick, I'll answer for it!"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! thank you," said Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, good-by. I'll come in for you to-morrow and take you in to see our
+war editor. He's a daisy. So long."</p>
+
+<p>When on the morrow Sam was ushered into the den of the war editor, he
+was surprised to see what a shabby room it was. The great man was
+sitting at a desk which was almost hidden under piles of papers,
+letters, telegrams, and memoranda. The chairs in the room were equally
+encumbered, and he had to empty the contents of two of them on the floor
+before Sam and Cleary could sit down.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, Captain Jinks, glad to see you!" he said.</p>
+
+<p>Sam beamed with delight. It was the first time that he had heard his new
+title&mdash;a title, in fact, to which he had as yet no right.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Page 77]</a></span> "I suppose
+Mr. Cleary has explained to you," the editor continued, "what our
+designs are. Editing isn't what it used to be. It has become a very
+complicated business. In old times we took the news as it came along,
+and that was all that was expected of us; but if we tried that way of
+doing things now, we'd have to shut up shop in a week. When we need news
+nowadays we simply make it. I don't mean that we invent news&mdash;that
+doesn't pay in the long run; people learn your game and you lose in the
+end. No, I mean that we create the events that make the news. We were
+running short of news last year, that's the whole truth of it; and so we
+got up this war. It's been a complete success. We've quadrupled our
+circulation, and it's doubling every month. We're well ahead of the
+other papers because it's known as our war, and of course we are
+expected to know more about it than anybody else."</p>
+
+<p>"But I thought the war was to free the oppressed Cubapinos&mdash;an outburst
+of popular sympathy with the downtrodden suf<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Page 78]</a></span>ferers from Castalian
+misrule," interposed Sam, flushing. "That's the reason why I applied for
+a commission, and I am ready to pour out my last drop of blood for my
+country."</p>
+
+<p>"Of course you are, my dear captain; of course you are. And your ideas
+of the cause of the war, as a military man, are quite correct. Indeed,
+if you will read my editorial of yesterday you will see the same ideas
+developed at some length."</p>
+
+<p>He pressed an electric button on his desk, and a clerk entered.</p>
+
+<p>"Get me a copy of yesterday's paper."</p>
+
+<p>In a moment it was brought; the editor opened it, marked an article with
+a dash of his blue pencil, and handed it to Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"There," said he, "put that in your pocket and read it. I am sure that
+you will agree with every word of it. Your understanding of the
+situation does great credit to your insight. That is, if I may use the
+term, the esoteric side of the question. It is only on the external and
+material side that it is really a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Page 79]</a></span> <i>Daily Lyre's</i> war. There's really no
+contradiction, none at all, as you see."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! none at all," said Sam, with a sigh of relief. "I never quite
+understood it before, and you make it all so clear!"</p>
+
+<p>"Now you will be prepared by what I have said to comprehend that it's
+just in this line of creating the news beforehand that we want to make
+use of you, and at the same time it will be the making of you, do you
+see?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not quite," said Sam. "How do you mean?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, we understand that you're a most promising military man and that
+you intend to distinguish yourself. Suppose you do, what good will it
+do, if nobody ever hears of it? Doesn't your idea of heroism include a
+certain degree of appreciation?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"Of publicity, I may say?"</p>
+
+<p>Sam nodded assent.</p>
+
+<p>"Or even in plain newspaper talk, of advertising?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Page 80]</a></span>"I shouldn't quite like to be advertised," said Sam uneasily.</p>
+
+<p>"That's a rather blunt word, I confess; but when you do some fine
+exploit, you wouldn't mind seeing it printed in full in the papers that
+the people at home read, would you?"</p>
+
+<p>"No-o-o, not exactly; but then I should only want you to tell the truth
+about it."</p>
+
+<p>"Of course; I know that, but there are lots of ways of telling the
+truth. We might put it in at the bottom of an inside page and give only
+a stick to it, or we might let it have the whole first page here, with
+your portrait at the top and headlines like that"; and he showed him a
+title in letters six inches long. "You'd prefer that, wouldn't you?"</p>
+
+<p>"I'm afraid I would," said Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, if you didn't you'd be a blamed fool, that's all I've got to say,
+and we wouldn't care to bother about you."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm sure it's very good of you to take me up," said Sam. "Why do you
+select me instead of one of the great generals at the front?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Page 81]</a></span>"Why, don't you see? You wouldn't make a practical newspaper man. The
+people are half tired of the names of the generals already. They want
+some new names. It's our business to provide them. Then all the other
+newspapers are on the track of the generals. We must have a little hero
+of our own. When General Laughter or General Notice do anything, all the
+press of the country have got hold of them. They've got their
+photographs in every possible attitude and their biographies down to the
+last detail, and pictures of their birthplaces and of their families and
+ancestors, and all the rest of it. We simply can't get ahead of them,
+and people are beginning to think that it's not our war after all. When
+we begin to boom you, they'll find out that we've got a mortgage on it
+yet. We'll have the stuff all ready here to fire off, and no one else
+will have a word. It'll be the greatest beat yet, unless Mr. Cleary is
+mistaken in you and you are not going to distinguish yourself."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't think he is mistaken," said Sam<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Page 82]</a></span> solemnly. "I do intend to
+distinguish myself if I get the chance."</p>
+
+<p>"And we'll see that you have the chance. It's a big game we're playing,
+but we hold the cards and we don't often lose. You're not the only card,
+to be sure. We've got a lot of men at the front now representing us.
+Several of our correspondents have made a hit already, and some of them
+have made themselves more famous than the generals! Ha, ha! Our head
+editor is going out next month, and of course we'll see to it that he
+does wonders. Hullo! there's Jonas now. Why, this is a lucky meeting.
+Here, Jonas. You know Cleary. Mr. Jonas, Captain Jinks. I'll be blessed
+if here isn't the whole combination."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Jonas, who had come into the room unannounced, and perched himself
+on the corner of a table, was a rather short man with a brown beard and
+eye-glasses, and wore his hat on the back of his head.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Jonas, how are things going?" asked the editor.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Page 83]</a></span>"A 1. Couldn't
+be better. I've just been down at Skinner's&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Skinner &amp; Company, one of the biggest financial houses in the street,"
+the editor explained to Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"And they've agreed to go the whole job. First of all, it'll be chiefly
+trade. I showed them the contracts for boots and hats for the army, and
+they were tickled to death. They'll let us have as much as we want on
+them. I didn't have the embalmed-beef contract with me&mdash;it smells too
+bad to carry round in my pocket, hee-hee!&mdash;but I explained it to them,
+and it's even better. They're quite satisfied."</p>
+
+<p>"And how is the beer business going?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! that's a success already. Look at this item," and he pulled a
+newspaper from his pocket and showed it to the editor.</p>
+
+<p>"One hundred more saloons in Havilla than there were at this time last
+year! Can that be possible?" ejaculated the latter.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, and I'm behind fifty-eight of them. That agent I sent out ahead is
+a jewel."</p>
+
+<p>"Have you been up at the Bible Society?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Page 84]</a></span>"Yes, and I've got special terms on a hundred thousand Testaments in
+Castalian and the native languages. That will awaken interest, you see,
+and then we'll follow it up with five hundred thousand in English, and
+it will do no end of good in pushing the language. It will be made the
+official language soon, anyway. What a blessing it will be to those poor
+creatures who speak languages that nobody can understand!"</p>
+
+<p>"How is the rifle deal coming out?"</p>
+
+<p>"Only so-so. The Government will take about three-quarters of the lot.
+The rest we'll have to unload on the Cubapinos."</p>
+
+<p>"What!" exclaimed Sam, "aren't they fighting against us now?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! we don't sell them direct of course," added Jonas, "but we can't
+alter the laws of trade, can we? And they require that things get into
+the hands of the people who'll pay the most for them, hey?"</p>
+
+<p>"Naturally," said the editor. "Captain Jinks has not studied political
+economy. It's all a matter of supply and demand."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Page 85]</a></span>"I'm ashamed to say I haven't," said Sam. "It must be very interesting,
+and I'm much obliged to you for telling me about it."</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose it's too early to do anything definite about concessions for
+trolleys and gas and electric-lighting plants," said the editor.</p>
+
+<p>"Not a bit of it. That's what I went to see Skinner about to-day. I'm
+sounding some of the chief natives already, and our people there are all
+right. Skinner's lawyers are at work at the charters, and I'll take them
+out with me. We can put them through as soon as we annex the islands."</p>
+
+<p>"But we promised not to annex them!" cried Sam.</p>
+
+<p>The editor and Jonas looked knowingly at each other.</p>
+
+<p>"The captain is not a diplomatist, you see," said the former. "As for
+that matter, a soldier oughtn't to be. You understand, Captain, that all
+promises are made subject to the proviso that we are able to carry them
+out."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Page 86]</a></span>"Certainly."</p>
+
+<p>"Now it's perfectly clear that we can never fulfil this promise. It is
+our destiny to stay there. It would be flying in the face of Providence
+and doing the greatest injury to the natives to abandon them. They would
+fly at each other's throats the moment we left them alone."</p>
+
+<p>"They haven't flown at each other's throats where we have left them
+alone," mused Sam aloud.</p>
+
+<p>"I didn't say they had, but that they would," explained the editor.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! I see," said Sam, and he relapsed into silence.</p>
+
+<p>"Talking of electric lights," continued Jonas, "I've got a book here
+full of all sorts of electric things that we'll have to introduce there.
+There's the electrocution chair; look at that design. They garrote
+people in the most barbarous manner out there now. We'll civilize them,
+if we get a chance!"</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps they won't have the money to buy all your things," remarked
+Cleary, who had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Page 87]</a></span> been a silent and interested spectator of the
+interview.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Jonas, "we may have trouble with the poorest tribes. We must
+make them want things, that's all. The best way to begin is to tax them.
+I've got a plan ready for a hut-tax of five dollars a year. That's
+little enough, I should think, but some of them never see money and
+they'll have to work to get it. That will make them work the coal-and
+iron-mines. Skinner has his eye on these, too. When the natives once
+begin to earn money, they'll soon want more and then they'll spend it on
+us."</p>
+
+<p>"But the Government there will be too poor to take up great public
+expenditures for a long time yet," said Cleary.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't be too sure of that. They haven't even got a national debt.
+That's one of the first things we'll provide for. They're a most
+primitive people. Just think of their existing up to the present time
+without a national debt! They're mere savages."</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said Cleary, rising, "I think we've<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Page 88]</a></span> taken enough of your
+valuable time and we must be off."</p>
+
+<p>"Wait a moment," said the editor. "Have you explained all that I told
+you to the captain?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not yet," answered Cleary, "but I'll do it now on the way to his hotel.
+He is going to leave town to-day, and he may be ordered to sail any day
+now. I will try to go on the same ship with him."</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps I can manage it, too," said Jonas, as he shook hands with the
+two friends, "if I can finish up all these arrangements. I must be on
+the ground there as soon as I can."</p>
+
+<p>As Sam and Cleary left the room the editor and Jonas settled down to a
+confidential conversation, and there were smiles upon their lips as they
+began talking.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Page 89]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_V" id="CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V</a></h2>
+
+<h1>Slowburgh</h1>
+
+
+
+
+<div class="wrap_area">
+
+ <img src="images/chap_5.png" alt="chap_5" height="600" width="302" />
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+ <div style="width: 340px;">&nbsp;</div>
+ <div style="width: 335px;">&nbsp;</div>
+ <div style="width: 330px;">&nbsp;</div>
+ </div>
+
+<p><br /><br />HILE Sam accepted the explanations of the editor and Jonas as
+expressions of wisdom from men who had had a far wider experience than
+his, he had some faint misgivings as to some of the business enterprises
+in which his new friends were embarked, and he hinted as much to Cleary.</p>
+
+<p>"Some of those things do sound rather strange," answered Cleary, as they
+walked away, "but you must look at the world in a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Page 90]</a></span> broad way. Is our
+civilization better than that of the Cubapinos?"</p>
+
+<p>"Undoubtedly."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, then, we must be conferring a favor upon them by giving it to
+them. We can't slice it up and give them only the plums. That would be
+ridiculous. They must take us for better and worse. In fact, I think we
+should be guilty of hypocrisy if we pretended to be better than we are.
+Suppose we gave them a better civilization than we've got, shouldn't we
+be open to the charge of misrepresentation?"</p>
+
+<p>"That's true," said Sam. "I didn't think of that.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," Cleary went on; "at first I had some doubts about that saloon
+business particularly, but the more you think of it, the more you see
+that it's our duty to introduce them there. It's all a part of our
+civilization."</p>
+
+<p>"So it is," said Sam. "And then people have always done things that way,
+haven't they?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, of course they have."</p>
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Page 91]</a></span>"Then it must be all right. What right have we to criticize the doings
+of people so much wiser than we are? I think you are quite right. As a
+correspondent you ought to be satisfied that you are doing the right
+thing. To me as a soldier it's a matter of no importance anyway, because
+a soldier only does what he's told, but you as a civilian have to think,
+I suppose, and I'm glad you're satisfied and can make such a conclusive
+case of it. What was it that the editor wanted you to tell me?"</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<p>"Oh! yes. I came near forgetting. You see what a lot they're going to do
+for us; now we must help them all we can. They want you to leave behind
+with them all the material about yourself that you can get together. You
+must get photographed at Slowburgh in a lot of different positions, and
+in your cadet uniform and your volunteer rig when you get it. Then you
+must let them have all your earlier photos if you can. 'Hero Jinks as an
+infant in arms,' 'Hero Jinks in his baby-carriage,' 'Hero Jinks as a
+schoolboy'&mdash;what a fine series<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Page 92]</a></span> it would make! You know what I mean.
+Then you must write your biography and your opinions about things in
+general, and give the addresses of all your friends and relations so
+that they can all be interviewed when the time comes. You'll do it,
+won't you? It's the up-to-date way of doing things, and it's the only
+way to be a military success."</p>
+
+<p>"If it's the proper way of doing things I'll do it," said Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"That's a good fellow! I'll send you a list of questions to answer and
+coach you as well as I can. I'm dying to get off and have this thing
+started. Isn't Jonas great? He's got just my ideas, only bigger. You
+see, he explained to me that in this country trusts have grown up with
+great difficulty, and it was hard work to establish the benefits which
+they produce for the public. They were fought at every step. But in the
+Cubapines we have a clean field, and by getting the Government monopoly
+whenever we want it, we can found one big trust and do ever so much
+good. I half wish I were a Cubapino, they're going to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Page 93]</a></span> be benefited so,
+and without doing anything to deserve it either. Some people are born
+lucky."</p>
+
+<p>"I can't quite follow all those business plans," said Sam. "My head
+isn't trained to it; but I'm glad we're going to do good there, and if I
+can do something great to bring it about, it will give me real
+happiness."</p>
+
+<p>"It will, old man, it will. I'm sure of it," cried Cleary, as he took
+his leave of Sam in front of the hotel. "Let me know what steamer you're
+going by as soon as you get orders, and I'll try to manage it to get a
+passage on her too. They often carry newspaper men on our transports."</p>
+
+<p>On the following day Sam went to visit his uncle at Slowburgh, a small
+sea-port of some four thousand inhabitants lying several miles away from
+the railroad. The journey in the train occupied six hours or more, and
+Sam spent the time in learning the Castalian language in a handbook he
+had bought in town. He had already taken lessons in the language at East
+Point and was beginning to be fairly proficient. He alighted at the
+nearest station<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Page 94]</a></span> to Slowburgh and entered the rather shabby omnibus
+which was standing waiting. Sam felt lonely. There was nothing military
+about the station and no uniform in sight. He no longer wore a uniform
+himself, and the landscape was painfully civilian. Finally the horses
+started and the 'bus moved slowly up the road. Sam was impatient. His
+fellow countrymen were risking their lives thousands of miles away, and
+here he was, creeping along a country road in the disguise of a private
+citizen, far away from the post of duty and danger. He looked with
+disgust at the plowmen in the fields busily engaged in preparing the
+soil for next year's grain.</p>
+
+<p>"What a mean, poor-spirited lot," he thought. "Here they are, following
+their wretched plows without a thought of the brave soldiers who are
+defending their country and themselves so many leagues away. It is the
+soldier, suffering from hunger and fever and falling on the battlefield
+in the agony of death, who makes it possible for these fellows to spend
+their days in pleasant exercise in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Page 95]</a></span> fields. The soldier bears
+civilization on his back, he supports all the rest, he is the pedestal
+which bears without complaint the civilian as an idle ornament. The
+soldier, in short, is the real man, the only perfect product of
+creation."</p>
+
+<p>And his heart was filled with thankfulness that he had selected the
+career of a soldier and that there never could be any doubt of his
+usefulness to the world. The only other occupants of the omnibus were
+two men&mdash;one of them a commercial traveler, and the other an aged
+resident of Slowburgh who had been at the county town for the day, as
+Sam gathered from their conversation.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't suppose that the war has caused much excitement at Slowburgh?"
+asked Sam at last, introducing the subject uppermost in his mind.</p>
+
+<p>"It ain't jest what it was when I went to the war," said the old man;
+"but there is a deal o' talk about it, and all the young men are wanting
+to go."</p>
+
+<p>"Are they?" cried Sam, in delight. "And<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Page 96]</a></span> did you serve in the war? How
+very interesting! Did you offer your life for your country without hope
+of reward?"</p>
+
+<p>"That's just what I did, young man, and if you doubt it, here's my
+pension that I drew to-day in town, twelve dollars a month, and they've
+paid it now these thirty-four years."</p>
+
+<p>"That's a pretty soft thing," said the commercial man. "Better'n selling
+fountain-pens in the backwoods."</p>
+
+<p>"A soft thing!" cried the old man, "I ought to have twice as much.
+There's Abe Tucker gets fifteen dollars because he caught cold on picket
+duty, and I get a beggarly twelve."</p>
+
+<p>"Were you severely wounded?" asked Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, no-o-o, not exactly, tho I might just as well 'a' been. I was
+down bad with the measles. This is an ongrateful country. Here it is
+only thirty-five years after the war, and they're only paying a hundred
+and forty millions a year to only a million pensioners. It's a beggarly
+shame!"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Page 97]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Were there that many men in the war?" asked the traveler.</p>
+
+<p>"Pretty near it, I reckon. But p'r'aps in thirty-five years there'd be a
+natural increase. Think of it, a million men throwing away their lives
+for a nothing like that! I jest tell our young fellers that they'd
+better stay at home. Why, we've had to fight for what we've got. You
+wouldn't think it, but we've had to pass around the hat, and shove it
+hard under the nose of Congress, too, just as if we were beggars and
+frauds, and as if we hadn't sacrificed everything for our country!"</p>
+
+<p>"It's an outrage," cried Sam sympathetically. "But I hope you won't keep
+the young men from going. I'm going soon, and perhaps the country will
+be more generous in future."</p>
+
+<p>"Take my advice, young man, and whenever anything happens to you while
+you're away, take down the names of the witnesses and keep their
+affidavits. Then you'll be all ready to get your pension as soon as you
+come back. It took me three years to straighten<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Page 98]</a></span> out mine. Then I got
+the back pay, of course, but I ought to have had it before. I've got a
+claim in now for eight dollars more a month running all the way back. It
+amounts to over three thousand dollars, and I ought to have it."</p>
+
+<p>"Was that for the measles, too?" asked the stranger.</p>
+
+<p>The old man glared at his interrogator, but did not deign to reply.</p>
+
+<p>"Our Congressman, old Jinks, has my claim," he said, turning to Sam.
+"But he doesn't seem to be able to do anything with it."</p>
+
+<p>"He's my uncle," said Sam, fearing that he might hear something against
+his worthy relative.</p>
+
+<p>"So you're George Jinks' nephew, are you? Are you goin' to be a captain?
+Do tell! I read about it in the Slowburgh <i>Herald</i> last week. I'm real
+glad to see you. You're the first officer I've seen in ten years except
+the recruiting officer last week."</p>
+
+<p>"Did they have a recruiting officer here, in Slowburgh?" asked Sam.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Page 99]</a></span>"Yes, they did, and there was thirteen fellers wanted to go, but he only
+took five of 'em, and they hain't gone yet. The rest was too short or
+too fat or too thin or something."</p>
+
+<p>"Didn't any more men want to go than that?"</p>
+
+<p>"No," said the old man. "They all want to wear soldier-clothes, but they
+don't all want to go fighting. They've got up a militia battalion for
+them now, and 'most everybody in town's got a uniform. I hadn't seen a
+uniform in the county before in I don't know how long&mdash;except firemen, I
+should say."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm so glad they've got them now," cried Sam. "Doesn't it improve the
+looks of the place? It's so much more homelike and-d-d glorious, don't
+you think so?"</p>
+
+<p>The old man had no opportunity to reply, as the 'bus now drew up at the
+front door of the principal hotel. The commercial traveler got out first
+and went into the house; the old man followed, and turning to Sam as he
+passed him, he said with a glance at the vanishing stranger:</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Page 100]</a></span>"He's a copperhead, that feller."</p>
+
+<p>He went on toward the bar-room door, but called back as he went:</p>
+
+<p>"If you get lonesome over at Jinks', come in here in the evening. Ask
+for me; my name's Reddy."</p>
+
+<p>Sam did not get out of the omnibus, but told the driver to take him to
+Congressman Jinks'; and on they went, first to the right and then to the
+left along the wide and gently winding streets, which would have been
+well shaded with maples if the yellow leaves had not already begun to
+fall. They drove in at last through a gate in a wooden fence and round a
+semi-circular lawn to the front of a comfortable frame house, and in a
+few moments he was received with open arms by his relations.</p>
+
+<p>Congressman Jinks was a widower and had several children, all of whom,
+however, were away at school except his eldest daughter, a young lady of
+Sam's age, and his youngest, a girl of seven. The former, Mary, was a
+tall damsel with fair hair and a decidedly attractive manner. Mr. Jinks
+reminded Sam of his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Page 101]</a></span> father with the added elegancies of many years'
+life at the Capital.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Samuel, I am glad to see you at last. We know all about you, and
+we're expecting great things from you," he cried out in a hearty voice.
+Sam felt at home at once.</p>
+
+<p>"Come, Mary, show your cousin his room. Here, give me your grip. Yes,
+you must let me carry it. Now get ready for supper as soon as you can.
+It's all ready whenever you are."</p>
+
+<p>After supper they all sat round a wood fire, for it was a little chilly
+in the evening now. Mr. Jinks had his little girl in his lap, and they
+talked over family history and the events of the day. Sam asked who Mr.
+Reddy was whom he had met in the train.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! you mean old Reddy. Was he drunk? No? That's odd."</p>
+
+<p>"He'd been away for the day drawing his pension," said Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"Of course," said Mr. Jinks. "I might have known it. That is his one
+sober day in the month. He sobers up to go to town, but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Page 102]</a></span> he'll make up
+for lost time to-night. That twelve dollars will last just a week, and
+it all goes into the bar-room till. He's been that way ever since I was
+a boy, tho they say he was a steady enough young fellow before he went
+to the war. It's a curious coincidence, but there are two or three old
+rum-soaked war veterans like that hanging round every tavern in the
+country, and I'd like to know how much pension money goes that way. It's
+a great system tho, that pension system. I see something of it in
+Whoppington when I'm attending Congress. It distributes the money of the
+country and circulates it among the people. I like to see the amount
+increase every year. It's a healthy sign. I'm trying to get some more
+for Reddy. It helps the county just that much. Swan, the hotel man,
+spends it here. I believe in protecting home industries and fostering
+our home market. I wish you could have heard my speech on the war-tax
+bill&mdash;it covered that point. My, how this war is costing, tho! A million
+dollars a day! But it's well worth<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Page 103]</a></span> it. The more money we spend and the
+higher the taxes, the more circulation there is. You ought to see how
+things are booming at Whoppington. I'm sorry you couldn't come to see me
+there, but I had to be here this week looking after election matters in
+my district. In Whoppington all the hotels are full of contractors and
+men looking for commissions in the army, and promoters and investors,
+all with an eye to the Cubapines. You can just see how the war has
+brought prosperity!"</p>
+
+<p>"I should have liked to see Whoppington very much," said Sam, "but I
+suppose I must wait till I come back. It must be very different from
+other cities. You must feel there as if you were at the center of
+things&mdash;at the very mainspring of all our life, I mean."</p>
+
+<p>"You've hit the nail on the head," said his uncle. "Whoppington holds up
+all the rest of the country. There is the Government that makes
+everything go. There's no business there to speak of; no manufacturing,
+no agriculture in the country round&mdash;nothing to distract your attention
+but the power of the Ad<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Page 104]</a></span>ministration that lies behind all the rest. Just
+think what this country would be without Whoppington! Just imagine the
+capital city sinking into the ground and what would we all do? Even here
+at Slowburgh what would be left for us?"</p>
+
+<p>"Wouldn't we have breakfast to-morrow morning, papa?" asked the little
+girl in his lap.</p>
+
+<p>"Er-er-well, perhaps we might have breakfast&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Wouldn't we have clothes, papa?"</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps we might have&mdash;but no, we couldn't either; it's the tariff that
+gives us our clothes by keeping all foreign clothes out of the country,
+and then we shouldn't have er-er&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"It would upset the post-office," suggested Sam, coming to the rescue.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, to be sure, that is what I meant. It would cause a serious delay
+in the mails, that's certain."</p>
+
+<p>"And then there would be no soldiers," added Sam.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Page 105]</a></span>"Of course. How stupid of me to overlook that. How would you like to see
+no soldiers in the street?"</p>
+
+<p>"I shouldn't like it at all, papa."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, my dear boy," he proceeded, turning to Sam, "I would not want to
+have it repeated in my district, but I confess that I am always homesick
+for Whoppington when I am here. That's the real world there. There's the
+State Department where they manage all the foreign affairs of the world.
+What could we do without foreign affairs? And the Agricultural
+Department. How could we get in our crops without it? And the Labor
+Department. Every man who does a day's work depends on the Labor
+Department for his living, we may say. And the&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"The War Department," said Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, the War Department. We depend on that for our wars. Perhaps at
+first that does not seem to be so useful, but&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! but, Uncle George, surely it is the most useful of all. What could
+we do without wars. Just fancy a country without wars!"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Page 106]</a></span>"I don't know but you're right, Sam."</p>
+
+<p>"And then the Treasury Department depends a good deal on the War
+Department," said Sam, in triumph, "for without the War Department and
+the army it wouldn't have any pensions to pay."</p>
+
+<p>"That's so."</p>
+
+<p>"Papa," said Mary Jinks, who had modestly taken no part in a
+conversation whose wisdom was clearly beyond her comprehension&mdash;"papa,
+why didn't everybody go to the war like Mr. Reddy, and then they'd all
+have pensions and nobody'd have to work."</p>
+
+<p>"It's their own fault if they didn't," answered her father; "and if some
+people are overworked they have only their own selves to thank for it. I
+have no patience with the complaints of these socialists and anarchists
+that the poor are getting poorer and the number of unemployed
+increasing. In a country with pensions and war taxes and a tariff
+there's no excuse for poverty at all."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Sam, "they could all enlist if they wanted to."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Page 107]</a></span>The following day was spent in driving about the country. Mr. Jinks was
+obliged to visit the various centers in his Congressional district, and
+he took Sam with him on one of these expeditions. The country was
+beautiful in the clear, cold autumn air. The mountains stood out blue on
+the horizon, and the trees were brilliant with red and yellow leaves.
+Sam, however, had no eyes for these things. He was eager to hear about
+the militia company, and was pleased to see several pairs of military
+trousers, altho they were made to do duty with civilian coats. Such for
+him were the incidents of the day. After supper in the evening he
+bethought him of old Reddy's invitation to the hotel bar-room, and
+thinking that he might learn more about the local military situation
+there, he excused himself and hied him thither. He found the room
+crowded with the wiseacres of the place, the Bohemian, drinking element
+perhaps predominating. The room was so full of smoke that, as Sam
+entered, he could hardly distinguish its contents, but he saw a confused
+mass of men in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Page 108]</a></span> wooden arm-chairs tipped at every conceivable angle,
+surrounding a tall round stove which was heated white hot. The room was
+intensely warm and apparently totally wanting in ventilation.</p>
+
+<p>"Here's my friend, Captain Jinks," said a husky voice which Sam
+recognized as that of old Reddy. "Here, take this chair near the fire."</p>
+
+<p>Sam accepted the offered chair, altho he would have preferred a
+situation a little less torrid.</p>
+
+<p>"Gentlemen, this is Captain Jinks," said the old man, determined to get
+all the credit he could from his acquaintance with Sam. "Captain, this
+is my friend, Mr. Jackson."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Jackson was a tall, thin, narrow-chested man with no shoulders, a
+rounded back, and a gray, tobacco-stained mustache. His face was covered
+with pimples, and a huge quid of tobacco was concealed under his cheek.
+He was sitting on a chair tipped back rather beyond the danger-point,
+and his feet rested on the rim which projected from the stove half-way<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Page 109]</a></span>
+up. He made no effort to rise, but slowly extended a grimy, clammy hand
+which Sam pressed with some hesitation.</p>
+
+<p>"Glad to make your acquaintance, Captain," he drawled in a half-cracked
+voice that suggested damaged lungs and vocal organs. "Shake hands with
+Mr. Tucker."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Tucker, a little, old, red-faced man on the other side of the stove,
+advanced and went through the ceremony suggested.</p>
+
+<p>"We were just a-talking about them Cubapinos," explained Reddy. "The
+idee of them fellers a-pitching into us after all we've done for 'em.
+It's outrageous. They're only monkeys anyway, and they ought to be shot,
+every mother's son on 'em. Haven't we freed 'em from the cruel
+Castalians that they've been hating so for three hundred years?"</p>
+
+<p>"They seem to be hating us pretty well just now," said a man in the
+corner, whose voice sounded familiar to Sam. He turned and recognized
+the commercial traveler of the day before.</p>
+
+<p>"They're welcome to hate us," answered<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Page 110]</a></span> Jackson, "and when it comes to a
+matter of hating I shouldn't think much of us if we couldn't make 'em
+hate us as much in a year as the Castalians could in three hundred.
+They're a blamed slow lot and we ain't. That's all there is of it. What
+do you think, Captain?"</p>
+
+<p>"I fear," said Sam, "that they don't quite understand the great
+blessings we're conferring on them."</p>
+
+<p>"What blessings?" asked the drummer.</p>
+
+<p>"Why," said Sam, "liberty and independence&mdash;no, I don't mean
+independence exactly, but liberty and freedom."</p>
+
+<p>"Then why don't we leave them alone instead of fighting them?"</p>
+
+<p>"What an idee!" exclaimed Tucker. "They don't know what liberty is, and
+we must teach 'em if we have to blow their brains out."</p>
+
+<p>"You're too hard on 'em, Tucker," drawled Mr. Jackson. "We mustn't
+expect too much from pore savages who live in a country so hot that they
+can't progress like we do." Here Mr. Jackson took off his hat and wiped
+the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Page 111]</a></span> beads of perspiration from his brow with a red bandanna
+handkerchief. "Don't expect too much from cannibals that have their
+brains half roasted by the tropical sun."</p>
+
+<p>"That's a fact!" said some one in the throng.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Jackson, crossing his legs on a level well above his head,
+"them pore critters need our civilization, that's what they need," and
+he dexterously squirted a mouthful of tobacco juice on the white-hot
+stove, where it sizzled and gradually evaporated. "We must make real men
+of 'em. We must give 'em our strength and vigor and intelligence.
+They're a dirty lot of lazy beggars, that's the long and short of it,
+and we must turn 'em into gentlemen like us!"</p>
+
+<p>A general murmur of approval followed this outburst.</p>
+
+<p>"I hear," said Sam, anxious to get some definite information as to the
+warriors of the town, "I hear that several Slowburghers are going to the
+war."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Tucker, while Jackson after his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Page 112]</a></span> effort settled down into a
+semi-comatose state, "six of our boys are a-going. There's Davy Black,
+he drives the fastest horse in these parts, and Tom Slade. Where is Tom?
+He's generally here. They'll miss him here at the hotel, and Jim Thomson
+who used to be bartender over at Bloodgood's, and the two
+Thatchers&mdash;they're cousins&mdash;that makes five."</p>
+
+<p>"The village ought to be glad they are going to represent her at the
+front," said Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"From all I can hear," said the commercial man, "I think they are."</p>
+
+<p>"Naturally," cried Sam, "it will reflect great glory on the place. You
+ought to be proud of them."</p>
+
+<p>"It'll help the insurance business here," said a young man who had not
+yet spoken.</p>
+
+<p>"How is that?" asked Sam. "I don't exactly see."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, it's this way. You see I'm in the insurance business and I can't
+write a policy on a barn in this township, there's been so many burned;
+and while I don't want to say nothing against anybody, we think maybe<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Page 113]</a></span>
+they won't burn so much when the Thatchers clear out."</p>
+
+<p>"Nothin' ain't ever been proved against 'em," said Tucker.</p>
+
+<p>"That's true," said the young man, "but perhaps there might have been if
+they'd stayed. They say that Squire Jones was going to have Josh
+Thatcher arrested next week for his barn, but he's agreed to let up if
+he'd go to the Cubapines. Maybe that isn't true, but they say so."</p>
+
+<p>"I venture to say that it is a mistake," said Sam, who had been much
+pained by the conversation. "Young men who are so patriotic in the hour
+of need must be men of high character."</p>
+
+<p>"Maybe they are and maybe they aren't," replied the insurance agent,
+"but old Mrs. Crane told me she was going to buy chickens again next
+week for her chicken-yard. There was so many stolen last year that she
+gave up keeping them, but next week she's beginning again, and next week
+the Thatchers are going away. It's a coincidence, anyhow."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Page 114]</a></span>"Oh, boys will be boys," said Reddy. "When they get a good pension
+they'll be just as respectable as you or me. Here comes Tom Slade now,
+and Josh Thatcher, too."</p>
+
+<p>The door had opened, and through the smoke Sam descried two young men,
+one a slight wiry fellow, the other a large, broad-shouldered,
+fair-haired man with a dull expression of the eye.</p>
+
+<p>"Who says 'drinks all around'?" cried the former. "Everybody's blowing
+us off now."</p>
+
+<p>"Here," said Jackson, waking up, "I'll do it, hanged if I don't. You
+fellows are a-goin' to civilize the Cubapinos, and you deserve all the
+liquor you can carry."</p>
+
+<p>He got up and approached the bar and the crowd followed him, and soon
+every one was supplied with some kind of beverage.</p>
+
+<p>"Here's to Thatcher and Slade! May they represent Slowburgh honorably in
+the Cubapines and show 'em what Slowburghers are like," said Jackson,
+elevating his iced cocktail.</p>
+
+<p>The health was heartily drunk.</p>
+
+<p>"And here is to that distinguished officer,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Page 115]</a></span> Captain Jinks. Long may he
+wave!" cried old Reddy.</p>
+
+<p>"Speech, speech!" exclaimed the convivial crowd.</p>
+
+<p>"Gentlemen," responded Sam, "I am a soldier and not an orator, but I am
+proud to have my name coupled with those of your honored fellow
+townsmen. It is a sign of the greatness of our country that men of just
+the same character are in all quarters of this mighty republic answering
+their country's call. Soon we shall have the very pick of our youth
+collected on the shores of these ungrateful islanders who have turned
+against their best friends, and these misguided people will see for
+themselves the fruits of our civilization as we see it, in the persons
+of our soldiers. Permit me in responding to your flattering toast to
+propose the names of Mr. Reddy and Mr. Tucker as representatives of an
+older generation of patriots whose example we are happy to have before
+us for our guidance."</p>
+
+<p>This, Sam's first speech, was received with great applause, and then
+Josh Thatcher pro<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Page 116]</a></span>posed three cheers for Captain Jinks, which were given
+with a will. The only perverse spirit was that of the commercial
+traveler, who had sat in the corner reading an old copy of the Slowburgh
+<i>Herald</i>, and now on hearing the cheers, took a candle and went upstairs
+to bed.</p>
+
+<p>"That man's no good," said Reddy with a shake of his head. While the
+whole company were expressing their concurrence with this sentiment, Sam
+bade them good-night and took his leave.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Page 117]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VI" id="CHAPTER_VI"></a>CHAPTER VI</h2>
+
+<h1>Off for the Cubapines</h1>
+
+
+<div class="wrap_area">
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+
+<p><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />Y the next morning's mail Sam's commission arrived, and with it orders
+to report at once at the city of St. Kisco, whence a transport was about
+to sail on a date which gave Sam hardly time to catch it. He must hurry
+at once to town and get his new uniforms for which he had been fitted
+the week before, and then proceed by the fastest trains on the long
+journey to the distant port without even paying his parents a farewell
+visit. He found<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Page 118]</a></span> Cleary busily engaged in making his final arrangements,
+and persuaded him to cut them short and travel with him. Sam had hardly
+time to take breath from the moment of his departure from Slowburgh to
+the evening on which he and Cleary at last sat down in their
+sleeping-car. His friend heaved a deep sigh.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, here we are actually off and I haven't got anything to do for a
+change. This is what I call comfort."</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Sam, "but I wish we were in the Cubapines. This inaction is
+terrible while so much is at stake. It's a consolation to know that I am
+going to help to save the country, but it is tantalizing to wait so
+long. Then in your own way you're going to help the country too," he
+added, thinking that he might seem to Cleary to be monopolizing the
+honors.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll help it by helping you," laughed Cleary. "I've got another
+contract for you. You see the magazines are worth working. They handle
+the news after the newspapers are through with it, and they don't
+interfere with each other. So I got permission to tackle<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Page 119]</a></span> them from <i>The
+Lyre</i>, and I saw the editor of <i>Scribblers' Magazine</i> yesterday and it's
+a go, if things come out as I expect."</p>
+
+<p>"What do you mean?" asked Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, you are to write articles for them, a regular series, and the
+price is to be fixed on a sliding scale according to your celebrity at
+the time of each publication. It won't be less than a hundred dollars a
+page, and may run up to a thousand. It wouldn't be fair to fix the price
+ahead. If the articles run say six months, the last article might be
+worth ten times as much as the first."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, it might be better written," said Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I don't mean that. But your name might be more of an ad. by that
+time."</p>
+
+<p>"I've never written anything to print in my life," said Sam, "and I'm
+not sure I can."</p>
+
+<p>"That doesn't make any difference. I'll write them for you. You might be
+too modest anyhow. I can't think of a good name for the series. It ought
+to be 'The Autobiography of a Hero,' or 'A Modern Washington in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Page 120]</a></span>
+Cubapines,' or something like that. What do you think?"</p>
+
+<p>"I'm sure I don't know," said Sam. "I must leave that to you. They sound
+to me rather too flattering, but if you are sure that is the way those
+things are always done, I won't make any objection. You might ask Mr.
+Jonas. Where is he?"</p>
+
+<p>"He's going on next week. He's the greatest fellow I ever saw.
+Everything he touches turns to gold. He's got his grip on everything in
+sight on those blessed islands already. He's scarcely started, and he
+could sell out his interests there for a cold million to-day. It's going
+to be a big company to grab everything. He's called it the 'Benevolent
+Assimilation Company, Limited'; rather a good name, I think, tho perhaps
+'Unlimited' would be nearer the truth."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Sam. "It shows our true purposes. I hope the Cubapinos will
+rejoice when they hear the name."</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps they won't. There's no counting on those people. I'm sick of
+them before I've<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Page 121]</a></span> seen them. I'm just going to tell what a lot of
+skins they are when I begin writing for <i>The Lyre</i>. By the way, did you
+have your photographs taken at Slowburgh?"</p>
+
+<p class="figcenter"><a name="page120" id="page120"></a><img src="images/page120.png" title="page120" alt="page120" height="413" width="400" /></p>
+<h4>A BLOOD BROTHERHOOD</h4>
+<h6>"A BIG COMPANY TO GRAB EVERYTHING ... THE 'BENEVOLENT<br />
+ASSIMILATION COMPANY, LIMITED'"<br /><br /><br /><br /></h6>
+
+<p>"No," said Sam, "I forgot all about it, but I can write home about the
+old ones, and I've got one in cadet uniform taken at East Point."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, we mustn't forget to have you taken at St. Kisco, and we can mail
+the photos to <i>The Lyre</i>, but you must be careful not to overlook a
+thing like that again. The people will want to know what the hero who
+saved the country looked like."</p>
+
+<p>"Even if I don't do anything very wonderful," said Sam, "and I hope I
+shall, I shall be taking part in a great work, and doing my share of
+civilizing and Christianizing a barbarous country. They have no
+conception of our civilized and refined manners, of the sway of law and
+order, of all our civilized customs, the result of centuries of
+improvement and effort."</p>
+
+<p>Cleary picked up a newspaper to read.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Page 122]</a></span>"What's that other newspaper lying there?" asked Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"That's <i>The Evening Star</i>; do you want it?" and he handed it to him.</p>
+
+<p>"Good Lord! what's that frightful picture?" said Cleary, as Sam opened
+the paper. "Oh, I see; it's that lynching yesterday. Why, it's from a
+snap-shot; that's what I call enterprise! There's the darkey tied to the
+stake, and the flames are just up to his waist. My! how he squirms. It's
+fearful, isn't it? And look at the crowd! There are small boys bringing
+wood, and women and girls looking on, and, upon my word, a baby in arms,
+too! I know that square very well. I've often been there. That's the
+First Presbyterian Church there behind the stake. Rather a handsome
+building," and Cleary turned back to his own paper, while Sam settled
+down in his corner to read how the leading citizens gathered bones and
+charred flesh as mementoes and took them home to their children. No one
+could have guessed what he was reading from his expression, for his face
+spoke of nothing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Page 123]</a></span> but a guileless conscience and a contented heart.</p>
+
+<p>One day at St. Kisco gave just time enough for the photographs, and most
+of the day was devoted to them. Sam was taken in twenty poses&mdash;in the
+act of leading his troops in a breach, giving the order to fire,
+charging bayonets himself with a musket supposed to have been taken from
+a dead foe, standing with his arms folded and his cap pulled over his
+eyes in the trenches, and waving his cap on a bastion in the moment of
+triumph. Cleary lay down so that his friend might be pictured with his
+foot upon his prostrate form. The photographer was one who made a
+specialty of such work, and was connected with a cinematograph company.</p>
+
+<p>"If you have good luck, sir, and become famous," he said, "as your
+friend thinks you will, we'll fight your battles over again over there
+in the vacant lot; and then we'll work these in, and you'll soon be in
+every variety show in the country."</p>
+
+<p>"But I may be mounted on horseback," said Sam.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Page 124]</a></span>"That's so," said Cleary. "Can't you get a horse somewhere and take him
+on that?"</p>
+
+<p>"We never do that, sir. Here's a saddle. Just sit on it across this
+chair, and when the time comes we'll work it in all right. We'll have a
+real horse over in the lot." And thus Sam was taken straddling a chair.</p>
+
+<p>They left orders to send copies of the photographs to Homeville,
+Slowburgh, and to Miss Hunter who was still at East Point, and the
+remainder to <i>The Lyre</i>. That very evening they boarded the transport
+and at daybreak sailed away over the great ocean. The ship was filled by
+various drafts for different regiments and men-of-war. Sam's regiment
+was already at the seat of war, but there were several captains and
+lieutenants assigned to it on board, as well as thirty or forty men. Sam
+felt entirely comfortable again for the first time since his resignation
+at East Point. He was in his element, the military world, once more.
+Everything was ruled by drum, fife, and bugle. He found the same feeling
+of intense patriotism again, which civilians can not quite attain<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Page 125]</a></span> to,
+however they may make the attempt. The relations between some of the
+officers seemed to Sam somewhat strange. The highest naval officer on
+board, a captain, was not on speaking terms with the highest army
+officer, a brigadier-general of volunteers. This breach apparently set
+the fashion, for all the way down, through both arms of the service,
+there were jealousies and quarrels. There was one great subject of
+dispute, the respective merits of the two admirals who had overcome the
+Castalian fleet at Havilla. Some ascribed the victory to the one and
+some to the other, but to take one side was to put an end to all
+friendships on the other.</p>
+
+<p>"See here, Sam," said Cleary, not long after they had been out of sight
+of land, "who are you for, Admiral Hercules or Admiral Slewey? We can't
+keep on the fence, that's evident, and if we get down on different sides
+we can't be friends, and that might upset all our plans, not to speak of
+the Benevolent Assimilation Trust."</p>
+
+<p>"The fact is," said Sam, "that I don't know<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Page 126]</a></span> anything about it. They're
+both admirals, and they both must be right."</p>
+
+<p>"Nobody knows anything about it, but we must make up our minds all the
+same. My idea is that Hercules is going to come out ahead; and as long
+as one seems as good as the other in other respects, I move that we go
+for Hercules."</p>
+
+<p>"Very well," said Sam, "if you say so. He was in command, anyway, and
+more likely to be right."</p>
+
+<p>So Sam and Cleary allied themselves with the Hercules party, which was
+in the majority. They became quite intimate with the naval officers who
+belonged to this faction, and saw more of them than of the army men. Sam
+was much interested in learning about the profession which kept alive at
+sea the same traditions which the army preserved on land. For the first
+few days of the voyage the rolling of the ship made him feel a little
+sick, and he concealed his failings as well as he could and kept to
+himself; but he proved to be on the whole a good sailor. He was
+particularly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Page 127]</a></span> pleased to learn that on a man-of-war the captain takes
+his meals alone, and that only on invitation can an inferior officer sit
+down at table with him. This appealed to him as an admirable way of
+maintaining discipline and respect. The fact that all the naval men he
+met had their arms and bodies more or less tattooed also aroused his
+admiration. He inquired of the common soldiers if they ever indulged in
+the same artistic luxury, and found out to his delight that a few of
+them did.</p>
+
+<p>"It's strange," he remarked to Cleary, "that tattooing is universal in
+the navy and comparatively rare in the army. I rather think the habit
+must have been common to both services, and somehow we have nearly lost
+it. It's a fine thing. It marks a man with noble symbols and mottoes,
+and commits him to an honorable life, indelibly I may say."</p>
+
+<p>"It's a little like branding a mule," said Cleary.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Sam; "the brand shows who owns the mule, and the tattooing
+shows a man belongs to his country."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Page 128]</a></span>"And if he's shipwrecked and hasn't any picture-books or newspapers with
+him, he can find all he wants on his own skin," said Cleary.</p>
+
+<p>"Joke as you please, I think it's a patriotic custom."</p>
+
+<p>"Why don't you get tattooed then?" asked Cleary.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you think there's anybody on board can do it?" cried Sam
+enthusiastically.</p>
+
+<p>"Of course. Any of those blue-jackets can tell you whom to go to."</p>
+
+<p>Sam was off before Cleary had finished his sentence. Sure enough, he
+found a boatswain who was renowned as an artist, and without further
+parley he delivered himself into his hands. Cleary was consulted on the
+choice of designs, and the result was pronounced by all the connoisseurs
+on board&mdash;and there were many&mdash;to be a masterpiece. On his chest was a
+huge spread-eagle with a bunch of arrows, bayonets, and
+lightning-flashes in his claws. Cannon belched forth on each side, and
+the whole was flanked by a sailor on one side and a soldier on the
+other. His arms were tattooed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Page 129]</a></span> with various small designs of crossed
+swords, flags, mottoes, the title of his regiment, and other such
+devices. The boatswain now thought that his task was complete, but Sam
+insisted on having his back decorated as well, altho this was rather
+unusual. The general stock of subjects had been exhausted, and Cleary
+suggested that a representation of Sam himself, striking off the fetters
+of a Cubapino, would be most appropriate. After discussing a number of
+other suggestions offered by various friends, this one was finally
+adopted and successfully carried out. The operation was not altogether
+painless and produced a good deal of irritation of the skin, but it
+served to pass Sam's time and allay his impatience to be in the field,
+and Cleary became so much interested that he consented to allow the
+artist to tattoo a few modest designs of cannon and crossed bayonets on
+his own arms. Sam's comparatively high rank among officers who were,
+many of them, his juniors in rank but his seniors in years, might have
+made his position at first a difficult one had it not been for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Page 130]</a></span> his
+entire single-mindedness and loyalty to his country. If the powers that
+be had made him a captain, it was right that he should be a captain. He
+obeyed implicitly in taking his seat near the head of the table, as he
+would have obeyed if he had been ordered to the foot, and he expected
+others to accept what came from above as he did.</p>
+
+<p>One afternoon a report sprang up that land was in sight, and soon every
+eye was strained in one direction. Sam's eyesight was particularly good,
+and he was one of the first to detect the white gleam of a lighthouse.
+Soon the coast-line was distinct, and it was learned that they would
+arrive on the next day. By daybreak Sam was on deck, studying as well as
+he could this new land of heroism and adventure. Cleary joined him
+later, and the two friends watched the strange tropical shore with its
+palm-groves and occasional villages, and a range of mountains beyond. A
+bay opened before them, and the ship turned in, passing near an old
+fortification.</p>
+
+<p>"This is just where our fleet went in," said<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Page 131]</a></span> Cleary, examining a
+folding map which he held in his hand. "They passed along there single
+file," and he pointed out the passage.</p>
+
+<p>"Wasn't it glorious! Just think of sailing straight on, no matter how
+many torpedoes there were!" exclaimed Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"They knew blamed well there weren't any torpedoes," answered Cleary.</p>
+
+<p>"How could they have known? They hadn't ever been here before? There
+might perfectly well have been a lot of them directly under them."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Cleary, "they might have grown up from the bottom of the
+sea. All sorts of queer things grow here. There might have been a sort
+of coral torpedoes."</p>
+
+<p>"Cleary, you're getting more and more cynical every day. I wish you'd be
+more reasonable. What's the matter with you?"</p>
+
+<p>"It must be the newspaper business. And then you see I don't wear a
+uniform either. That makes a lot of difference."</p>
+
+<p>In another hour they passed the scene of the great naval battle. They
+could just<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Page 132]</a></span> distinguish the hulks of the wrecks well in shore.</p>
+
+<p>"And there's Havilla!" cried Cleary.</p>
+
+<p>And Havilla it was. They entered the great Oriental port with its
+crowded shipping. Small native boats were darting about between
+merchantmen and men-of-war. The low native houses, the fine buildings of
+the Castalian city, the palms, the Eastern costumes&mdash;all made a scene
+not to be forgotten. An officer of the 200th Volunteer Infantry came on
+board before the steamer had come to her moorings, with orders for
+Captain Jinks to report at once at their headquarters in one of the
+public buildings of the city. A lieutenant was left in charge of the
+200th's detail, and Sam hastened ashore in a native boat and Cleary went
+with him. They had no difficulty in finding their way, and Sam was soon
+reporting to his chief, Colonel Booth, an elderly captain of the regular
+army, who had been placed at the head of this volunteer regiment. The
+colonel received him rather gruffly, and turned him over to one of his
+captains, telling him they would<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Page 133]</a></span> be quartered together. The colonel was
+inclined to pay no attention to Cleary, but when the latter mentioned
+the Benevolent Assimilation Company, Limited, he suddenly changed his
+tone and expressed great delight at meeting him. Sam and Cleary went off
+together with the captain, whose name was Foster, to visit the lodgings
+assigned by the colonel. They were in a building near by, which had been
+used as barracks by the Castalian army. A number of rooms had been
+fitted up for the use of officers, and Sam and Foster were to occupy one
+of these, an arrangement which promised to be most comfortable. Five
+companies of their regiment were quartered in the same building.</p>
+
+<p>Cleary asked Foster's advice as to lodgings for himself, and Foster took
+him off with him to find a place, while Sam was left to unpack his
+luggage which had just arrived from the ship. They agreed to meet again
+in the same room at nine o'clock in the evening.</p>
+
+<p>It was somewhat after the hour fixed that the three men came together.
+Foster brought<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Page 134]</a></span> out a bottle of whisky from a cupboard and put it on the
+table by the water-jug, and then offered cigars. Sam had never smoked
+before, but he felt that a soldier ought to smoke, and he accepted the
+weed, and soon they were all seated, smoking and drinking, and engaged
+in a lively conversation. Foster had been in the Cubapines since the
+arrival of the first troops, and it was a treat for both of his
+interlocutors to hear all the news at first hand from a participant in
+the events.</p>
+
+<p>"How were things when you got here?" asked Cleary.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, it was like this," answered Foster. "Nothing had happened then
+except the destruction of the fleet. Our fleet commanded the water of
+course, and the niggers had closed up round the city on land. The
+Castalians didn't have anything but the city, and when we came we wanted
+to take the city."</p>
+
+<p>"Was Gomaldo in command of the Cubapino army then?" asked Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, he has been from the beginning. He's a bad lot."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Page 135]</a></span>"How is that?" asked Cleary.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, he has interfered with us all along as much as he could, just as
+if we didn't own the place."</p>
+
+<p>"That's just what I thought," said Cleary. "The copperheads at home say
+we treated him as an ally, but of course that's rubbish."</p>
+
+<p>"Of course," said Foster, "we never treated him as an ally. We only
+brought him here and made use of him, supplying him with some arms and
+letting him take charge of some of our prisoners. We couldn't tell him
+that we intended to keep the islands, because we were using him and
+couldn't get on without him. He's an ignorant fellow and hasn't the
+first idea of the behavior of an officer and a gentleman."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, how did you take Havilla?" asked Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, it was this way. The Castalians couldn't hold out because these
+monkeys had the place so tight that they couldn't get any provisions in.
+So they sent secret word to us that they would let us in on a certain
+day if<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Page 136]</a></span> we would keep the natives out. We agreed to this, of course.
+Then the Castalian general said that we must have some kind of a battle
+or he would be afraid to go home, and we cooked up a nice little battle.
+When the men got into it, however, it turned out to be quite a skirmish,
+and a number were killed on both sides. Then they surrendered and we
+went in and put a guard at the gates, and wouldn't let the niggers in.
+You wouldn't believe it, but they actually kicked at it. They're an
+unreasonable, sulky lot of beggars."</p>
+
+<p>"Then what happened after that?" asked Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, after that we sent the Castalians home and the Cubapinos moved back
+their lines a little, and we agreed to a sort of neutral zone and a line
+beyond which we weren't to go."</p>
+
+<p>"What was it that started the fighting between us and them?" said Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"It's a little mixed up. I was at the theater that night, and in the
+middle of the play we heard firing, and all of us rushed off and found
+everything in motion, and it grew into a regu<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Page 137]</a></span>lar fight. We made them
+move back, and before long the firing ceased. I tried to find out the
+next day how it began. The fact is, the day before, General Notice had
+ordered the 68th to move forward about half a mile, and they did so. The
+Cubapinos objected and insisted on crossing the new picket-line. That
+evening an officer of theirs walked across it and was shot by the
+sentinel. That started it."</p>
+
+<p>"Was the regiment moved across the line fixed on their side of the
+neutral zone?" said Cleary.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes. But that was all right. Don't we own the whole place? And the
+regiment was only obeying orders."</p>
+
+<p>"I wonder why the general gave the orders?" asked Cleary, musing as he
+looked into the smoke which he was puffing forth.</p>
+
+<p>"They say it was because he had what he called 'overmastering political
+reasons.' That is, there was the army bill up in Congress and it had to
+go through, and he was given the tip that some fighting would help it,
+and he took<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Page 138]</a></span> the hint. It was good statesmanship and generalship, too.
+All subordinate things must bend to the great general interests of the
+country. It was a good move, for it settled the business. Gomaldo sent
+in the next day and tried to patch up a truce, but Notice wouldn't see
+his messengers. He told them they must surrender unconditionally. It was
+fine, soldierly conduct. He's a brick."</p>
+
+<p>"What has he gone home for?" asked Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, he'd conquered them. Why shouldn't he go home? They're giving him
+a grand reception at home, and I'm glad to see it."</p>
+
+<p>"But he says that he has pacified the islands and brought the war to a
+close!"</p>
+
+<p>"So he did, in the military sense. He couldn't tell that the scamps
+wouldn't submit at once. It wasn't his fault that they showed such
+unreasonable bitterness and obstinacy."</p>
+
+<p>"How much territory do we hold now?" said Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"We've got the city and a strip along the bay where the fleet is; about
+five miles back,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Page 139]</a></span> I should say. But it's hardly safe to wander off far
+at night."</p>
+
+<p>"What's going to happen next?" asked Cleary. "I want to send home some
+news to <i>The Lyre</i> as soon as I can, and I want my friend Jinks here to
+have a chance to distinguish himself&mdash;and you too," he added hastily.</p>
+
+<p>"We'll probably get to work by next week, the way things look now.
+General Laughter is rather slow, but he means business. Gomaldo is
+getting a big army together, and we may have to take the offensive to
+get ahead of him. Now I suppose we ought to turn in. How would you like
+to take a look at Havilla to-morrow and see the place where the naval
+battle was? We can get off duty in the afternoon. All right, let's meet
+at regimental headquarters at three."</p>
+
+<p>Cleary bade them good-night, and Sam, who was beginning to feel
+uncomfortable effects from his cigar, was quite ready to go to bed.</p>
+
+<p>Sam's morning was occupied in familiarizing himself with the regimental
+routine in barracks. The building enclosed a large court<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Page 140]</a></span> which was used
+for drills and guard-mounting parade, and he did not have occasion to
+leave it until he went to join his friends at headquarters. Promptly at
+three o'clock the three men sallied forth. Sam was struck with the
+magnificence of the principal buildings, including the palace and the
+cathedral.</p>
+
+<p>"It's a fine city, isn't it?" he said.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, and the women are not bad-looking," said Cleary.</p>
+
+<p>"The people don't quite look like savages," said Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"You can't judge of them by these," said Foster. "Wait till you meet
+some negritos in the country."</p>
+
+<p>"How large a part of the population are they?" said Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"About one-fortieth, I think, but where principle is involved you can't
+go by numbers."</p>
+
+<p>"Of course not," was Sam's reply. "What building is that," he added,
+"with our flag over it and the nicely dressed young women in the
+windows?"</p>
+
+<p>"That?" said Foster, laughing; "oh, that's<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[Page 141]</a></span> the Young Ladies' Home. We
+have to license the place. It's the only way to keep the army in
+condition. Why, we've got about fifty per cent infected now."</p>
+
+<p>"Really?" cried Sam. "How our poor fellows are called upon to suffer for
+these ungrateful Cubapinos! Still they can feel that they are suffering
+for their country, too. That's a consolation."</p>
+
+<p>"There's more consolation than that," said Foster, "for we're spreading
+the thing like wildfire among the natives. We'll come out ahead."</p>
+
+<p>"I wish, tho, that they wouldn't fly Old Gory over the house," said Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"There was some talk of taking it down, but you see it's the policy of
+the Administration never to haul down the flag when it has once been
+raised. It presents rather a problem, you see."</p>
+
+<p>"It may wear out in time," said Sam, "altho it looks painfully new. What
+will they do then?"</p>
+
+<p>"I confess I don't know," said Foster.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[Page 142]</a></span> "They'll cross the bridge when
+they reach it."</p>
+
+<p>"A good many of the shop signs are in English already," remarked Sam.
+"That's a good beginning."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Cleary. "But they seem to be almost all saloons, that's
+queer."</p>
+
+<p>"So they are," said Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"There are some pretty good ones, too," said Foster. "Just stop in here
+for a moment and take a drink."</p>
+
+<p>They entered a drinking-place and found a bar planned on the familiar
+lines of home.</p>
+
+<p>"Look at this list of our drinks," said Foster proudly. "Count 'em;
+there are eighty-two."</p>
+
+<p>Sam examined the list, which was printed and framed and hanging on the
+wall, and they each took a glass of beer, standing. There were about a
+dozen men in the place, most of them soldiers.</p>
+
+<p>"Do they do a big business in these places?" asked Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"You'll think so when you see the drunken soldiers in the streets in the
+evening," an<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[Page 143]</a></span>swered Foster. "We're planting our institutions here, I
+tell you."</p>
+
+<p>"Not only saloons," said Sam. "There's the post-office, for instance."</p>
+
+<p>"They had a post-office before," said Cleary.</p>
+
+<p>"But ours is surely better," rejoined Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"It's better than it was," said Foster, "now that they've put the new
+postmaster in jail. They say he's bagged $75,000."</p>
+
+<p>"It's a good example of the way we treat embezzlers," cried Sam. "It
+ought to be a lesson to these Cubapinos. He'll be sent home to be tried.
+They ought to do that with every one caught robbing the mails in any
+way."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm afraid if they did the force would be pretty well crippled," said
+Foster.</p>
+
+<p>"Then there's the custom house," said Sam. "They must be delighted to
+get rid of those Castalian swindlers."</p>
+
+<p>"A merchant here told me," said Foster, "that they have to pay just as
+often now, but that they have to pay bigger sums."</p>
+
+<p>"Of course," cried Cleary, "you wouldn't expect our people to bother
+with the little<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[Page 144]</a></span> bribes the Castalians were after. We live on a larger
+scale. It will do these natives good to open their eyes to a real
+nation. I'm sorry any of them steal, but if they do, let 'em take a lot
+and be done with it."</p>
+
+<p>"We must remember that these people are only civilians," said Sam. "What
+can we expect of them?"</p>
+
+<p>"Our commissary and quartermaster departments aren't much better, tho,"
+said Foster. "Somebody's getting rich, to judge from the prices we pay
+and the stuff we get. The meat stinks, and the boots are made with glue
+instead of stitches and nails."</p>
+
+<p>"Then they must have been appointed from civil life," cried Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"Come, Sam," said Cleary, "I'm a civilian now, and I'm not going to have
+you crow over us. How about Captain Peters, who was the pet of
+Whoppington and cleaned out the Deer Harbor fund?"</p>
+
+<p>Sam walked on in silence.</p>
+
+<p>"See here," said Foster, "I'm tired of going on foot. Let's take a cab.
+Here, you fellow!"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[Page 145]</a></span>A two-wheeled wagon with an awning, drawn by a small, shaggy horse, drew
+up before them.</p>
+
+<p>"There's a gentleman in it," said Sam. "We must wait for another."</p>
+
+<p>"Nonsense!" cried Foster in a loud voice. "You evidently are a new
+arrival. It's only one of those monkeys. Here you, sir, get out of
+that!"</p>
+
+<p>The native expostulated a little, shrugged his shoulders, and did as he
+was told, and the three men got in.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm afraid he didn't like it," said Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"Didn't like it? What of it?" said Foster. "Whatever we do in uniform is
+official business, and we've got to impress these fellows with our power
+and make them respect us."</p>
+
+<p>They drove now through some narrow streets, past various native caf&eacute;s
+half open to the air, where the <i>habitu&eacute;s</i> were beginning to collect,
+through a picturesque gate in the old city wall, and out on the
+Boulevard, which was now filled with people driving and walking. It was
+a gay scene, and reminded Cleary of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[Page 146]</a></span> some of the cities of the
+Mediterranean which he had visited.</p>
+
+<p>"They're not quite as much like Apaches as I expected," said Sam, and
+neither of his friends ventured to respond.</p>
+
+<p>"We haven't got time to go out to where the ships are sunk," said
+Foster, "but if we drive up that hill and get out and walk up a little
+farther we can see them in the distance. I've got my glasses with me."</p>
+
+<p>In a few minutes they were at this point of vantage in a sort of
+unfrequented public park, and the three men took turns in looking at the
+distant wrecks through the captain's field-glass.</p>
+
+<p>"It was a great victory, wasn't it?" said Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, perhaps it was," answered Foster; "but the fact is, that those
+old boats could hardly float and their guns couldn't reach our ships. We
+just took our time and blew them up and set them on fire, and the crews
+were roasted or drowned, that was all there was of it. I don't think
+much of naval men anyway,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[Page 147]</a></span> to tell the truth. They don't compare with
+the army. They're always running their ships aground if there's any
+ground to run into."</p>
+
+<p>"Anyhow, if it had been a strong fleet we'd have wiped it out just the
+same, wouldn't we?" said Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"Undoubtedly," said Foster. "It's a pity, tho, that the fight didn't
+test our naval armaments better. It didn't prove anything. If we'd only
+used our torpedo-boats, and they'd got out their torpedo-boat
+destroyers, and then we'd had some torpedo-boat-destroyer destroyers,
+and&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," interrupted Cleary, "it is a pity."</p>
+
+<p>"But it wasn't Admiral Hercules's fault," said Sam. "His glory ought to
+be just as great."</p>
+
+<p>"Hercules! Hercules!" shouted Foster. "What had Hercules to do with it?
+He's a first-class fraud. It was Slewey who won the battle. You don't
+mean to tell me that you are Hercules men?"</p>
+
+<p>Sam and Cleary tried in vain to explain<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[Page 148]</a></span> their position, but Foster
+would not listen to them. The breach evidently was irreparable. He
+magnanimously turned over the cab to them, and went back to the city in
+another vehicle.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, this is strange," said Sam. "I liked everything about Captain
+Foster, but I don't understand this."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, you will tho, old man," said Cleary. "I've found out this morning
+that it's the same thing all through the army and navy here. They're
+hardly any of them on speaking terms. If it isn't one thing it's
+another. It's the Whoppington fashion, that's all. The general of the
+army won't speak to the adjutant-general there, and they're always
+smuggling bills into Congress to retire each other, and that spirit runs
+all the way down through both services. I'm a civilian now, and I can
+see with a little perspective. I don't know why military people are
+always squabbling like the women in an old ladies' home. No other
+professions do; it's queer. It's getting to be better to lose a battle
+than to win it, for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[Page 149]</a></span> then you don't have to fight for a year or two to
+find out who won it."</p>
+
+<p>Sam entered a feeble protest against Cleary's criticisms, and the two
+relapsed into silence.</p>
+
+<p>"Who did win that naval victory anyhow?" said Sam at last.</p>
+
+<p>"That's just what I'd like to know," responded Cleary. "One of the
+admirals admits he wasn't there, and, if we are to believe the naval
+people, the other one spent most of his time dodging around the
+smokestack. But I think they're a little too hard on him; I can't
+imagine why. I hear they're going to establish a permanent court at
+Whoppington to determine who wins victories in future. It's not a bad
+idea. My own view is that that battle won itself, and I shouldn't be
+surprised if that was the way with most battles. It would be fun to run
+a war without admirals and generals and see how it would come out. I
+don't believe there'd be much difference. At any rate it looks so, if
+what the navy says is true, and one of the admirals was away and the
+other playing tag on the forward deck of the <i>Phila</i><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[Page 150]</a></span><i>delphia</i>. Rum name
+for a battle-ship, the <i>Brotherly Love</i>, isn't it?"</p>
+
+<p>To this Sam made no answer.</p>
+
+<p>On arriving at the barracks he succeeded in having a separate room
+assigned to him, and thenceforth he and Foster were strangers.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[Page 151]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VII" id="CHAPTER_VII"></a>CHAPTER VII</h2>
+
+<h1>The Battle of San Diego</h1>
+
+
+
+<div class="wrap_area">
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+
+<p><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
+URING the next few days there was much activity in the army. It was
+clear that there was an expedition in preparation. All sorts of rumors
+were floating about, but it was impossible to verify any of them. Some
+said that Gomaldo was advancing with a large army; others, that he had
+surrendered and that the army was about to take peaceable possession<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[Page 152]</a></span> of
+the islands. Meanwhile Sam's position in the 200th Infantry was most
+unpleasant. Foster was a popular man in the regiment, and he had set all
+the officers against him. It was unfortunately a Slewey regiment, and it
+was too late for Sam to change sides&mdash;a thing which he was quite ready
+to do. He made up his mind never to mention the two admirals again, and
+regretted that he had named them once too often. He complained to
+Cleary.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm afraid," he said, "that there's no chance of my doing anything. The
+colonel will see to it that I am out of the way if there's anything to
+do. I might as well have stayed at East Point."</p>
+
+<p>"Brace up, old man! I've got an idea," said Cleary. "I'll fix you all
+right. Just you wait till to-morrow or the day after."</p>
+
+<p>The next day in the afternoon Sam received an order to report at once at
+the headquarters of General Laughter. He hastened to obey, and was
+ushered into the presence of that distinguished officer in the palace.
+It was an impressive sight that met his eyes. The gen<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[Page 153]</a></span>eral was believed
+to weigh some three hundred pounds, but he looked as if he weighed
+nearer five hundred. He was dressed in a white duck suit with brass
+buttons, the jacket unbuttoned in front and showing his underclothes. He
+was suffering a good deal from the heat, and fanning himself
+incessantly. Several members of his staff were busied talking with
+visitors or writing at desks, but the chief was doing nothing. He was
+seated in a superb arm-chair with his back to a pier-glass.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! captain," he said. "I'm glad to see you. Have a whisky and soda?
+I've assigned you to duty on my staff. Report here again to-morrow at
+ten and have your things moved over to the palace. Major Stroud will
+show you your quarters, captain!"</p>
+</div>
+<p>Major Stroud advanced and shook hands with Sam. He was every inch a
+soldier in appearance, but old enough to be a retired field-marshal. The
+three indulged in whiskies and soda, and Sam took his leave after a
+brief formal conversation. He found Cleary waiting for him in the
+street.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[Page 154]</a></span>"How on earth did you do it?" cried Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"It's the B. A. C. L.," said Cleary.</p>
+
+<p>"The what!"</p>
+
+<p>"The Benevolent Assimilation Company, Limited. What do you suppose? With
+<i>The Daily Lyre</i> thrown in too."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! thank you, thank you, my dear, dear friend," ejaculated Sam, with
+tears in his eyes. "I was beginning to think that my whole life was a
+failure, and here I am just in the very best place in the world. I won't
+disappoint you, I won't disappoint you!"</p>
+
+<p>In the few days at the barracks of the 200th Infantry, Sam had learned
+something of regimental work, and now he applied himself assiduously to
+the study of the business of the headquarters of a general in command in
+the field, for the army was practically in the field. At first it all
+seemed to him to be a maze quite without a plan, and he hoped that in
+time he would begin to see the outline of a system. But the more he
+observed the less system he saw. Everything that could be postponed was
+postponed. Responsibility was shifted from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[Page 155]</a></span> one staff officer to
+another. No one was held accountable for anything, and general confusion
+seemed to reign. The place was besieged with contractors and agents, and
+the staff was nearly worried to death. The general was always very
+busy&mdash;fanning himself&mdash;and the days went on.</p>
+
+<p>One morning a fellow member of the staff, a young lieutenant whom he
+scarcely knew, called Sam aside and asked him for a half-hour's
+conference. They went off together into a deserted room, and the
+lieutenant began the conversation in a whisper.</p>
+
+<p>"See here, Captain," said he, "we're looking for a patriotic fellow who
+cares more for his country than his own reputation. We understand that
+you're just the man."</p>
+
+<p>"I hope so," said Sam, delighted at the prospect of an opportunity to
+distinguish himself.</p>
+
+<p>"It's a rather delicate matter," continued the lieutenant, "and I must
+say it's rather a compliment to you to be selected for the job. The fact
+is, that Captain Jones is in trouble. He's about $3,000 short in his
+accounts."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[Page 156]</a></span>"How did that happen?" asked Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, that's not the point. I don't see that it makes any difference. But
+we've got to get him out of the scrape. The honor of the army is at
+stake. Civilians don't understand us. They don't appreciate our
+standards of honor. And if this thing gets out they'll charge us with
+all kinds of things. We've got to raise $3,000. That's all there is of
+it."</p>
+
+<p>"Good heavens! how can we?" cried Sam. "I've hardly got anything left of
+my pay, but I can give, say $25, on the next pay-day."</p>
+
+<p>"We're not going to pass the hat around. That would be beneath the
+dignity of the army. What we want you to do is this&mdash;and, indeed, we
+have settled it that you should do it. You are to go to-morrow afternoon
+to Banks &amp; Company, the army contractors, and have a confidential talk
+with Banks. Tell him you must have $3,000 at once. Here's a letter of
+introduction to him. He will see that you represent the people that run
+things here. Tell him that his contracts will probably be preferred to
+Short &amp; Co.'s, and tell him that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[Page 157]</a></span> for the future we shan't inspect his
+things as closely as we have in the past. You needn't go into
+particulars. He will understand. It's an ordinary business matter."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't quite like the idea," said Sam, ruminating. "Why don't you go
+yourself?"</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Captain, I'm only a lieutenant. It requires a man of higher
+rank to do such an important piece of work. You're a new man on the
+staff, and we wanted to pay you an honor and give you a chance to show
+your patriotism. You will be saving the reputation and character of the
+army."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, thank you!" exclaimed Sam. "Are you sure that it's always done in
+just this way?"</p>
+
+<p>"Always. It's an ordinary matter of business arrangement, as I've
+already told you."</p>
+
+<p>"Then it must be all right, I suppose," said Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"But it's not only that. It's a noble act to protect the character of a
+brother officer."</p>
+
+<p>"So it is, so it is," said Sam. "I'll do it. I'll call and see him about
+it to-morrow afternoon."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[Page 158]</a></span>"Hello!" shouted another officer, coming into the room. "Have you seen
+the orders? There's to be a conference of brigade and regimental
+commanders here to-night, and all staff officers are invited to attend.
+That means business."</p>
+
+<p>Sam was overjoyed at the news, and the three men hastened to the
+headquarters' room to discuss it with their fellow officers.</p>
+
+<p>Sam was present at the conference as a matter of course, and he watched
+the proceedings with the greatest interest. A map was stretched out on a
+magnificent gilt table in the middle of the room in which Sam had first
+seen the general, and most of the officers bent over it studying it. The
+general sat back in his arm-chair with his fan and asked everybody's
+advice, and no one appeared to have any advice to give.</p>
+
+<p>"The fact is this, gentlemen," he said at last, "we've got to do
+something, and the question is, what to do. Burton," said he to his
+assistant adjutant-general, "show them the plan that we've worked out."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[Page 159]</a></span>Burton was one of the officers who were poring over the map, and he
+began to explain a general advance in the direction of the enemy. He
+pointed out the position which they were now supposed to occupy, some
+ten miles away.</p>
+
+<p>"We ought to move out our lines to-morrow," he explained, "within, say,
+three or four miles of theirs. The regiments will keep the same order
+that they're in here at Havilla. We can't make the final arrangements
+until we get there. We may stay there a day or two to entrench
+ourselves, and then move on them at daybreak some day within a week."</p>
+
+<p>"That's the plan, gentlemen," said the general. "What do you think of
+it?" and he began to question all the general and field officers present
+beginning with the youngest, and none of them had any suggestion to
+offer.</p>
+
+<p>"Then it's understood that we start for this line here to-morrow morning
+at seven," said Burton.</p>
+
+<p>They all assented.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, boys, let's have some whisky," said<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[Page 160]</a></span> the general, and the
+conference resolved itself into a committee of the whole.</p>
+
+<p>Early in the morning the troops began to move forward. Sam, who acted as
+aide-de-camp, was sent out from headquarters once or twice to urge the
+various colonels to make haste, but there seemed to be no special orders
+as to the details of the movement. The regiments went as best they could
+and selected their own roads, finally choosing the positions that seemed
+most desirable to their commanders, who took care not to leave too great
+an interval between regiments. The men were set to work at once at
+putting up the tents and making entrenchments. It was some time after
+midday when the general and his staff finally left the headquarters in
+the city. Sam came downstairs with Major Stroud to mount his horse, and
+was surprised to see a landau with two horses drawn up at the door.</p>
+
+<p>"Who's that for?" he cried.</p>
+
+<p>"For the general," answered Major Stroud quietly.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[Page 161]</a></span>"For the general! Why on earth doesn't he ride a horse?"</p>
+
+<p>"There isn't a horse in the place that can carry him. He tried one when
+he first came here. He mounted it on a step-ladder, and the beast came
+down on his knees on the stone pavement and had to be shot. He hasn't
+tried it since."</p>
+
+<p>After waiting on the street for a long time Sam had the privilege of
+seeing the general emerge from the palace and enter his carriage. He was
+perspiring and fanning as usual, but carried no whisky and soda. The
+staff officers, of whom there were a dozen or more, mounted and followed
+the carriage. Sam rode next to Stroud. There was much confusion in the
+roads which they traveled&mdash;wagons laden with tents and provisions and
+hospital stores, camp-followers of all descriptions, and some belated
+soldiers besides. The general, however, had the right of way, and they
+proceeded with reasonable speed. They passed through native villages,
+rows of one-and two-story thatched houses on each side, with wooden
+palisades in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[Page 162]</a></span> front of them, well shaded by low but spreading palms.
+They passed large sugar refineries, built by the Castalians, and
+churches and convents. They passed rice-fields, some covered with water
+and others more or less dry, which sturdy peasants were busy harrowing
+with buffaloes. On the road they saw many two-wheeled carts drawn by
+single buffaloes, the man standing in the cart as he drove. At last they
+came to a halt on rising ground at the edge of a piece of woodland, and
+Colonel Burton, the adjutant-general, rode up beside the general's
+carriage and dismounted, and the two began to study the map again. After
+a long discussion the procession moved on again and finally stopped at
+the crest of a ridge, where the general alighted and soon selected a
+place for his tent. An hour had passed before the tents and baggage
+arrived, but notwithstanding the delay the tents were pitched and supper
+ready by sundown, and Sam found himself actually in the field on the eve
+of a battle. The eve, however, was somewhat prolonged. Several days
+passed, and Sam was kept pretty<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[Page 163]</a></span> busy in riding to the various brigade
+and regimental headquarters and finding out how things were progressing:
+what was the state of the trenches, and what news there was from the
+enemy. Scouting parties were sent out, but their reports were kept
+secret, and Sam was left in the dark. There was a native village about
+half a mile to the rear, and the inhabitants were all friendly. Sam
+stopped there occasionally for a drink of water, and became acquainted
+with the keeper of the caf&eacute;, who was particularly amicable and fond of
+conversation. Cleary was on the lookout for accommodations in the
+neighborhood, and Sam introduced him to this native, Se&ntilde;or Garcia, who
+provided him with a room. One evening Sam was sitting with Cleary in the
+caf&eacute; when Garcia, as was his custom, joined them, and they began to talk
+in the Castalian language.</p>
+
+<p>"We are glad you people are coming to rule our islands," said Garcia;
+"that is, those of us who know your history, because we know that you
+are a great people and love freedom."</p>
+
+<p>"I am pleased to hear it," said Sam.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[Page 164]</a></span> "Cleary, I was sure that all the
+sensible natives would feel that way."</p>
+
+<p>"You believe in liberty, equality, fraternity?"</p>
+
+<p>"Of course we do," said Cleary.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Sam, "if you understand those words properly. Now liberty
+doesn't interfere with obedience. Our whole army here is built up on the
+idea of obedience. We've all got liberty, of course, but&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Liberty to do what?" asked Garcia innocently.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, liberty to&mdash;well, to&mdash;yes, liberty to do as we're ordered," said
+Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! I see," said Garcia. "And then you have equality."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Sam, "in a general way we have. But that doesn't prevent
+people from differing in rank. Now there's the general, he's my
+superior, and I'm the superior of the lieutenants, and we're all
+superior to the privates. We have regular schools at home to teach us
+not to misunderstand the kind of equality that we believe in. There's
+one at East Point for the army. This gentleman and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[Page 165]</a></span> I were educated
+there. We weren't allowed even to look at our superiors. There's another
+institution like it for the navy. And then every man-of-war and every
+army garrison is a sort of college to spread these ideas about rank. A
+captain of a ship can't even let his officers dine with him too often.
+It's a fine system and it prevents us from making any mistakes about
+what equality means."</p>
+
+<p>"And then fraternity?" asked Garcia.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, that's just the same," said Cleary. "At East Point we got a blow in
+the jaw if we showed the wrong kind of fraternity to our betters."</p>
+
+<p>"It's a wonderful system," said Garcia. "But I have heard some of your
+people explain liberty, equality, fraternity a little differently."</p>
+
+<p>"They must have been civilians," said Sam. "The army and navy represent
+all that is best in our country, and the people at large do not
+understand the army and navy. Luckily for you, the islands will be in
+charge of the army.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[Page 166]</a></span> There won't be any mistake about the kind of
+liberty and equality we give you."</p>
+
+<p>"I am so grateful," said Garcia, rolling up his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Cleary," said Sam. "The people at home don't understand us. Did
+you see that there's a bill in Congress to allow men in the ranks, mere
+non-commissioned officers, to apply for commissions? If they pass it, it
+will be the end of the army. Just think of a sergeant becoming one of
+us! Oh, I forgot, you aren't an officer, but you must know how I feel!"</p>
+
+<p>Cleary expressed his sympathy, and Sam bade him and his host good-night.
+On his way back through a path in the jungle he thought he heard a light
+step behind him, but when he looked back he could see nothing. When he
+arrived at the headquarters' tent he found all the higher officers of
+the army there, and Stroud whispered to him that they had heard that
+Gomaldo would take the offensive the next morning, and that consequently
+a general advance was ordered for daybreak in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[Page 167]</a></span> order that they might
+forestall him. The general was rather taken by surprise and his final
+plans were not ready, but it was arranged that at four o'clock each
+regiment should advance, and that orders containing further details
+would be sent to them by six o'clock at the latest. Burton remained in
+the general's tent to perfect the orders, and Sam went to the tent which
+he occupied with Major Stroud to enjoy a few hours' sleep.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm afraid we're not quite ready," said Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"No army ever is," replied Stroud laconically.</p>
+
+<p>"I wish the general were a little livelier and quicker," said Sam,
+blushing at his own blasphemy.</p>
+
+<p>"And thinner?" said Stroud, smiling, as he twisted his white mustache
+and smoothed his imperial. "Oh, he'll do very well. He's a good solid
+point to rally round and fall back on, and then we always know where to
+find him, for he can't get away very far if he tries."</p>
+
+<p>At half-past three in the morning the officers<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[Page 168]</a></span> of the staff were called
+by a native servant and began to make their preparations. They
+breakfasted as best they could on coffee without sugar or cream, and
+some stale bread, with an egg apiece, and whisky. Sam felt unaccountably
+sleepy, and he thought that all the rest looked sleepy too. It was five
+o'clock before Burton had the orders ready for the various subordinate
+commanders, telling each of them in which direction to advance. The plan
+had been mapped out the night before, but the orders had to be copied
+and corrected. At last he came out and distributed them to Stroud, Sam,
+and several other officers&mdash;two orders to each, yawning painfully as he
+handed them out.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't think I slept a wink last night," he said.</p>
+
+<p>The two commands to which Sam's orders were directed were stationed on
+the extreme right of the army. He made a rough tracing of that part of
+the map and set out at once on a wiry little native pony. For some
+distance he followed the high-road, but then was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[Page 169]</a></span> obliged to turn into a
+branch road which led through the woods, and which soon became a mere
+wood-path. Before long he heard firing in front of him, and soon he
+recognized the sound of whistling bullets above his head. He found
+himself ducking his head involuntarily, and almost for the first time in
+his life he was conscious of being afraid. This was a surprise to him,
+as his thoughts during the night whenever he had been awake had been
+full of pleasant anticipations.</p>
+
+<p>The path suddenly came out into an open rolling country, and Sam pulled
+up his horse, dismounted, and hiding behind some underbrush, took a look
+at the situation. There was a Gatling-gun, worked by a young officer and
+five men, a few hundred yards to the right at the edge of the woods.
+Beyond to the front he could see a line of troops firing at the enemy
+from behind a wall. Of the Cubapinos he could see nothing but the smoke
+of their guns and muskets here and there. Shells were falling in another
+part of the field, but nowhere near him. Bullets were flying<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[Page 170]</a></span> thick
+through the air, and he heard them hissing constantly. As he looked he
+saw one of the Gatling crew fall over, doubled up in a heap. Sam moved
+along in the wood nearer to this gun, so that he might ask where he
+could find the brigade commander. As he approached he heard the
+lieutenant say:</p>
+
+<p>"Damn those sharp-shooters. They've got our range now. With this damned
+smokeless powder they can pick us all off. Clark, bring some of that
+artificial smoke stuff here."</p>
+
+<p>The soldier obeyed, and in a few moments a dense smoke rose above them,
+covering the whole neighborhood.</p>
+
+<p>"What a wonderful thing these inventions are!" thought Sam, as he tied
+his horse to a tree and advanced crouching toward the battery. The
+lieutenant pointed out to him the position of the brigadier-general,
+some distance back on the right under cover of the jungle, and told him
+of a path that would take him there. Sam was not slow to follow his
+directions, for just then a shell exploded close by. He soon found the
+general surrounded<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[Page 171]</a></span> by his staff on a partially wooded hill, from which,
+however, they could command the field with their glasses. Bullets were
+flying about them, and an occasional shell sailed over their heads, but
+the general seemed perfectly at home. He took the orders, opened them
+and read them.</p>
+
+<p>"That's strange," said he. "Last night I understood that I was to make
+for that pass between the hills there on the left, and now I'm ordered
+to take the first turning to the right. I don't understand it. Do you
+know anything about it?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, he must have changed his mind. Or else it was a bluff to keep his
+plans from leaking out. Tell the general that I will carry out his
+orders at once."</p>
+
+<p>Sam inquired of the members of the staff where he would be likely to
+find the 43d Volunteers, to whose colonel his other orders were
+directed, but they had no information, except that in the morning that
+regiment had been stationed farther over on the right. Sam<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[Page 172]</a></span> started out
+again, guiding himself as best he could by a compass which he had in his
+pocket. He selected the paths which seemed most promising, but the
+jungle between was impenetrable on horseback. The firing on the extreme
+right seemed to be farther in the rear, and he made his way in that
+direction. Again he came out at the edge of the woods, and to his
+surprise saw a battalion of the enemy at a short distance from him. He
+turned his horse, stuck his spurs into him, and went back along the path
+to the rear at a full run, while a shower of bullets fell around him. He
+still kept on working to the right in the direction of the firing which
+he heard in front of him. At last in a hollow of the jungle he came upon
+a Red Cross station, one of those advance temporary relief posts where
+the wounded who are too much injured to be taken at once to the rear are
+treated. Twenty or thirty men were lying in a row, some of them on their
+coats, others on the bare ground. Two surgeons were doing what they
+could in the line of first aid to the injured, binding up arms and
+legs,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[Page 173]</a></span> dressing wounds, and trying to stop the flow of blood from
+arteries. Two soldiers were lifting a wounded man on a stretcher so that
+he might be carried to the rear, and he was groaning with agony. Every
+one of the patients was blotched in one place or another with blood, and
+some of them were lying in pools of the crimson fluid. Sam felt a little
+sick at his stomach. Two men came in with another stretcher, bringing a
+wounded man from the front. The man gave a convulsive start as they set
+him down.</p>
+
+<p>"A bullet's just hit him in the head," said one of the men. "I'm glad it
+wasn't me."</p>
+
+<p>One of the doctors looked at the wounded man.</p>
+
+<p>"He's dead," he said. "Damn you, what do you mean by bringing dead men
+here?"</p>
+
+<p>The two bearers took up their load again and dropped it out of sight in
+the bushes. Sam did not like to interrupt the doctors, who were
+overtasked, so he dismounted and tried to find a wounded man well enough
+to answer his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[Page 174]</a></span> questions. One man at the end of the row looked less pale
+than the rest, and he asked him where he could find the 43d.</p>
+
+<p>"That's my regiment, sir," he replied, as a twig, cut off by a bullet,
+fell on his face. "You'd better lie down here, sir; you'll be shot if
+you don't. A lot of the wounded have been hit here again."</p>
+
+<p>Sam sat down by his side.</p>
+
+<p>"Our regiment is over that way," he said, pointing in the direction of
+the firing. "I don't know where the colonel is. We haven't seen him for
+hours. The lieutenant-colonel is down with fever. I think the major's in
+command. You ought to find him at the front. We've been falling back,
+and the firing sounds nearer than it did. I'm afraid the enemy will
+catch us here."</p>
+
+<p>Sam did not wait to hear anything further, but, leaving his horse tied
+to a tree, he ran toward the front. He found many soldiers skulking
+along the path, and they directed him to the major. He discovered him
+sitting on the ground behind a stone wall.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[Page 175]</a></span>"Here, major, are your orders. I understand you're in command."</p>
+
+<p>"Not much," said the major. "The colonel's in command. You'd better find
+him."</p>
+
+<p>"Where is he?"</p>
+
+<p>"I'm sure I don't know. I haven't seen him since six o'clock."</p>
+
+<p>"But this is your regiment, isn't it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, yes. It's part of it."</p>
+
+<p>Just then a young captain came running up from the front, and cried out
+to his major:</p>
+
+<p>"Major, we're having a hard time of it there. Won't you come up and take
+charge? I'm afraid they'll force us back."</p>
+
+<p>"No," said the major, "I won't. I'm going back there to that last
+village. It's a much better place to defend. Besides I'm not feeling
+well. You fellows can stay here if you like. I shan't order the regiment
+back, but I'll go back and get ready for them there. We ought to have
+trenches there, you know," and he got up and walked rapidly off down the
+road. The captain turned to Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"I beg your pardon, captain," said he, "but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[Page 176]</a></span> what are we to do? Our
+officers have given out, and we're a new regiment and haven't any
+experience. Won't you take command?"</p>
+
+<p>Sam was by no means satisfied in his mind that he would behave much
+better than the major, but here was an opportunity that he could not
+afford to lose.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll see what I can do," said he. "Let's see what the orders are."</p>
+
+<p>He opened the document and saw that it was a direction to keep on to the
+front until they arrived before the town of San Diego, which they were
+to assault and capture.</p>
+
+<p>"Show me where your men are," said Sam. "Who have you got there?"</p>
+
+<p>"We've got our own regiment, the 43d, and six or eight companies of the
+72d&mdash;I don't know where they came from; and then there's a battery, and
+perhaps some others."</p>
+
+<p>They hastened along the road together, urging the stragglers to join
+them, which many of them did. The way became more and more encumbered
+with men, and the bullets came thicker. Sam was thoroughly scared. He<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[Page 177]</a></span>
+could feel his legs waver at the knee, and it seemed as if a giant hand
+had grasped him by the spine. They passed several musicians of the band.</p>
+
+<p>"Start up a tune!" cried Sam. "Play something and follow us." At the
+same time he instinctively thrust his hand into his breast pocket and
+felt for his traveling Lares and Penates, namely, his tin soldier, his
+photographs of East Point, one of Marian, and her last letter. Meanwhile
+the band began to play and the bass-drummer wielded his huge drumstick
+with all his might. Sam began to feel happier, and so did the men about
+him. One of the musicians suddenly fell, struck dead by a bullet, and
+just then a shell burst over them and two or three men went down. With
+one accord the soldiers began to curse and swear in the most frightful
+manner and to insist on speedy vengeance. Sam was surprised to find
+himself enjoying the oaths. They just expressed his feelings, and he
+hurried on to the edge of the woods. In front of them they saw a line of
+their own men lying on the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[Page 178]</a></span> ground behind stones and logs, shooting at
+the enemy, whose line could be distinguished hardly more than a third of
+a mile away.</p>
+
+<p>"They're nearer than they were," whispered the captain. "We must push
+them back or they'll have us. The men on the firing line are getting
+scared."</p>
+
+<p>"We must scare them behind more than the enemy does in front," said Sam,
+drawing his revolver. "Here you, sir, get back into your place."</p>
+
+<p>A man in the ranks, who was beginning to creep back, saw the revolver
+and dropped back in his position with an oath.</p>
+
+<p>"Forward!" cried Sam, now thoroughly in the spirit of the occasion.
+"Come up to the front, all of you, and extend our line there to the
+right. Lie down and take careful aim with every shot."</p>
+
+<p>The men did as they were told, and Sam took up his position behind the
+line with the captain, both of them standing in a perfect gale of
+bullets, while all the rest were lying down.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[Page 179]</a></span>"Lie down," said Sam to the captain. "You've no business to risk your
+life like that."</p>
+
+<p>"How about yours, sir?" said the captain, as he obeyed.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll take care of myself, if you'll be good enough to let me," answered
+Sam.</p>
+
+<p>The presence of a staff officer gave new courage to the men, and their
+marksmanship began to have effect on the enemy, who were seen to be
+gradually falling back. Sam took this opportunity to move his line
+forward, and he sent a lieutenant to direct the battery to cover his men
+when they should charge on the enemy's line. He moved his line forward
+in this way successively three or four times, and the troops were now
+thoroughly encouraged, and some of them even asked to be allowed to
+charge. Sam, however, postponed this final act as long as he could. It
+was not until he saw the captain whom he had met in the woods mangled
+and instantly killed by a piece of shell that he became so angry that he
+could restrain himself no longer. He gave<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[Page 180]</a></span> the order to fix bayonets,
+and with a yell the men rose from their lairs and rushed over the
+intervening ground to the enemy's position. The Cubapinos did not wait
+for them, but turned and ran precipitously. Sam and his men followed
+them for at least a mile, when they made a stand again.</p>
+
+<p>"They're in the trenches now that they were in this morning," explained
+a lieutenant.</p>
+
+<p>Here the same tactics were renewed, and in another half-hour Sam ordered
+his men to charge again. This time the enemy waited longer, and many of
+the attacking party fell, but before they reached the trenches the
+Cubapinos took flight, and Sam saw his soldiers bayonet the last two or
+three of them in the back. There were a good many dead in the trenches,
+all of them shot through the head. It was a proud moment for Sam when he
+stood on the edge of the trench and planted Old Gory there while the men
+cheered. A wounded Cubapino lay just before him, and one of the soldiers
+kicked him in the head and killed him. Sam noticed it, and was a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[Page 181]</a></span> little
+startled to find that it seemed all right to him.</p>
+
+<p>"I've half a mind to kick the next wounded man I see," he thought. "It
+must be rather good sport"; but he did not do it.</p>
+
+<p>The rest of the fight was in the nature of a procession. They pursued
+the flying Cubapinos as fast as they could, but were unable to come up
+with them. In a native village through which they passed, Sam asked an
+old man, who had been too weak to get away, how far off San Diego was,
+and learned that it was five miles away to the left. He could not
+understand this, but still he kept on in that direction. As they left
+the village it burst into flames, for the last soldiers had set it on
+fire. Sam thought of the old man perishing in his hut, and it seemed to
+him a fine thing and quite natural. On their way they came across other
+bodies of troops who joined them, and it so happened that no one came
+forward of superior rank to Sam, and consequently he retained the
+command. Before they came in sight of San Diego he had quite a brigade<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[Page 182]</a></span>
+under him. He halted them in front of the town and sent out a scouting
+party. There was no sound of firing now except in the distance. In an
+hour the scouting party came back and reported that the place had been
+vacated by the enemy, who for some reason had been seized by a panic.
+Sam ordered the advance to be resumed, and late in the afternoon found
+himself in possession of San Diego. He began to take measures at once to
+fortify the place, when the brigadier-general whom he had seen in the
+morning marched in with his brigade and took over the command from him,
+congratulating him on his success, which was already the talk of the
+army. Sam turned over the command to him with much grace and dignity,
+and, borrowing a horse, set off for the old headquarters which he had
+left in the morning, for he learned that, altho the enemy were
+completely defeated and scattered, still the general would not move his
+headquarters forward to the front till the following day.</p>
+
+<p>The general received him with great cordiality.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[Page 183]</a></span>"Everything turned out just as I planned it," he said, "but, Captain,
+you helped us out at a critical point there on the right. I shall
+mention you in despatches. You may depend on being promoted and given a
+good post. You ought to have a regiment at least."</p>
+
+<p>Sam was taking his supper when Cleary came in, hot and grimy.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, you're a great fellow," he said, "to get away from me the way you
+did this morning. But didn't I tell you, you were the stuff? Why, you
+won the battle. Do you know that you turned their left flank?"</p>
+
+<p>"To tell the truth, I didn't know it," said Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, you did."</p>
+
+<p>"But the general planned everything," said Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Cleary, "but I'll tell you more about that. I'm doing some
+detective work, and I'll have something to tell you in a day or two. But
+I wish I'd been with you. I had my kodak all ready. However, they can
+make up the pictures at home. How's this for headlines?" and he took
+some notes from his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[Page 184]</a></span> pocket. "'Great Victory at San Diego. Captain Jinks
+Turns Defeat into Victory. Hailed as Hero Jinks by the Army. General
+Laughter's Plans Carried Out through the Young Hero's Co-operation.'
+What do you think of that? We'll put the part about the general in small
+caps, because he's not quite solid with the trust. I'm not going to
+write up anybody but you and the Mounted Mustangs; those are my orders."</p>
+
+<p>"How did the Mustangs make out?" asked Sam. "They were way off on the
+left, and I haven't heard anything about them."</p>
+
+<p>"They did very decently," said Cleary, "considering they were never
+under fire before. They kept up pretty well with the regulars, and
+fortunately they had a regular regiment on each side. They really did
+well."</p>
+
+<p>"Did they make any fine cavalry charges?" inquired Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"Cavalry charges! Bless your heart, they didn't have any horses, and
+it's lucky they didn't. They had their hands full without having to
+manage any horses!"</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[Page 185]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VIII" id="CHAPTER_VIII"></a>CHAPTER VIII</h2>
+
+<h1>Among the Moritos</h1>
+
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+
+<p><br /><br /><br />
+
+N the following day headquarters were moved into San Diego. Sam was
+lodged in the town hall with the general, and Cleary got rooms close by.
+There were rumors of renewed activity on the part of the Cubapinos, but
+it was thought that their resistance for the future would be of a
+guerrilla nature. There was, however, one savage tribe to the north
+which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[Page 186]</a></span> had terrorized a large district of country, and the general
+decided that it must be subdued. Sam heard of this plan, but did not
+know whether he would be sent on the expedition or not, and urged Cleary
+to use his influence so that he might be one of the party.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll manage it for you, old man," said Cleary, two or three days after
+the battle. "I've got the general in a tight place, and all I've got to
+do is to let him know it and he'll do whatever I want."</p>
+
+<p>"What do you mean?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, he had about as much to do with the San Diego fight as the man in
+the moon."</p>
+
+<p>"What?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I'll tell you the story. I've run down every clue and here it is.
+You see somehow Colonel Burton got the orders mixed up that morning and
+addressed every one of them to the wrong general."</p>
+
+<p>"Is it possible?" exclaimed Sam. "That explains why they couldn't
+understand the orders there in the Third Brigade, and why I took all day
+to find San Diego. I wonder if<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[Page 187]</a></span> it's true. Why on earth didn't Gomaldo
+win then? It must have been a close call."</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p>"It's plain enough why he didn't win," said Cleary. "That chap Garcia
+was one of his spies, and a clever one too. He got all he could out of
+you and me, but that wasn't much. Then he had the native servant of the
+general in his pay. As soon as you left on the night before the battle
+he cleared out too, and he got a statement from the native servant of
+all the general intended to do. He got the news to Gomaldo by midnight,
+and before sunrise the Cubapino forces were ready to meet each of our
+columns when they advanced. They had ambushes prepared for each of them.
+If the orders had gone out straight we'd have been cleaned out, that's
+my opinion. But you see, they all went wrong and the columns advanced
+along different roads, and poor Gomaldo's plans all went to pot. I
+believe he had Garcia hanged for deceiving him. You haven't seen the
+general's servant since the battle, have you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Now that you speak of it, I don't think I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[Page 188]</a></span> have," said Sam. "But he's a
+great general all the same, don't you think so?"</p>
+
+<p>"Of course," answered Cleary.</p>
+
+<p>"I wonder if all battles are won like that?" said Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"I half think they are," said his friend. "And then the generals smile
+and say, 'I told you so.'"</p>
+
+<p>"Cleary," said Sam, "I want you to answer me one question honestly."</p>
+
+<p>"Out with it."</p>
+
+<p>"Did I have much to do with winning that battle or not?"</p>
+
+<p>"To tell the honest truth, Sam, between me and you, I don't know whether
+you did or not. But <i>The Lyre</i> will say that you did, and that will
+settle it for history."</p>
+
+<p>Sam sighed and made no other reply.</p>
+
+<p>The expedition against the Moritos started out a week later. It
+consisted of two regiments, one of colored men under a certain Colonel
+James, the other of white volunteers, with a brigadier-general in
+command. Sam was assigned to the command of the volunteer<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[Page 189]</a></span> regiment with
+the temporary rank of major, its colonel having been wounded at the
+battle of San Diego. For a whole day they marched northward unmolested,
+and encamped at night in a valley in the mountains with a small native
+village as headquarters. There had been little incident during the day.
+They had burned several villages and driven off a good many cattle for
+meat. Sam was surprised to see how handsome the furniture was in the
+little thatched cottages of the people, perched as they were on posts
+several feet high. It was a feast day, and the whole population had been
+in the streets in their best clothes. The soldiers snatched the jewels
+of the women and chased the men away, and then looted the houses,
+destroying what they could not take, and finally setting them on fire.</p>
+
+<p>"It's better so," said Sam to his adjutant. "Make war as bad as possible
+and people will keep the peace. We are the real peacemakers."</p>
+
+<p>He heard shouts and cries as he passed through the villages, and had
+reason to think<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[Page 190]</a></span> that the soldiers were not contented with mere looting,
+but he did not inquire. He took his supper with the general at his
+headquarters. Colonel James and Cleary ate with them, for Cleary was
+still true to his friend's fortunes and determined to follow him
+everywhere. After an evening of smoking and chatting, Sam, Cleary, and
+Colonel James bade the general good-night and started for their
+quarters, which lay in the same direction. It was a gorgeous moonlight
+night, such a night as only the tropics can produce, and they sauntered
+slowly along the mountain road, enjoying the scene.</p>
+
+<p>"There is a question that I have been wanting to ask you, Colonel," said
+Sam to Colonel James as they walked on together. "What do you think of
+darkies as soldiers? I have never seen much of them, and as you have a
+negro regiment, you must know all about it."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, the truth is, Major," responded the colonel, "I wouldn't have my
+opinion get out for a good deal, but I'll tell you in confidence.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[Page 191]</a></span> They
+make much better soldiers than white men, that's the long and short of
+it."</p>
+
+<p>"How can you explain that? It's most surprising!" cried Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, they're more impressible, for one thing. You can work them up
+into any kind of passion you want to. Then they're more submissive to
+discipline; they're used to being ordered about and kicked and cuffed,
+and they don't mind it. Besides, they're accustomed from their low
+social position to be subordinate to superiors, and rather expect it
+than not. They are all poor, too, and used to poor food and ragged
+clothes and no comforts, and of course they don't complain of what they
+get from us."</p>
+
+<p>"You mean," said Cleary, "that the lower a man is in the scale of
+society the better soldier he makes."</p>
+
+<p>"Well," answered the colonel, "I hadn't ever put it just in that light,
+but that's about the size of it. These darkies are great hands at
+carrying concealed weapons, too. If it isn't a razor it's something
+else, and if there's a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[Page 192]</a></span> row going on they will get mixed up in it, but
+they're none the worse as soldiers for that."</p>
+
+<p>"Let's go up to that point there and take the moonlight view before we
+turn in," suggested Cleary.</p>
+
+<p>The others agreed, and they began to climb a path leading up to the
+right. It was much more of a climb than they had expected, and when they
+had become quite blown they sat down to recover their breath.</p>
+
+<p>"I think we'd better go back," said Colonel James. "We may lose our way,
+and it isn't safe here. The Moritos are known to be thick in these
+mountains, and they might find us."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, let's go a little farther," said Cleary, and they set out to climb
+again.</p>
+
+<p>"The path seems to stop here," said Sam, who was in the lead. "This must
+be the top, but I don't see any place for a view. Perhaps we'd better go
+back."</p>
+
+<p>Cleary did not repeat his objection, and they began to retrace their
+steps. For some time they went on in silence.</p>
+
+<p>"The path begins to go up-hill here," said<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[Page 193]</a></span> Cleary, who now led. "I
+don't understand this. We didn't go down-hill at all."</p>
+
+<p>"I think we did for a short distance," answered Sam.</p>
+
+<p>They went on, still ascending.</p>
+
+<p>"There doesn't seem to be any path here," said Cleary. "Do you see it?"</p>
+
+<p>His companions were obliged to admit that they did not.</p>
+
+<p>"We'd better call for help," said Sam, and the three men began to shout
+at the top of their voices, but there was no reply. An hour must have
+elapsed while they were engaged in calling, and their voices became
+husky, but all in vain.</p>
+
+<p>"Hist!" said Cleary at last. "I think I hear some one coming. I heard
+the branches move. They have sent out for us, thank fortune! I didn't
+like the idea of sleeping out here and making the acquaintance of snakes
+and catching fevers."</p>
+
+<p>The words, were hardly out of his mouth when three shadowy figures
+sprang out of the bushes and grasped each of the three men from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[Page 194]</a></span> behind,
+holding their elbows back so that they could not use their arms, and in
+a moment a veritable swarm of long-haired, half-clad Moritos were upon
+them, pinioning them and emptying their pockets and belts. It was quite
+useless to make any resistance, the attack had been too sudden and
+unexpected. Cleary cried out once, but they made him understand that, if
+he did it again, they would stab him with one of their long knives. When
+the captives were securely bound, the captors began to discuss the
+situation in their own language, which was the only language they
+understood. There was evidently some difference of opinion, but after a
+few minutes they came to some kind of an agreement. The legs of the
+prisoners were unbound, and they were made to march through the jungle,
+each one with two guards behind him, who pricked him with their lances
+if he did not move fast enough. Their only other arms seemed to be bows
+and arrows. The march was a very weary one, and through a wild,
+mountainous country which would have been impassable for men who did<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[Page 195]</a></span>
+not know it thoroughly. Occasionally they seemed to be following obscure
+paths, but as often there was no sign of a track, and the thick,
+tropical vegetation made progress difficult. For an hour or two they
+climbed up the half-dry bed of a mountain torrent, and more than once
+they were ankle-deep in swampy ground. The Moritos passed through the
+jungle with the agility and noiselessness of cats, but the three white
+men floundered along as best they could. Their captors uttered never a
+word and would not allow them to speak.</p>
+
+<p>The sun was just rising over a wilderness of mountains when they came to
+a small clearing in the woods, apparently upon a plateau near the top of
+a mountain. In this clearing there were a number of isolated trees, in
+each one of which, at about twenty feet above the ground, was a native
+hut, looking like a huge bird's nest. A small crowd of natives,
+including women and children, ran toward them shouting, and now for the
+first time the men of the returning party began to talk too. Some of
+them tied the legs of their prisoners again<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[Page 196]</a></span> and sat them down on the
+ground, while the others rehearsed the history of their exploit. It was
+a curious scene to witness. The men as well as the women wore their
+long, coarse hair loose to the waist. Some of the men had feathers stuck
+in their hair, and all of them were grotesquely tattooed.</p>
+
+<p>"I wonder if they're cannibals?" said Cleary, for there seemed to be an
+opportunity now for conversation.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't think there are any in this part of the country," said Colonel
+James. "Here comes our breakfast anyway."</p>
+
+<p>All the inhabitants of the village had been inspecting the captives with
+great interest, especially the women and children. Two women now came
+running from the group of tree-houses with platters of meat, and the
+crowd opened to let them approach.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't ask what it is," said Cleary, as he gulped down his rations.</p>
+
+<p>"I can't eat it!" cried Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, you must, or you'll offend them," said Colonel James.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[Page 197]</a></span>And they completed their repast with wry faces. When they had finished,
+one of the warriors, whom they had noticed before on account of his
+comparative height and the magnificence of his decorations, came up to
+them and addressed them, to their great surprise, in Castalian. He
+explained to them that he was the famous savage chief, Carlos, who as
+head of the Moritos ruled the entire region, and that they were
+prisoners of war; that he had learned Castalian as a boy from a
+missionary in the mountains when the land was at peace; and that a
+palaver would be held on the following day, to which the heads of the
+neighboring villages would be invited, to determine what to do with
+them. He showed special interest in Sam's red hair and mustache, and
+smoothed them and pulled them, asking him if they had been dyed. When he
+was informed that they were not, he was filled with admiration and
+called up his favorites to examine this wonder of nature. Sam had
+noticed that from the moment of his arrival he had been the object of
+admiration<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[Page 198]</a></span> of the women, and this fact was now accounted for.</p>
+
+<p>The three prisoners had no reason to complain of their treatment during
+the day. A guard was set upon them, but the ropes by which they were
+tied were loosened, and they were allowed from time to time to walk
+about. Most of the morning they passed in much-needed sleep. In the
+afternoon Carlos visited them again with some of his men, and set to
+work to satisfy his curiosity as to their country, translating their
+answers to his friends. His Castalian was very bad, but so was that of
+his captives; yet they succeeded in making themselves understood without
+difficulty.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you have houses as high as those?" he asked, pointing to the human
+nests in the trees.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, indeed," said Cleary. "Near my home there is a house nearly a
+quarter of a mile long and twice as high as that tree, and nine hundred
+people live in it."</p>
+
+<p>There were murmurs of astonishment as this information was translated.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[Page 199]</a></span>"What is that great house for?" asked the chief.</p>
+
+<p>"It's a lunatic asylum."</p>
+
+<p>"What is that?"</p>
+
+<p>"A house for lunatics to live in."</p>
+
+<p>"But what is a lunatic?"</p>
+
+<p>Cleary tried in vain to explain what a lunatic was. The Moritos had
+never seen one.</p>
+
+<p>"We have plenty of such houses at home," said Sam, "and we have had to
+double their size in ten years to hold the lunatics; they are splendid
+buildings. There was one not very far from the college where my friend
+and I were educated. But some of our prisons are even larger than our
+lunatic asylums."</p>
+
+<p>"What is a prison," asked Carlos.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh," said Sam, "don't you understand that either? It's a house in which
+we lock up criminals&mdash;I mean men who kill us or rob us."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I see," replied Carlos. "You mean your enemies whom you take
+prisoner in battle."</p>
+
+<p>"No, I don't. I mean our own fellow citizens who murder and steal."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[Page 200]</a></span>"Do you mean that you sometimes kill each other and steal from each
+other, your own tribe?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Sam. "Of course people who do so are bad men, but there are
+some such among us."</p>
+
+<p>A great discussion arose among the natives after hearing this.</p>
+
+<p>"What do they say?" asked Colonel James in Castalian.</p>
+
+<p>"They say," said the chief, "that they can not believe this, as they
+have never heard of members of the same tribe hurting each other."</p>
+
+<p>"We do all we can to prevent it," said Sam. "In our cities we have
+policemen to keep order; that is, we have soldiers stationed in the
+streets to frighten the bad men."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you have soldiers in the streets of your towns to keep you from
+killing each other!" exclaimed the chief, in astonishment. "Who ever
+heard of such a thing? I do not understand it," and, altho Sam repeated
+the information in every conceivable way permitted by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[Page 201]</a></span> his limited
+vocabulary, he was unable successfully to convey the idea.</p>
+
+<p>"It is strange how uncivilized they are," he said to his friends.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you live on bananas in your country?" asked Carlos.</p>
+
+<p>"No; we eat them sometimes, but we live on grain and meat," said Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"You must have to work very hard to get it."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, we do, sometimes twelve hours a day."</p>
+
+<p>"How frightful! And is there enough for all to eat?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not always."</p>
+
+<p>"And are your people happy when they work so hard and are sometimes
+hungry?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not always," said Sam. "Sometimes people are so unhappy that they
+commit suicide."</p>
+
+<p>"What?"</p>
+
+<p>"I mean they kill themselves."</p>
+
+<p>There was now another heated discussion.</p>
+
+<p>"What do they say?" asked Colonel James.</p>
+
+<p>"They say that they did not know it was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[Page 202]</a></span> possible for people to kill
+themselves. I did not know it either. It is very strange."</p>
+
+<p>"What limited intelligences they have!" exclaimed Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"They say," continued Carlos, in a somewhat embarrassed manner, "that if
+you are condemned to death, they wish one of you would kill himself, so
+that they can see how it is done."</p>
+
+<p>"There's a chance for you, Sam," said Cleary, but Sam did not seem to
+see the joke.</p>
+
+<p>"I am very sorry," said Carlos, seating himself nearer to Sam, "I am
+very sorry that we may have to kill you, for I like you; but what can we
+do? It is a rule of our tribe to kill prisoners of war."</p>
+
+<p>"I really don't see what they can do, if that is the case," said Sam in
+English. "If that is their law, and they have always done it, of course
+from their point of view it is their military duty. I don't see any way
+out of it. Do you?"</p>
+
+<p>"It wouldn't break my heart if they failed to do their duty in this
+case," said Cleary. "For<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[Page 203]</a></span> heaven's sake, don't tell him what you think.
+Let's keep him feeling agreeable by our conversation. He's fallen in
+love with you, Sam. Perhaps he'll give you to one of his daughters and
+she may marry you or eat you, whichever she pleases."</p>
+
+<p>"I wish you wouldn't joke about these things," said Sam. "It's a serious
+piece of business. There's no glory in being tomahawked here in the
+mountains."</p>
+
+<p>"And I haven't got my kodak with me either," said Cleary.</p>
+
+<p>"What made you come into my country?" asked Carlos. "Did you not know
+how powerful I am? And what have I ever done against you?"</p>
+
+<p>"We came because we were ordered to," said Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"And do you do what you are ordered to, whether you approve of it or
+not?"</p>
+
+<p>"Of course we do."</p>
+
+<p>"That is very strange," said Carlos. "We never obey anybody unless we
+want to and think he is doing the right thing. I tell my<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[Page 204]</a></span> men here what
+I want to do, and if they agree to it they obey me, but if they don't I
+give it up. But you do things that you think are wrong and foolish
+because you are ordered to. It is very strange!"</p>
+
+<p>"We are military men," said Sam. "It requires centuries of civilization
+to understand us."</p>
+
+<p>"How do you kill your prisoners?" asked Carlos.</p>
+
+<p>"We don't kill them," answered Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know about that, Sam," said Cleary in English. "We didn't take
+many prisoners at San Diego."</p>
+
+<p>"That's a fact," answered Sam, in the same language. "We didn't take
+many. I never thought of that."</p>
+
+<p>"Don't tell him, tho," added Cleary.</p>
+
+<p>"But when you soldiers have to execute an enemy for any reason, how do
+you do it?"</p>
+
+<p>"We shoot them with rifles," said Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"Is that all?"</p>
+
+<p>"No; we make them dig their graves first," interposed Cleary. "That's a
+hint to him,"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[Page 205]</a></span> he whispered. "It's better than the stew pot."</p>
+
+<p>"Dig their graves first!" exclaimed the chief, and he turned to his men
+and explained the matter to them. They were evidently delighted.</p>
+
+<p>"What are they saying?" asked James again.</p>
+
+<p>"They say that that is a grand idea, and that they will adopt it. They
+think civilization is a great thing, and they want to be civilized,"
+said Carlos.</p>
+
+<p>"There, I knew they weren't cannibals!" said the colonel.</p>
+
+<p>There was silence for several minutes, and Carlos smoothed Sam's locks
+with his hand.</p>
+
+<p>"We must entertain him," said Cleary. "Say something, Sam, or he'll get
+down on us."</p>
+
+<p>"Say something yourself," said Sam, who was thoroughly vexed at his
+friend's ill-timed flippancy.</p>
+
+<p>"Does your tribe live in these mountains and nowhere else?" asked
+Cleary.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[Page 206]</a></span>"Oh, no. We have brothers everywhere. They are in all the islands, and
+all over the world."</p>
+
+<p>"You tell them by your language, I suppose."</p>
+
+<p>"No, some of them do not speak our language. That makes no difference.
+We tell our brothers in other ways."</p>
+
+<p>"How?" said Cleary.</p>
+
+<p>"There are four marks of the true Morito," said the chief. "Their young
+men are initiated by torture. That is one mark. Then their chief men
+wear feathers on their heads. That is the second. And the third mark is
+that they are tattooed, as I am," and he pointed to the strange figures
+on his naked chest; "and the fourth is that they all use the sacred
+tom-tom when they dance."</p>
+
+<p>"Sam," said Cleary, "have you got those East Point photographs in your
+pocket?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Sam, thrusting his hand into his bosom.</p>
+
+<p class="figcenter"><a name="page206" id="page206"></a><img src="images/page206.png" title="page206" alt="page206" height="584" width="400" /></p>
+<h4>TWO OF A KIND</h4>
+<h6>"THERE ARE FOUR MARKS"<br /><br /><br /><br /></h6>
+
+<p>Cleary rolled over to Carlos as well as his ropes would allow, threw his
+arms about his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[Page 207]</a></span> neck, and cried out in Castalian, "Oh, my brother, my
+long-lost brother!"</p>
+
+<p>There was a general commotion. The savages drew their knives, and for a
+moment there seemed to be danger for the prisoners.</p>
+
+<p>"What on earth are you trying to do, Mr. Cleary?" exclaimed Colonel
+James. "It seems to me that your pleasantries are in very doubtful taste
+while our lives are in the balance."</p>
+
+<p>Cleary made no answer, but went on crying, "Oh, my brothers, my
+long-lost brothers!"</p>
+
+<p>"What do you mean?" ejaculated Carlos, in a rage. "I will give you one
+minute in which to explain, and then your head will fall."</p>
+
+<p>"We are your brothers. We are Moritos. We are your people from a distant
+island, and you never knew it!"</p>
+
+<p>"Is this true?" asked the chief, looking at Sam and the colonel.</p>
+
+<p>"Swear to it," whispered Cleary.</p>
+
+<p>"We swear that it is true," replied the two officers.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[Page 208]</a></span>"Then prove it, or you shall all three die to-night. I am not to be
+trifled with. Proceed."</p>
+
+<p>"Se&ntilde;or," said Cleary, "you have said that you recognize Morito young men
+by the fact that they have passed through the torture. We have passed
+through the torture. My friend will show you the pictures taken of both
+of us when we were about to be burned at the stake, and also one of
+himself passing through the ordeal of water. Sam, show him the photos."</p>
+
+<p>Sam took the two pictures from his pocket and handed them to Cleary, who
+held them in his hand while Carlos peered over his shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>"You see here," he said, "that we are tied to the stake. You may
+recognize our features. You see the expression of pain on our faces.
+These men standing around are our elder brothers who initiated us. It
+was done by night in a sacred grove where our ancestors have indulged in
+these rites for many ages. That wall is part of a ruin of a temple to
+the god of war."</p>
+
+<p>Carlos evidently was impressed. He took<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[Page 209]</a></span> the dim print, with its fitful
+lantern-light effects, and studied it, comparing the faces with those of
+his prisoners. Then he showed it to his followers, and they all spoke
+together.</p>
+
+<p>"They say," said their chief at last, "that they believe you speak the
+truth. But how do we know that the old man was initiated too?"</p>
+
+<p>"He is an old man," said Cleary. "He had a picture like this in his
+pocket when he was young. We all carry them with us as long as they hold
+together. But they will wear out. You may see that this one is wearing
+out already."</p>
+
+<p>"That is true," assented the chief. "But your picture proves against you
+as well as for you. You have no feathers in your heads there, and you
+are wearing none now," and he proudly straightened up those on his head.</p>
+
+<p>"In our country we have not many feathers as you have here," answered
+Cleary. "The birds do not come often to that land, it is so cold. Only
+our greatest men wear feathers. When we reach home and grow old and wise
+and valiant, perhaps we shall all have feath<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[Page 210]</a></span>ers. This old warrior of
+ours has feathers at home, but he does not carry them on journeys. My
+young friend and I are yet too young. We have a picture of our old
+friend here with his feathers."</p>
+
+<p>"Good heavens!" exclaimed Sam. "What are you driving at. We'll be worse
+off than ever now."</p>
+
+<p>"Just you let me manage this affair," said Cleary. "Give me that photo
+of the dress-parade at East Point that you showed me last week."</p>
+
+<p>Sam did as he was told. It represented the dress-parade at sunset, the
+companies drawn up in line at parade-rest and the band in full blast
+going through its evolutions in the foreground, with a peculiarly
+magnificent drum-major in bear-skin hat and plumes at the head, swinging
+a gorgeous baton.</p>
+
+<p>Cleary exhibited it to Carlos.</p>
+
+<p>"There is our elderly friend," said he, indicating the drum-major. "He
+is leading the national war-dance of our people. There is the tom-tom,"
+he added triumphantly, point<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[Page 211]</a></span>ing at the bass-drum, which was fortunately
+presented in full relief.</p>
+
+<p>Carlos was taken aback, and he made a guttural exclamation of surprise.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you dress like that when you are at home?" he asked of Colonel
+James.</p>
+
+<p>"I do," replied the colonel majestically.</p>
+
+<p>"Then I bow down before you," said the chief, kneeling down and touching
+the ground with his forehead three times. "But," he added, as he rose to
+his feet, "you have not yet proved that we are brothers. Where are your
+tattoo-marks? Look at mine!"</p>
+
+<p>"Sam, strip," whispered Cleary, and Sam tore off his coat and shirt,
+displaying the masterpieces of the artistic boatswain. A cry of
+admiration went up from the assembled savages. Carlos rushed at him,
+threw his arms about his neck, and rubbed his nose violently against
+his.</p>
+
+<p>"For heaven's sake, save me, Cleary!" cried Sam. "My nose will be worse
+than Saunder's, and Marian is prejudiced against damaged noses."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[Page 212]</a></span>Cleary thought it best not to interfere, and finally the chief grew
+tired of this exercise. He hardly paid any attention while Cleary showed
+the modest tattoo-marks on his arms, and Colonel James exhibited equally
+insignificant symbols on his, for he, too, had been tattooed in his
+youth. He was too much engrossed in Sam's red hair and his variegated
+cuticle.</p>
+
+<p>"Here is the picture of the water-ordeal which you forgot to look at,"
+said Cleary, as he collected the photographs. "This is my friend again
+with his head in the water and his legs stretched out in supplication to
+the god of the temple."</p>
+
+<p>Carlos looked at it in ecstasy.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, my brothers!" he cried. "To think that I should not have known you!
+You torture each other just as we do. You are tattooed just as we are!
+You have bigger feathers and bigger dances and bigger tom-toms. You are
+bigger savages than we are! Come, let us feast together."</p>
+
+<p>The repast was soon prepared in the center<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[Page 213]</a></span> of the clearing. The
+prisoners, now unbound, washed and happy, were seated in the place of
+honor on each side of the chief. A huge pot of miscellaneous food was
+set down in the midst, and they all began to eat with their fingers, the
+chief picking out the tid-bits for his guests and putting them in their
+mouths. They were so much delighted with the results of the day's work
+that they ate heartily and asked no questions. When the meal was over,
+Cleary turned to the chief and thanked him in a little oration, which
+was received with great favor.</p>
+
+<p>"We have found our brothers," he said in conclusion, "and you have found
+yours. You believe us now when we say that we have come to bless you and
+not to injure you. We will not take your land. We will generously give
+you part of it for yourselves. You see how we all love you, the aged
+warrior and the red-headed chief as well as I. Why will you not come
+with us when we set out on our journey to our great chief, or why, at
+any rate, will you not send your chiefs with us, to tell<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[Page 214]</a></span> him that you
+have received us all as brothers and that we shall always be friends and
+allies?"</p>
+
+<p>Carlos translated this speech sentence by sentence. Cleary was a good
+speaker, and they were impressed by his style as well as by his
+argument. They palavered together for some time; then Carlos arose and
+addressed his guests, but particularly Sam, whom he considered as the
+leader.</p>
+
+<p>"Brothers," he said, "we are indeed brothers by the torture, tattoo,
+tom-tom, and top-feather. We did not know who you were, we did not
+understand you. We wished to be left in peace. We did not want to have
+the Castalians come here and rob us. We did not want their beads and
+their brandy. We wanted to be let alone. But you are our brothers. You
+are greater savages than we are. Why should we not go with you? The
+chiefs of our other villages are coming to-morrow at sunrise. I will
+conduct you back to your great chief with them, and we shall all rejoice
+together."</p>
+
+<p>It was now nearly dark. Carlos apologized<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[Page 215]</a></span> for not having accommodation
+for his guests in his tree-hut, but provided comfortable blankets on the
+ground and had a fire built for them in a secluded place near the
+village. The three men were soon sleeping peacefully, and they did not
+awake until the sun had already risen.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[Page 216]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IX" id="CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX</a></h2>
+
+<h1>On Duty at Havilla<br /></h1>
+
+
+
+<div class="wrap_area">
+
+ <img src="images/chap_9.png" alt="chap_9" height="567" width="400" />
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+
+ </div>
+
+<p><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />HEN they woke they heard the noise of voices in the village and
+hastened thither. The chiefs had already arrived and were exchanging
+greetings with Carlos and the other residents. Breakfast was prepared by
+the women on the same ground where they had dined, and by eight o'clock
+the expedition started, com<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[Page 217]</a></span>posed of some thirty warriors, several of
+whom were laden with presents in the shape of baskets and native cloth.
+When they neared the headquarters of the little invading army, the three
+white men went ahead and informed the sentinels that it was a peaceful
+embassy which followed them.</p>
+
+<p>"You must leave me to tell the story of our exploit," Cleary had said,
+and his friends were so well satisfied with his record as a talker that
+they assented.</p>
+
+<p>"General," said Cleary, as they entered his hut in the village, "we are
+bringing in all the chiefs of the Moritos. They are ready to lay down
+their arms and accept any terms. We have sworn friendship to them."</p>
+
+<p>"How on earth have you managed it?" said the general.</p>
+
+<p>"It is chiefly due to Captain Jinks, or, I should say, Major Jinks. They
+were about to kill us when, by the sheer force of his glance and his
+powers of speech, he actually cowed them, and they submitted to him."</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p>"I have heard of taming wild beasts that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[Page 218]</a></span> way," said the general, "but I
+never quite believed it."</p>
+
+<p>When the chiefs arrived they embraced every soldier they saw and showed
+every sign of joy. The general ordered a feast to be spread for them and
+addressed them in English. They did not understand a word of this
+harangue, but seemed much affected. When they heard that the great
+general of all was at San Diego, only a day's march away, they insisted
+on going thither, and the next day the brigade marched back again,
+leaving a small garrison behind. The army at San Diego could hardly
+believe its eyes when at sundown the expedition returned, having fully
+accomplished its object without firing a shot and accompanied by a band
+of Moritos. When Cleary's version of the exploit became known, Sam was
+openly acclaimed as a hero and the favorite of the army. General
+Laughter complimented him again, and again mentioned him in despatches.
+A week later his promotion to be major of volunteers, for meritorious
+conduct in the field of San Diego, was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[Page 219]</a></span> announced by cable, and again
+after a few days he was made a colonel. Sam's cup was full.</p>
+
+<p>"Sam," said Cleary one day, "I believe in your luck. You'll be President
+some of these days. All the time we were up in the mountains I knew it
+would come out all right because we had you along."</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile the chiefs had tendered their presents to General Laughter and
+had drunk plentiful libations of whisky and soda with him. They spent a
+week of festivity in the town and then returned, having agreed to all
+that was asked of them by their "brothers."</p>
+
+<p>The rainy season now set in, and operations in the field became
+difficult. Furthermore, the general had decided that the war was at an
+end, and officially it was so considered. Some troops were left at San
+Diego, but the headquarters were removed again to Havilla, and Sam went
+back with the staff. He found himself received as a great man. His two
+exploits had made him the most famous officer in the army, even more so
+than the general in com<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[Page 220]</a></span>mand. Soon after his return to the city one of
+the civil commissioners, who had been sent out by the Administration,
+gave a large dinner in his honor at the palace. The chief officers and
+civil officials were among the guests, as well as two or three native
+merchants who had remained loyal to the invading army for financial and
+commercial reasons and had not joined the rebels, who composed
+nine-tenths of the population. These merchants were generally known in
+the army as the "patriots," and were treated with much consideration by
+the civil commissioners.</p>
+
+<p>After dinner the host proposed a toast to Sam and accompanied it with a
+patriotic speech which thrilled the hearts of his audience. He pointed
+to the national flag which was festooned upon the wall.</p>
+
+<p>"Look at Old Gory!" he cried. "What does she stand for? For the rights
+of the oppressed all over the earth, for freedom and equal rights,
+for&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>There was a sound of boisterous laughter in the next room. A young
+officer ran forward<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[Page 221]</a></span> and whispered to the orator, "Be careful; some of
+those captured rebel officers are shut up in there, and perhaps they can
+overhear you. Be careful what you say. Some of them speak English." The
+commissioner hemmed and hawed and tried to recover himself.</p>
+
+<p>"What does the dear old flag stand for?" he repeated. "For
+liber&mdash;No&mdash;for-r-r&mdash;&mdash;Well, 'pon my word, what does she stand for?"</p>
+
+<p>"For the army and navy," whispered a neighbor.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," he thundered. "Yes, the flag stands for the army and navy, for
+our officers and men, for our men-of-war and artillery, for our cavalry
+and infantry, that's what she stands for!"</p>
+
+<p>This was received with great applause, and the speaker smiled with
+satisfaction. Then gradually his expression became sad.</p>
+
+<p>"I am sorry to say," he said,&mdash;"I am ashamed as a citizen of our great
+land to be obliged to admit, that there are at home a few
+craven-hearted, mean-spirited men&mdash;shall I call them<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[Page 222]</a></span> men? No, nor even
+women&mdash;there are creatures, I say, who disapprove of our glorious deeds,
+who spurn the flag and the noble principles for which it stands and to
+which I have alluded, who say that we have no business to take away land
+which belongs to other people, and that we have not the right to
+slaughter rebels and traitors in our midst. I appeal to the patriotic
+Cubapinos at this board, if we are not introducing a higher and nobler
+civilization into these islands."</p>
+
+<p>The native gentlemen bowed assent.</p>
+
+<p>"Have we not given them a better language than their own? Have we not
+established our enlightened institutions? For instance, let me cite the
+custom house. We have the collector here with us&mdash;and the post-office.
+The postmaster is&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Sh-sh-sh!" whispered the prompter again. "He's in jail."</p>
+
+<p>"I mean the assistant postmaster is also with us. And there are our
+other institutions, the&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"There's going to be a prize-fight to-night,"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[Page 223]</a></span> cried a young lieutenant
+who had taken too much wine, at the foot of the table. "Dandy Sullivan
+against Joe Corker."</p>
+
+<p>This interruption was too much for the commissioner, who was quite
+unable to resume the thread of his remarks for several moments. The
+guests in the mean time moved uneasily in their seats, for most of them
+were anxious to be off to see the fight.</p>
+
+<p>"Those who carp against us at home," continued the speaker, trying in
+vain to find some graceful way of coming to a close, "those who dishonor
+the flag are the men who pretend to be filled with humanity and to
+desire the welfare of mankind. They pretend to object to bloodshed. They
+are mere sentimentalists. They are not practical men. They do not
+understand our destiny, nor the Constitution, nor progress, nor
+civilization, nor glory, nor honor, nor the dear old flag, God bless
+her. They are sentimentalists. They have no sense of humor."</p>
+
+<p>Here the audience applauded loudly, altho the speaker had not intended
+to have them ap<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[Page 224]</a></span>plaud just there. It occurred to him that he might just
+as well stop at this point, and he sat down, not altogether satisfied,
+however, with his peroration and vexed to think that he had forgotten
+Sam altogether. The party broke up without delay, and Sam walked off
+with Cleary, who had been present, to see the prize-fight.</p>
+
+<p>"The commissioner isn't much of a talker, is he?" said Cleary. "That was
+a bad break about the postmaster. I hear they've arrested Captain Jones
+for embezzlement too."</p>
+
+<p>"Good heavens!" cried Sam, "what an outrage!" And he told Cleary of his
+narrow escape from complicity in the matter, and how the military
+operations had prevented him from calling on the contractors. "Civilians
+don't understand these things," he added. "They oughtn't to send them
+out here. They don't understand things."</p>
+
+<p>"No. They haven't been brought up on tabasco sauce. What can you expect
+of them?"</p>
+
+<p>They soon arrived at the Alhambra Theater at which the fight was to take
+place, and found<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[Page 225]</a></span> it in progress. A large crowd was collected,
+consisting of soldiers and natives in equal proportions. The last round
+was just finishing, and Joe Corker was in the act of knocking his
+opponent out. The audience was shouting with glee and excitement, the
+cheers being mixed with hisses and cries of "Fake, fake!"</p>
+
+<p>"I know Corker," said Cleary. "Come, I'll introduce you."</p>
+
+<p>They pushed forward through the crowd, and were soon in a room behind
+the stage, where Corker was being rubbed and washed down by his
+assistants. Sam looked at the great man and felt rather small and
+insignificant. "Here's a kind of civilian who is not inferior to army
+men," he thought. "Perhaps he is even superior." He would not have said
+this aloud, but he thought it.</p>
+
+<p>"How de do, Joe?" said Cleary, shaking hands. "That was a great fight.
+You knocked him out clean. Here's my friend, Colonel Jinks, the hero of
+San Diego and the pacifier of the Moritos."</p>
+
+<p>Corker nodded condescendingly.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[Page 226]</a></span>"We enjoyed the fight very much," said Sam, not altogether at his ease.
+"It reminded me of my own experience at East Point."</p>
+
+<p>"It was a good fight," said Corker, "and a damned fair one too. I'd like
+to punch the heads of those fellers who cried 'fake.' It was as fair as
+fair could be, and Dandy and me was as evenly matched as two peas. I
+always believe in takin' a feller of your size, and I did."</p>
+
+<p>"That wasn't the way at East Point," said Cleary. "They didn't take
+fellows of their size there."</p>
+
+<p>"That's against our rules anyway," said Corker.</p>
+
+<p>"It must be a civilian rule," said Sam, beginning to feel his
+superiority again. "The military rule as we were taught it at East Point
+was to take a smaller man if you could, and you see, the army does just
+the same thing. We tackled Castalia and then the Cubapines, and they
+weren't of our size. We don't fight the powerful countries."</p>
+
+<p>"That's queer," said Corker, drinking a lemonade.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[Page 227]</a></span>"It's perfectly right," said Sam. "When a man's in the right, and of
+course we always are, if he fights a man of his size or one bigger than
+he is, he gives the wrong a chance of winning, and that is clearly
+immoral. If he takes a weaker man he makes the truth sure of success.
+And it's just the same way with nations."</p>
+
+<p>Corker did not seem to be much interested by this disquisition, and
+Cleary dragged his friend away after they had respectfully bade the
+pugilist good-night. A crowd of soldiers was waiting outside to see
+Corker get into his carriage. They paid no attention whatever to Sam and
+Cleary.</p>
+
+<p>"When it comes to real glory a prize-fighter beats a colonel all
+hollow," said Cleary, and they parted for the night.</p>
+
+<p>Sam was retained on the general staff and assigned to the important post
+of censor of the press. His duties were most engrossing, for not only
+were the proofs of all the local newspapers submitted to him, but also
+all other printed matter. One day a large number of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[Page 228]</a></span> handbills were
+confiscated at a printer's and brought in for his inspection. He was
+very busy and asked his native private secretary to look them over for
+him. In a half-hour he came to him with a translation of the document.</p>
+
+<p>"What does it say?" cried Sam. "I have no time to read it through."</p>
+
+<p>"It says that governments are made to preserve liberty, and that they
+get their only authority from the free will of the people who are ruled
+by them," answered the clerk.</p>
+
+<p>"That's clearly seditious," said Sam. "There must be some plot at the
+bottom of it. Have the whole edition burned and have the printer locked
+up."</p>
+
+<p>A few days later a newspaper was brought to him announcing that the
+Moritos had massacred the garrison stationed among them, that the whole
+province of San Diego was in revolt, and that the regiment there would
+probably have to fall back on Havilla. Sam was much scandalized, and
+sent at once for the native editor.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[Page 229]</a></span>"What does this mean?" said he.</p>
+
+<p>"Pardon, my colonel," said the little man apologetically, "this is a
+newspaper and this is news. I am sure it is true."</p>
+
+<p>"That is the civilian conception of news," said Sam, with disdain.
+"Officially this is not true. We have instructions, as you have often
+been told, not to allow anything to be printed that can injure the
+Administration at Whoppington. Any one can see how this would injure it,
+and news that can injure it is, from the military point of view, untrue.
+General Notice is making a tour of the country at home, receiving
+ovations everywhere on account of the complete subjugation of the
+islands. What effect will such news have upon his reception? Is it a
+proper way to treat a general who has deserved well of his country?"</p>
+
+<p>"But," interposed the editor, "don't the people know that you are
+continually sending out more troops?"</p>
+
+<p>"The people do not mind a little thing like that," said Sam. "When an
+officer and a gentleman says the war is over, they believe<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[Page 230]</a></span> it, and they
+show their gratitude by voting money to send new regiments. Your action
+in printing this stuff is most disloyal. I will send one of my
+assistants around to your office with you to see that this edition is
+destroyed, and if you repeat the offense you will be deported."</p>
+
+<p>The unfortunate man retired, shrugging his shoulders. As he went out
+Cleary came running in with a copy of the paper.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! you've got a copy of that, have you?" said Sam. "It's an outrage to
+print such things, isn't it?"</p>
+
+<p>"I'm afraid it's true," said Cleary.</p>
+
+<p>"What difference does that make?" exclaimed Sam. "It's the business of
+an army to conquer a country. We've done it twice, and we can do it as
+often as we like again."</p>
+
+<p>"Hear, hear!" cried Cleary. "You're becoming more and more of a soldier
+as you get promoted. You have the true military instinct, I see. Of
+course it makes no difference who holds the country, but I'm a little
+disappointed in the Moritos. As for San Diego,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[Page 231]</a></span> Colonel Booth of your
+old regiment is in command, and I half think he didn't back up the
+Morito garrison out of jealousy toward you. He wanted to have the Morito
+country go back, so as to belittle our exploit. But we'll get even with
+him. I've seen the cable-censor, and not a word about it will go home. I
+have just sent a despatch saying that the whole island is entirely in
+our hands and that the natives are swearing allegiance by thousands."</p>
+
+<p>"That's right," said Sam. "It's really a kindness to the people at home,
+for if they think it's true it makes them just as happy as if it were
+true, and I think it's positively cruel to worry them unnecessarily."</p>
+
+<p>"To be sure," said Cleary. "And if it does get out, we'll throw all the
+blame on the Secretary of War and his embalmed beef. They say he's
+writing a book to show that a diet of mummies is the best for fighting
+men&mdash;and so the quarrels go on. By the way, I just stopped a piece of
+news that might have interested you. Do you know that you have
+suppressed the Declaration of Independence?"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[Page 232]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Nonsense. I haven't seen a copy of it in two years."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, here's a despatch that I got away from the cable-office just in
+time. It would have gone in another ten minutes. Here it is."</p>
+
+<p>Sam took the paper and read an account of the printing by a native
+committee of fifty thousand copies of the Declaration in Castalian, and
+its immediate suppression by Colonel Jinks, the censor.</p>
+
+<p>"It's a downright lie," cried Sam. "I'll call my native secretary and
+inquire into this," and he rang his bell.</p>
+
+<p>"See here, what does this mean?" he asked the clerk who hurried in.</p>
+
+<p>The man thought a minute.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not know the Declaration of Independence," he said, "but perhaps
+that paper I translated for you the other day had something to do with
+it. I have not a copy here."</p>
+
+<p>"Were they burned?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not yet, sir. They were seized, and are in our d&eacute;p&ocirc;t."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[Page 233]</a></span>"Come," said Sam to Cleary, "let's go over there and look at it. It's a
+half-mile walk and it will do me good."</p>
+
+<p>"How are things at San Diego?" asked Sam, as they walked along together.
+"You've been out there, haven't you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. We'll have to come in. The Cubapinos have got a force together at
+a town farther down the river and are threatening us there. We got
+pretty near them and mined under a convent they were in, and blew up a
+lot of them, but it didn't do them much harm, for a lot of recruits came
+in just afterward from the mountains. That convent was born to be blown
+up, it seems, for some Castalian anarchists had a plot to blow it up
+some years ago, and came near doing it, too. We made use of their
+tunnels, which the monks were too lazy to have filled up. The anarchist
+plot was found out, and they garroted a dozen of them."</p>
+
+<p>"What inhuman brutes those anarchists are!" cried Sam. "Think of their
+trying to blow up a whole houseful of people! I wish<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[Page 234]</a></span> we could take some
+one of the smaller islands and put all the anarchists of the world there
+and let them live out their precious theories. Just think what a hell it
+would be! What infernal engines of hatred and destruction they would
+construct, if they were left to themselves&mdash;machines charged with
+dynamite and bristling with all sorts of explosive contrivances!"</p>
+
+<p>"Something like a battle-ship," suggested Cleary.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't talk nonsense!" exclaimed Sam. "Only Castalian fiends would try
+to destroy law and order and upset the peaceable course of society in
+such a way. Do you suppose that any of our people at home would do such
+a thing?"</p>
+
+<p>"None, outside of the artillery," answered Cleary. "Well, at any rate,
+our blowing up of the convent didn't do much good. There was some talk
+of putting poison in the river to dispose of them, but of course we
+couldn't do that."</p>
+
+<p>"Of course not," said Sam. "That would<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[Page 235]</a></span> be barbarous and against all
+military precedents. The rules of war don't allow it."</p>
+
+<p>"They're rather queer, those rules," answered his friend. "I should like
+my enemies to take notice that I prefer being poisoned to being blown up
+with bombshells. In some respects they don't pay much attention to the
+rules, either. They don't take prisoners much nowadays. Most of my
+despatches now read, 'fifty natives killed,' but they say nothing of
+wounded or prisoners."</p>
+
+<p>"We're fighting savages, we must remember that," said Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"Then we've got a way of trying our pistols and rifles on natives
+working in the fields; it's rather novel, to say the least. I saw one
+man in the 73d try his new revolver on a native rowing a boat on the
+river, and over the fellow toppled and the boat drifted down-stream. The
+men all applauded, and even the officers laughed."</p>
+
+<p>"Boys will be boys," said Sam, smiling. "They're good shots, at any
+rate."</p>
+
+<p>"They are that. There were some darkies<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[Page 236]</a></span> plowing up there just this side
+of San Diego, and some of our fellows picked them off as neatly as you
+please. It must have been eight hundred yards if it was a foot. But
+somehow I don't quite like it."</p>
+
+<p>"War is war," said Sam, using a phrase which presumably has a rational
+meaning, as it is so often employed by reasonable people. "It doesn't
+pay to be squeamish. The squeamish men don't make good soldiers. I've
+seen enough to learn that. They hesitate to obey orders, if they don't
+like them."</p>
+
+<p>As he said this they passed a small crowd of boys in the street. They
+were trying to make two dogs fight, but the dogs refused to do so, and
+the boys were beating them and urging them on.</p>
+
+<p>"What stupid brutes they are," said Sam. "They're badly trained."</p>
+
+<p>"They haven't had a military education," responded Cleary. "But I almost
+forgot to ask you, have you seen the papers from home this morning?
+They're all full of you and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[Page 237]</a></span> your greatness. Here are two or three," and
+he took them from his pocket.</p>
+
+<p>Sam opened them and gazed at them entranced. There was page upon page of
+his exploits, portraits of all kinds, biographies, anecdotes,
+interviews, headlines, everything that his wildest dreams had imagined,
+only grander and more glorious. There was nothing to be seen but the
+words "Captain Jinks" from one end of the papers to the other.</p>
+
+<p>"They've even got a song about you," said Cleary. "Here it is:</p>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 10em;">
+<p>'I'm Captain Jinks of the horse-marines.<br />
+I feed my horse on corn and beans.<br />
+Of course it's quite beyond my means,<br />
+Tho a captain in the army!'"</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>"I don't altogether like it," said Sam. "What are the horse-marines? I
+don't believe there are any."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, that doesn't make any difference. It seems it's an old song that
+was all the go long before our time, and your name has revived it. It
+will advertise you splendidly. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[Page 238]</a></span> whole thing is a grand piece of work
+for <i>The Lyre</i>. Jonas has been congratulating me on it. He'd come and
+tell you so, but he doesn't want to be seen with you. You've censured
+out everything I've asked you to for him, and he doesn't want people to
+know about his pull. That's the reason why he's never called on you. But
+he says it's the best newspaper job he ever heard of. I tell you we're a
+great combination, you and I. Perhaps I'll write a book and call it,
+'With Jinks at Havilla.' Rather an original title, isn't it? But I'm
+afraid that all this talk at home will not make you very popular with
+the officers here, who knew you when you were only a captain. What would
+you say to being transferred to Porsslania? They want new men for our
+army there, and I've half a mind to go too for a change and act as the
+<i>Lyre's</i> correspondent there. They'll do anything I ask them now."</p>
+
+<p>"I'd like it very much," said Sam. "I'm tired of this literary business.
+But here we are. This is our d&eacute;p&ocirc;t."</p>
+
+<p class="figcenter"><a name="page238" id="page238"></a><img src="images/page238.png" title="page238" alt="page238" height="600" width="400" /></p>
+<h4>CONSENT OF THE GOVERNED</h4>
+<h6>"WHAT BUSINESS HAVE THESE PEOPLE TO TALK ABOUT EQUAL RIGHTS?"<br /><br /><br /><br /></h6>
+
+<p>The two men entered the long low building<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[Page 239]</a></span> in which confiscated
+property was stored. A soldier who was acting as watchman showed them
+where the circulars were piled. Cleary took one and glanced over it.</p>
+
+
+<p>"As sure as fate, it's the Declaration of Independence!" he laughed.</p>
+
+<p>Sam took up a copy and looked at it too.</p>
+
+<p>"I believe it is," he said. "I didn't half look at it the other day. I'm
+ever so much obliged to you for telling me and stopping the telegram.
+But between you and me, the circular ought to be suppressed anyway. What
+business have these people to talk about equal rights and the consent of
+the governed? The men who wrote the Declaration&mdash;Jeffries and the
+rest&mdash;were mere civilians and these ideas are purely civilian. Come,
+let's have them burned at once," and he called up two or three soldiers,
+and in a few minutes the circulars formed a mass of glowing ashes in the
+courtyard.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[Page 240]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_X" id="CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X</a></h2>
+
+<h1>A Great Military Exploit</h1>
+
+
+<div class="wrap_area">
+
+ <img src="images/chap_10.png" alt="chap_10" height="538" width="400" />
+
+ <div class="shape_wrap">
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+
+ </div>
+
+<p><br /><br />NE day while Sam was still waiting for Cleary to carry out his designs,
+his secretary told him that a sergeant wished to see him, and Sam
+directed him to show him into his office. The man was a rather
+sinister-looking individual, and his speech betrayed his Anglian origin.</p>
+
+<p>"Colonel," said he, after the door was closed and they were alone, "I'm
+only a sergeant<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[Page 241]</a></span> promoted from the ranks, but I'm not just an ordinary
+common soldier. I know a thing or two, and I've got a plan and I thought
+perhaps you would be glad to 'ear of it. I 'ave the 'abit of observing
+things, and most soldiers don't. Why, bless me, you can march them into
+a country and out again, and with their eyes front, they don't see a
+bloomin' thing. They're trained to see nothin'. They're good for nothin'
+but to do as they're bid. I used to be in the army in the old country,
+and once at Baldershot I saw Lord Bullsley come along on horseback and
+stop two soldiers carryin' a soup-pail.</p>
+
+<p>"'Give me a taste of that,' says he, and one of them runs off and gets a
+ladle and gives him a taste. He spits it out and makes a face and
+shouts:</p>
+
+<p>"'Good heavens! man, you don't call that stuff soup, do you?'</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p>"'No, sir,' says the man. 'It's dish-water that we was a-hemptyin'.'
+That's the soldier all over again. He 'adn't sense enough to tell him
+beforehand."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[Page 242]</a></span>"I don't see, sergeant, what that has to do with me," said Sam curtly.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, sir, perhaps it hasn't. But I only wanted to say that I ain't
+that kind of a man. I sees and thinks for myself. Now I 'ear that
+they've got a letter captured from Gomaldo askin' General Baluna for
+reenforcements, and that they've got some letters from Baluna too, and
+know his handwritin'. I only wanted to say that I used to be a
+writin'-master and that I can copy any writin' goin' or any signature
+either, so you can't tell them apart. Now why couldn't we forge an
+answer from Baluna to Gomaldo and send the first reenforcements
+ourselves? He wants a 'undred men at a time. And then we could capture
+Gomaldo as easy as can be. We could find him in the mountains. I know a
+lot of these natives 'ere who would go with us if we paid them well."</p>
+
+<p>"We should have to dress them up in the native uniform," said Sam. "I
+don't know whether that would be quite honorable."</p>
+
+<p>The sergeant smiled knowingly, but said nothing.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[Page 243]</a></span>"Do you think we could get native officers to do such a thing?" Sam
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes! Plenty of them. I know one or two. At first they wouldn't like
+it. But give them money enough and commissions in our army, and they'd
+do it."</p>
+
+<p>"How different they are from us!" mused Sam. "Nobody in our army,
+officer or man, could ever be approached in that way."</p>
+
+<p>"It seems to me I've read somewhere of one of our principal
+generals&mdash;Maledict Donald, wasn't it?"</p>
+
+<p>Sam thought best not to hear this.</p>
+
+<p>"But we would have to send some of our own officers on such an
+expedition," he said. "We couldn't disguise them as natives."</p>
+
+<p>"That wouldn't be necessary. They can go as if they were prisoners&mdash;you
+and two or three others you could pick out. I'd like to go too. And then
+I'd expect good pay if the thing went through, and a commission as
+lieutenant."</p>
+
+<p>"There'd be no trouble about that," answered Sam. "I'll think it over,
+and perhaps<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[Page 244]</a></span> consult the general about it and let you know by
+to-morrow."</p>
+
+<p>"Very good, sir. I'm Sergeant Keene of the 5th Company, 39th Infantry."</p>
+
+<p>As the sergeant went out Cleary came in, and Sam laid the matter before
+him.</p>
+
+<p>"I know that fellow by sight," said Cleary. "They say he's served
+several terms for forgery and counterfeiting. I don't like his looks.
+That's a great scheme tho, if it does seem a little like bunco-steering.
+It's all right in war perhaps."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Sam. "We have a higher standard of honor than civilians.
+I'll go and see the general about it now."</p>
+
+<p>After some consultation the general approved the plan and authorized Sam
+to carry it out. The latter set Keene to work at once at forging a
+letter from Baluna acknowledging receipt of the orders for
+reenforcements and informing Gomaldo that he was sending him the first
+company of one hundred troops. Meanwhile he selected three officers of
+the Regular Army to accompany him besides<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[Page 245]</a></span> Keene, and through the latter
+approached three native officers who had been captured at San Diego. One
+of these was a close confidential friend of Gomaldo's, but Keene
+succeeded after much persuasion in winning them all over. It was an
+easier task to make up a company of native privates, who readily
+followed their officers when a small payment on account had been given
+to each man.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't quite like the job," Sam confessed to Cleary, "but the general
+says it's all right and so it must be."</p>
+
+<p>At last the expedition started out. All the natives were dressed in the
+native uniform, and the five white men were clad as privates in the
+invading army and held as prisoners. After passing the outposts near San
+Diego they turned toward the south in the direction of the mountains
+where Gomaldo's captured letter had been dated. They were received with
+rejoicings in each native village as soon as they showed the forged
+letter of Baluna and exhibited their white prisoners. The villagers
+showed much interest in the latter, but treated<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[Page 246]</a></span> them kindly, expressing
+their pity for them and offering them food. They had no difficulty in
+obtaining exact directions as to Gomaldo's situation, but found that it
+lay in the midst of an uninhabited district where it was impossible to
+obtain supplies, the village where he had established his headquarters
+being the only one within many miles. They scraped together what food
+they could in the shape of rice, Indian corn, and dried beef, and set
+out on the last stage of their journey. There had been heavy rains
+recently, and the mountain paths were almost impassable. There were
+swift rivers to cross, precipices to climb, and jungles to penetrate.
+The heat was intense, and the men began to suffer from it. The advance
+was very slow, and soon the provisions gave out. It began to seem
+probable that the whole expedition would perish in the mountains. Sam
+called a council of war, and, at Keene's suggestion, picked out the two
+most vigorous privates, who went ahead bearing the alleged Baluna letter
+and another from Gomaldo's renegade friend, who was nominally<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[Page 247]</a></span> in
+command, asking for speedy succor. The two ambassadors were well
+schooled in what they should say, and were promised a large sum of money
+if they succeeded.</p>
+
+<p>For two long days the party waited entirely without food, and they were
+just beginning to despair, when the two men returned with a dozen
+carriers sent by Gomaldo bringing an ample supply of bread and meat. He
+also delivered a letter in which the native general congratulated his
+friend on his success in leading the reenforcements and in capturing the
+prisoners, and gave express instructions that the latter should be
+treated with all consideration. The carriers were commanded by a native
+lieutenant, who insisted that the prisoners should share equally with
+the native troops, and saw to it personally that Sam and his friends
+were served. His kindness cut Sam to the heart. After a few hours' delay
+the expedition set out again, and on the following day it reached the
+mountain village where Gomaldo had established himself.</p>
+
+<p>Gomaldo's body-guard, composed of fifty<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[Page 248]</a></span> troops neatly dressed in white
+uniforms, were drawn up to receive them, and the whole population
+greeted them with joy. Gomaldo himself stood on the veranda of his
+house, and, after saluting the expedition, invited the native officers
+who were to betray him in to dinner. At this moment Keene whispered to
+Sam and the latter signaled to the native officer, Gomaldo's treacherous
+friend who was in charge of him, and this man gave an order in a low
+voice, whereupon the whole expedition discharged their rifles, and
+half-a-dozen of the body-guard fell to the ground. In the mean time two
+of the native officers threw their arms round Gomaldo and took him
+prisoner, and his partizans were seized with a panic. Sam took command
+of his men, who outnumbered the loyal natives, and in a few minutes he
+had unchallenged control of the post without losing a single man, killed
+or wounded. Gomaldo was intensely excited and upbraided Sam bitterly
+when taken before him, but upon being promised good treatment he became
+more tractable. Sam gave orders that the vil<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[Page 249]</a></span>lagers should bury the
+dead, among whom he regretted to see the body of the native lieutenant
+who had brought him food when they were starving; and then, after a rest
+of several hours, the expedition set out on the return journey, Gomaldo
+and his men accompanying it as prisoners.</p>
+
+<p>The news of the capture preceded the party, and when, after a march of
+several days, they arrived at Havilla, Sam was received as a conquering
+hero by the army. Cleary took the first opportunity to grasp his hand.</p>
+
+<p>"Is it really a great and noble act?" Sam whispered. "I suppose it is,
+for everybody says so, but somehow it has left a bad taste in my mouth,
+and I can't bear the sight of that fellow Keene."</p>
+
+<p>"Never mind," said Cleary. "You won't have to see him long. We're going
+to Porsslania in a fortnight, you and I, and you'll have a chance to
+turn the world upside down there."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[Page 250]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XI" id="CHAPTER_XI"></a>CHAPTER XI</h2>
+
+<h1>A Dinner Party at Gin-Sin</h1>
+
+
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+<p><br /><br />
+
+URING the past months great events had taken place in the ancient
+empire of Porsslania. Many years earlier the various churches had sent
+missionaries to that benighted land to reclaim its inhabitants from
+barbarism and heathenism. These emissaries were not received with the
+enthusiastic gratitude which they deserved, and some of the Porsslanese
+had the impudence to assert that they were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[Page 251]</a></span> a civilized people when
+their new teachers had been naked savages. They proved their barbarism,
+however, by indulging in the most unreasonable prejudices against a
+foreign religion, and when cornered in argument they would say to the
+missionaries, "How would you like us to convert your people to our
+religion?" an answer so illogical that it demonstrates either their bad
+faith or the low development of their intellects. The missionaries of
+some of the sects, by the help of their governments, gradually obtained
+a good deal of land and at the same time a certain degree of civil
+jurisdiction. The foreign governments, wishing to bless the natives with
+temporal as well as celestial advantages, followed up the missionary
+pioneers with traders in cheap goods, rum, opium, and fire-arms, and
+finally endeavored to introduce their own machinery and factory system,
+which had already at home raised all the laboring classes to affluence,
+put an end to poverty, and realized the dream of the prophets of old.
+The Porsslanese resolutely resisted all these benevolent enterprises<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[Page 252]</a></span>
+and doggedly expressed their preference for their ancient customs. In
+order to overcome this unreasonable opposition and assure the welfare of
+the people, the various Powers from time to time seized the great ports
+of the Empire. The fertile diplomacy of the courts found sufficient
+grounds for this. Most frequently the pretext was an attack upon a
+missionary or even a case of cold-blooded murder, and it became a
+proverb among the Porsslanese that it takes a province to bury a
+missionary. Finally, all the harbors of the Empire were in the hands of
+foreigners, who used this advantageous position to confer blessings
+thick and fast upon the reluctant population, who richly deserved, as a
+punishment, to be left to themselves. At last a revolutionary party
+sprang up among this deluded people, claiming that their own Government
+was showing too much favor to foreign religions and foreign machines.
+The Government did not put down this revolt. Some said that it did not
+have the power and that the provinces were practically independent of
+the central<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[Page 253]</a></span> authority. Others whispered that the Imperial Court
+secretly favored the rebels. However this may be, the Fencers, as the
+rebels were called from their skill with the native sword, succeeded
+without much difficulty in getting possession of the imperial city and
+imprisoning the foreign embassies and legations in the enclosure of the
+Anglian Embassy. The Imperial Court meanwhile fled to a distant city and
+left the entire control of the situation in the hands of the Fencers.
+The peril of the legations was extreme. They were cut off completely
+from the coast, which was many miles distant, and the foreign newspaper
+correspondents amused themselves by sending detailed accounts of the
+manner in which they had been tortured and murdered. The principal men
+among the Porsslanese assured the Powers that the legations were safe,
+but they were not believed. A great expedition was organized in which
+all the great Powers took a part. The forts near the sea were stormed
+and taken. The intermediate city of Gin-Sin was besieged and finally
+fell, and the forces<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[Page 254]</a></span> advanced to the gates of the Capital. Before long
+they succeeded in taking possession of the great city. The Fencers fled
+in confusion, and at least two-thirds of the population fled with them,
+fearing the vengeance of the foreigners. The legations were saved, after
+one ambassador had been shot by an assassin. The city was divided into
+districts, each of which was turned over to the safe-keeping of one of
+the foreign armies, and the object of the expedition had been
+accomplished. In the mean time many foreign residents, including many
+missionaries in various parts of the Empire, had been murdered, the
+inhabitants not recognizing the obvious fact that they and their
+countrymen were their best friends.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p>Affairs had reached this position when orders came to Havilla for
+Colonel Jinks to proceed to join the army in Porsslania, where he would
+be placed in command of a regiment. His fidus Achates, Cleary, had also
+received permission from his journal to accompany him, and the two set
+sail on a transport which carried details of troops. It is true that
+these<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[Page 255]</a></span> troops could ill be spared from the Cubapines, as the country was
+still in the hands of the natives with the exception of here and there a
+strip of the seacoast, and there was much illness among the troops, many
+being down with fever and worse diseases. But it was necessary for the
+Government to make as good a showing in Porsslania as the other Powers,
+and the reenforcements had to go.</p>
+
+<p>It was on a hot summer day that Sam and Cleary looked over the rail of
+the transport as they watched the troops come on board. It was a
+remarkable scene, for a crowd of native women were on the shore, weeping
+and arguing with the men and preventing them from getting into the
+boats.</p>
+
+<p>"Who on earth are they?" asked Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"It's a pretty mean practical joke," said Cleary. "That regiment has
+been up in the interior, and they've all had wives up there. They buy
+them for five dollars apiece. And the Governor of the province there, a
+friendly native, has sent more than a hundred of the women down here, to
+get rid of them, I sup<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[Page 256]</a></span>pose, and now the poor things want to come along
+with their young men. Some of them have got babies, do you see?"</p>
+
+<p>After a long and noisy delay the captain of the transport, assisted by
+the officers of the regiment in question, persuaded the women to stay
+behind, giving a few coppers to each and making the most reckless and
+unabashed promises of return. The steamer then weighed anchor and was
+soon passing the sunken Castalian fleet.</p>
+
+<p>"The Court at Whoppington has just allowed prize-money to the officers
+and men for sinking those ships," said Cleary. "They didn't get as much
+as they wanted, but it's a good round sum."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm glad they will get some remuneration for their hard work," said
+Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you see that native sloop over there?" said Cleary. "She's a pirate
+boat we caught down in the archipelago. She had sunk a merchant vessel
+loaded with opium or something of the kind, very valuable. They'd got
+her in shallow water and had killed some of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[Page 257]</a></span> the crew, and the rest swam
+ashore, and they were dividing up the swag when they were caught. They
+would have had I don't know how many dollars apiece. They were all
+hanged."</p>
+
+<p>"Serves them right," said Sam. "We must put down piracy. Good-by,
+Havilla," he added, waving his hat toward the capital. "It makes me feel
+happy to think that I have actually ended the war by capturing Gomaldo."</p>
+
+<p>"Not much!" cried Cleary. "Didn't you hear the news this morning? The
+Cubapinos are twice as active as ever. They're rising everywhere."</p>
+
+<p>Not many days later, and after an uneventful voyage, the transport
+sailed into the mouth of the Hai-Po River and came to anchor off the
+ruins of the Porsslanese forts. Colonel Jinks had orders to proceed at
+once to Gin-Sin, and he left with Cleary on a river steamer. They were
+much struck by the utter desolation of the country. There were no signs
+of life, but here and there the smoking ruins of a town showed where
+human beings<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[Page 258]</a></span> had been. They noticed something floating in the water
+with a swarm of flies hovering over it.</p>
+
+<p>"Good heavens! it's a corpse," said Cleary. "It's a native. That's a
+handsome silk jacket, and it doesn't look like a soldier's either. Look
+at that vulture. It's sweeping down on it."</p>
+
+<p>The vulture circled round in the air, coming close to the body, but did
+not touch it.</p>
+
+<p>"It has had enough to eat already," said an Anglian passenger who was
+standing near them. "Did you ever see such a fat bird? You'll see plenty
+of bodies before long. Do you observe those vultures ahead there? You'll
+find floating bodies wherever they are."</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose they are the bodies of soldiers," said Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"No, indeed, not all of them by any means. These Porsslanese must be
+stamped out like vipers. I'm thankful to say most of the armies are
+doing their duty. They don't give any quarter to native soldiers, and
+they despatch the wounded too. That's the only way to treat<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[Page 259]</a></span> them, and
+they don't feel pain the way we do. In fact, they rather like it. The
+Tutonians are setting a good example; they shoot their prisoners. I saw
+them shoot about seventy. They tied them together four by four by their
+pigtails and then shot them. It's best, tho, to avoid taking prisoners;
+that's what most of them do."</p>
+
+<p>"But you say these bodies are not all soldiers," said Cleary.</p>
+
+<p>"No, of course not. You see the Mosconians kill any natives they please.
+Then those who are out at night are killed as a matter of course, and
+those who won't work for the soldiers naturally have to be put out of
+the way. It's the only way to enforce discipline. Look at these bodies
+now."</p>
+
+<p>Corpses were now coming down the river one after another. Each had its
+attendant swarm of flies, and vultures soared in flocks in the air. The
+river was yellow with mud, and the air oppressively hot and heavy. Now
+and then a whiff of putrid air was blown across the deck. The three men
+watched the bodies<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[Page 260]</a></span> drifting past, brainless skulls, eyeless sockets,
+floating along many of them as if they were swimming on their backs. "It
+is really a fine example of the power of civilization," said the
+stranger. "I don't approve of everything that has been done, by any
+means. Some of the armies have treated women rather badly, but no
+English-speaking soldiers have done that. In fact, your army has hardly
+been up to the average in effectiveness. You and the Japs have been
+culpably lenient, if you will permit me to say so."</p>
+
+<p>"We are only just starting out on our career as a military nation," said
+Sam. "You must not expect too much of us at first. We'll soon get our
+hand in. As for the Japs, why they're heathen. They can hardly be
+expected to behave like Christians. But we were afraid that the war was
+over and that we should find nothing to do."</p>
+
+<p>"The war over! What an absurdity! I have lived in Porsslania for over
+thirty years and I ought to know something about it by now. There's an
+army of at least forty thou<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[Page 261]</a></span>sand Fencers over there to the northwest and
+another twenty-five thousand in the northeast. The Tutonians are the
+only people who understand it. Their first regiments have just arrived,
+and they are going to do something. They say the Emperor is coming
+himself, and he will put an end to this state of affairs. He is not a
+man to stand rebellion. All we can say is that we have made a good
+beginning. We have laid the whole province waste, and it will be a long
+time before they forget it."</p>
+
+<p>The journey was hot and tedious; the desolated shore, the corpses and
+vultures, and an occasional junk with square-rigged sails and high poop
+were the only things upon which to fix the eye. When at last our
+travelers arrived at the city of Gin-Sin, Sam learned that his regiment
+had proceeded to the Capital and was in camp there, and it would be
+impossible for him to leave until the following day. He stopped with
+Cleary at the principal hotel. The city was in a semi-ruined condition,
+but life was already beginning to assume its ordinary course. The narrow
+streets, hung with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[Page 262]</a></span> banners and lanterns and cabalistic signs, were full
+of people. Barbers and scribes were plying their trades in the open air,
+and war was not always in sight. Sam's reputation had preceded him, and
+he had scarcely gone to his room when he received an invitation from a
+leading Anglian merchant to dine with him that evening. Cleary was
+anxious to go too, and it so happened that he had letters of
+introduction to the gentleman in question. He made his call at once and
+was duly invited.</p>
+
+<p>There were a dozen or more guests at dinner, all of them men. Indeed,
+there were few white women left at Gin-Sin. With the exception of Sam
+and Cleary all the guests were Anglians. There was the consul-general, a
+little man with a gray beard, a tall, bald-headed, gray-mustached
+major-general in command of the Anglian forces at Gin-Sin, two
+distinguished missionaries of many years' experience, several junior
+officers of the army, and a merchant or two. When dinner was announced
+they all went in, each taking pre<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[Page 263]</a></span>cedence according to his station. Sam
+knew nothing of such matters, and was loath to advance until his host
+forced him to. He found a card with his name on it at the second cover
+on the right from his host. On his right was the card of a young
+captain. The place on his left and immediately on the right of the host
+bore no card, and the consul-general and the major-general both made for
+it. The former got there first, but the military man, who was twice his
+size, came into violent collision with him, pushed him away and captured
+the seat, while the consul-general was obliged to retreat and take the
+seat on the left of his host. The whole party pretended very hard to
+have noticed nothing unusual.</p>
+
+<p>"Rather odd performance, eh?" whispered the captain to Sam. "You see how
+it is. Old Folsom says he takes precedence because he represents the
+Crown, but the general says that's all rot, for the consul's only a
+commercial agent and a K.C.Q.X. Now the general is a G.C.Q.X., and he
+says that gives him prece<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[Page 264]</a></span>dence. Nobody can settle it, and so they have
+to fight it out every time they meet."</p>
+
+<p>"I see," said Sam. "I don't know anything about such things, but I
+should think that the general was clearly in the right. He could hardly
+afford to let the army be overridden."</p>
+
+<p>"Quite so," said the captain. "I don't suppose you know these people,"
+he added.</p>
+
+<p>"Not one of them, except my friend, Mr. Cleary. We only arrived to-day."</p>
+
+<p>"The general is a good deal of a fellow," said the captain. "I was with
+him in Egypt and afterward in South Africa."</p>
+
+<p>"Were you, indeed?" cried Sam. "Do tell me all about those wars. They
+were such great affairs."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, they were. Not much like this business here. Nothing could stop us
+in the Sudan, and when we dug up the Mahdi and threw his body away there
+was nothing left of the rebellion. I believe the best way to settle
+things here would be to dig up somebody&mdash;Confusus, for instance. If
+there's anything of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[Page 265]</a></span> that kind to be done our army could do it in
+style."</p>
+
+<p>"It must be a very effective means of subjugating people," said Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, and would you believe it? the natives objected to it. They asked
+us what we would think of it if they dug up our Queen. Just think of it!
+The impudent niggers! As if there was any similarity in the two cases."</p>
+
+<p>"Outrageous," said Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"And even at home and in Parliament, when our general was sitting in the
+gallery hearing them discuss how much money they would give him, some of
+the members protested against our digging the old fraud up. It was a
+handsome thing for the general to go there and face them down."</p>
+
+<p>"It showed great tact, and I may say&mdash;delicacy," said Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, indeed," said the captain. "That's his strong point."</p>
+
+<p>"But I suppose that the war in South Africa was even greater," said Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"Rather. Why we captured four thousand<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[Page 266]</a></span> of those Boers with only forty
+thousand men. No wonder all Anglia went wild over it. Lord Bobbets went
+home and they gave him everything they could think of in the way of
+honors. It was a fitting tribute."</p>
+
+<p>"The war is quite over there now, isn't it?" asked Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," answered the captain, somewhat drily. "And so is yours in the
+Cubapines, I understand."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Sam. "I think the Cubapine war and the South African war are
+about equally over."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you see that lieutenant there between your friend and the parson?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"He got the Victorious Cross in South Africa. He saved a sergeant's life
+under fire. You see his cross?"</p>
+
+<p>"How interesting!" said Sam. "He must be a hero."</p>
+
+<p class="figcenter"><a name="page266" id="page266"></a><img src="images/page266.png" title="page266" alt="page266" height="645" width="400" /></p>
+<h4>WINNERS OF THE CROSS</h4>
+<h6>"HE GOT THE VICTORIOUS CROSS IN
+SOUTH AFRICA"<br /><br /><br /><br /></h6>
+
+<p>"That chap with the mustache at the bottom of the table really did more
+once. He saved three men from drowning in a ship<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[Page 267]</a></span>wreck in the Yellow
+Sea. He's got a medal for it."</p>
+
+<p>"Why doesn't he wear it, too?" asked Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"Civilians never do," said the captain. "It would look rather odd,
+wouldn't it, for him to wear a life-saving medal? You may be sure he
+keeps it locked up somewhere and never talks about it."</p>
+
+<p>"It is strange that civilians should be so far behind military men in
+using their opportunities," said Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"That old fellow with the long beard is Cope, the inventor of the Cope
+gun. He's a wonder. He was out here in the employ of the Porsslanese
+Government. Most of their artillery was designed by him. What a useful
+man he has been to his country! First he invented a projectile that
+could go through any steel plate then known, and all the navies had to
+build new steel-clad ships on a new principle that he had invented to
+prevent his projectiles from piercing them. Then what does he do, but
+invent a new projectile that could go through that, and they had to
+order new<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[Page 268]</a></span> guns for it and build new ships to withstand it. He's done
+that four times. And he's got a rifle now that will penetrate almost
+anything. If you put two hundred Porsslanese of the same height in a row
+it would go through all their heads at five hundred yards. I hope
+they'll try the experiment before this affair is over."</p>
+
+<p>The major-general had by this time exhausted all possible subjects of
+conversation with his host and sat silent, and Sam felt obliged to turn
+his attention to him, and was soon engaged in relating his experience in
+the Cubapines. Meanwhile Cleary had been conversing with the brave young
+lieutenant at his side and the reverend gentlemen beyond him. They had
+been discussing the slaughter of the Porsslanese, the lieutenant sitting
+back from the table while his neighbors talked across him.</p>
+
+<p>"I confess," said the Rev. Mr. Parker, "that I am not quite satisfied
+with our position here. This wholesale killing of non-combatants is
+revolting to me. Surely it can not be Christian."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[Page 269]</a></span>"I have had some doubts about it too," said the young man. "I don't mind
+hitting a man that hits back. I didn't object to the pig-sticking in
+South Africa, and I believe that man-hunting is the best of all sports;
+but this killing of people who don't resist, and even smile in a sickly
+way while you do it and almost thank you&mdash;it really does go against me."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Cleary, "perhaps there is something in that."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, my dear young friend!" cried the clergyman, turning toward the
+lieutenant, "you don't know what joy it gives me to hear you say that. I
+have spoken in this way again and again, and you are the first man I
+have met who agrees with me. Won't you let your fellow officers know
+what you think? It will come with so much more force from a military
+man, and one of your standing as a V.C. Won't you now tell this company
+that you think we are going too far?"</p>
+
+<p>"Really, Doctor," said the young man, blushing, "really, I think you
+exaggerate my<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[Page 270]</a></span> importance. It wouldn't do any good. Perhaps I have said
+a little more to you than I really meant. This champagne has gone to my
+head a little."</p>
+
+<p>"Just repeat what you said to us. I will get the attention of the
+table."</p>
+
+<p>"No, Doctor, for God's sake don't!" cried the lieutenant, laying his
+right hand on the missionary's arm while he toyed with his cross with
+the other. "To tell you the truth, I haven't the courage to say it. They
+would think I was crazy. I would be put in Coventry. I have no business
+to make suggestions when a general's present."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Parker sighed and did not return to the subject.</p>
+
+<p>After dinner Sam was introduced to Canon Gleed, another missionary, who
+seemed to be on very good terms with himself, and stood rubbing his
+hands with a benignant smile.</p>
+
+<p>"These are great days, Colonel Jinks," he said. "Great days, indeed, for
+foreign missions. What would St. John have said on the island of Patmos
+if he could have cabled for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[Page 271]</a></span> half-a-dozen armies and half-a-dozen
+fleets, and got them too? He would have made short work of his jailers.
+As he looks down upon us to-night, how his soul must rejoice! The Master
+told us to go into all nations, and we are going to go if it takes a
+million troops to send us and keep us there. You are going on to the
+Capital to-morrow? You will meet a true saint of the Lord there, your
+own fellow countryman, the Rev. Dr. Amen. He is a true member of the
+Church Militant. Give him my regards when you see him."</p>
+
+<p>"I see there is another clergyman here," said Sam, looking at Mr.
+Parker.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, and I must say I am surprised to see him. Let me warn you,
+Colonel. He is, I fear, altogether heterodox. I don't know what kind of
+Christianity he teaches, but he has actually kept on good terms with the
+Porsslanese near his mission throughout all these events. He is disloyal
+to our flag, there can be no question of it, and he openly criticizes
+the actions of our governments. He should not be received in society. He
+ought to be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[Page 272]</a></span> sent home&mdash;but, hist! some one is going to sing."</p>
+
+<p>It was the young lieutenant who had seated himself at the piano and was
+clearing his throat as he ran his hands over the keys. Then he began to
+sing in a rather feeble voice:</p>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 10em;">
+<p>"Let the Frenchy sip his cognac in his caffy,<br />
+Let the Cossack gulp his kvass and usquebaugh;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Let the Prussian grenadier</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Swill his dinkle-doonkle beer,</span><br />
+And the Yankee suck his cocktail through a straw,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 4em;">Through a straw,</span><br />
+And the Yankee suck his cocktail through a straw.<br />
+<br />
+"Let the Ghoorka drink his pugaree and pukka,<br />
+Let the Hollander imbibe old schnapps galore.<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Tommy Atkins is the chap</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left:2em;">Who has broached a better tap,</span><br />
+For he takes his 'arf-and-'arf in blood and gore.<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 4em;">Blood and gore,</span><br />
+For he takes his 'arf-and-'arf in blood and gore.<br />
+<br />
+"When at 'ome he may content himself with whisky,<br />
+But if once he lands upon a foreign shore&mdash;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">On the Nile or Irrawady&mdash;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">He forgets his native toddy,</span><br />
+And he takes his 'arf-and-'arf in blood and gore.<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 4em;">Blood and gore,</span><br />
+And he takes his 'arf-and-'arf in blood and gore.<br />
+<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[Page 273]</a></span>
+"He's a connoisseur of every foreign vintage,<br />
+From the claret of the fat and juicy Boer<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">To the thicker nigger brand</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">That he spills upon the sand,</span><br />
+When he draws his 'arf-and-'arf in blood and gore.<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 4em;">Blood and gore,</span><br />
+When he draws his 'arf-and-'arf in blood and gore."<br /></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>"Fine, isn't it!" exclaimed Sam's neighbor, the captain, who was
+standing by him, as they all joined in hearty applause. "I tell you
+Bludyard Stripling ought to be our poet laureate. He's the laureate of
+the Empire, at any rate. Why, a song like that binds a nation together.
+You haven't any poet like that, have you?"</p>
+
+<p>"No-o," answered Sam, thinking in shame of Shortfellow, Slowell, and
+Pittier. "I'm afraid all our poets are old women and don't understand us
+soldiers."</p>
+
+<p>"Stripling understands everything," said the captain. "He never makes a
+mistake. He is a universal genius."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't think we ever drink cocktails with a straw," ventured Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes, you must. He never makes a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[Page 274]</a></span> mistake. You may be sure that,
+before he wrote that, he drank each one of those drinks, one after
+another."</p>
+
+<p>"Quite likely," whispered Cleary to Sam, as he came up on the other
+side.</p>
+
+<p>"I wish I could hear it sung in Lunnon," said the captain. "A chorus of
+duchesses are singing it at one of the biggest music-halls every
+evening, and then they pass round their coronets, lined with velvet, you
+know, and take up a collection of I don't know how many thousand pounds
+for the wounded in South Africa. It stirs my blood every time I hear it
+sung."</p>
+
+<p>The party broke up at a late hour, and Sam and Cleary walked back
+together to the hotel.</p>
+
+<p>"Interesting, wasn't it?" said Cleary.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"Canon is a good title for that parson, isn't it? He's a fighter. They
+ought to promote him. 'Bombshell Gleed' would sound better than 'Canon
+Gleed,'" said Cleary.</p>
+
+<p>"'M," said Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"And that old general looked rather queer in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[Page 275]</a></span> that red and gilt
+bob-tailed Eton jacket," said Cleary.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, rather."</p>
+
+<p>"Convenient for spanking, I suppose."</p>
+
+<p>"The captain next to me told me a lot about Bobbets," said Sam. "Wasn't
+he nearly kidnaped in South Africa?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; that comes of sending generals away from home who only weigh
+ninety-five pounds. We hadn't any such trouble with Laughter. They'd
+have had to kidnap him with a derrick."</p>
+
+<p>"I never thought of that," said Sam. "Perhaps that's the real reason
+they selected him. I shouldn't wonder."</p>
+
+<p>"Of course it was," responded Cleary.</p>
+
+<p>"What sort of a chap was the one with the V.C. next to you?" asked Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"A fine fellow," said Cleary. "But it does seem queer, when you think of
+it, to wear a cross like that, that says 'I'm a hero,' just as plain as
+the beggar's placard says, 'I am blind.'"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't see why," said Sam.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[Page 276]</a></span>"On the whole I think that a placard would be better," said Cleary.
+"Everybody would be sure to understand it. 'I performed such and such an
+heroic action on such and such a day, signed John Smith.' Print it in
+big letters and then stand around graciously so that people could read
+it through when they wanted to. I'll get the idea patented when I get
+home."</p>
+
+<p>"It's a pity we don't give more attention to decorations at home," said
+Sam. "But I don't quite like the placard idea."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[Page 277]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XII" id="CHAPTER_XII"></a>CHAPTER XII</h2>
+
+<h1>The Great White Temple</h1>
+
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+
+<p><br /><br /><br />
+N the following morning the two friends started on their journey up the
+river toward the Imperial City. They went on a barge filled with
+soldiers, some of them their own troops who had arrived earlier the same
+morning. The barge was drawn by ropes pulled by natives, who walked and
+ran<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[Page 278]</a></span> along the banks of the river. It was a day of ever-increasing
+horrors. All the desolation which they had remarked the day previous was
+reproduced and accentuated, and as they were so much nearer to the bank,
+and occasionally took walks on shore, they saw it all more clearly. Sam
+was much interested in the foreign troops. Their uniforms looked strange
+and uncouth.</p>
+
+<p>"What funny pill-boxes those are that those Anglian soldiers have stuck
+to the side of their heads," he said, pointing to two men at Gin-Sin
+before they set sail.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," answered Cleary. "They'll put on their helmets when the sun gets
+higher. They do look queer, tho. Perhaps they think our fellows look
+queer too."</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p>"I never thought of that," said Sam. "Perhaps they do," and he looked at
+his fellow-countrymen who were preparing to embark, endeavoring to judge
+of their appearance as if he had never seen them before. He scrutinized
+carefully their slouch hats creased in four quarters, their loose,
+dark-blue jackets, gen<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[Page 279]</a></span>erally unbuttoned, and their easy-going
+movements.</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps they do look queer," he said at last. "I never thought of
+that."</p>
+
+<p>The river was more full of corpses than ever, and there were many to be
+seen on the shore, all of them of natives. Children were playing and
+bathing in the shallows, oblivious of the dead around them. Dogs prowled
+about, sleek and contented, and usually sniffing only at the cadavers,
+for their appetites were already sated. At one place they saw a father
+and son lying hand in hand where they had been shot while imploring
+mercy. A dog was quietly eating the leg of the boy. The natives who
+pulled the boat along with great difficulty under the hot sun were drawn
+from all classes, some of them coolies accustomed to hard work, others
+evidently of the leisure classes who could hardly keep up with the rest.
+Soldiers were acting as task-masters, and they whipped the men who did
+not pull with sufficient strength. Now and then a man would try to
+escape<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[Page 280]</a></span> by running, but such deserters were invariably brought down by a
+bullet in the back. More than once one of the men would fall as they
+waded along, and be swept off by the current. None of them seemed to
+know how to swim, but no one paid any attention to their fate. Parties
+were sent out to bring in other natives to take the place of those who
+gave out. One of the men thus brought in was paralyzed on one side and
+carried a crutch. The soldiers made sport of him, snatched the crutch
+from him, and made him pull as best he could with the rest. Sam, Cleary,
+and an Anglian officer who had served through the whole war took a long
+walk together back from the river during the halt at noon. They entered
+a deserted house, with gables and a tiled roof, which by chance had not
+been burned. The house had been looted, and such of its contents as were
+too large to carry away were lying broken to bits about the floor. A
+nasty smell came from an inner room, and they looked in and saw the
+whole family&mdash;father, mother, and three daughters&mdash;lying<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[Page 281]</a></span> dead in a row
+on the floor. A bloody knife was in the hand of the man.</p>
+
+<p>"They probably committed suicide when they saw the soldiers coming,"
+said the Anglian, whose name was Major Brown. "They often do that, and
+they do quite right. When they don't, the soldiers, and even the
+officers sometimes, do what they will with the women and then bayonet
+them afterward. Our people draw the line at that, and so do yours."</p>
+
+<p>"We certainly conduct war most humanely," said Sam.</p>
+
+<p>They heard a groan from another room, and opening the door saw an old
+woman lying in a pool of blood, quite unconscious.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll put her out of her misery," said the major, and he drew his
+revolver and shot her through the head.</p>
+
+<p>The journey was a very slow one and occupied three days, altho the
+natives were kept at work as long as they could stand it, on one day
+actually tugging at the ropes for twenty-one hours. At last, however,
+the Imperial City was reached, and our two travelers disem<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[Page 282]</a></span>barked and,
+taking a donkey-cart, gave directions to carry them to the quarter
+assigned to their own army. Here as everywhere desolation reigned. A
+string of laden camels showed, however, that trade was beginning to
+reassert itself. They drove past miles of burned houses, through the
+massive city walls and beyond, until they saw the welcome signs of a
+camp over which Old Gory waved supreme. Sam was received with much
+cordiality by the commandant, General Taffy, and assigned to the command
+of the 27th Volunteer Infantry. The general was a man well known
+throughout the army for his courage and ability, but notwithstanding
+this Sam took a strong prejudice against him, for he seemed to be
+half-hearted in his work and to disapprove of the prevailing policy of
+pacification by fire and sword. Sam ascribed this feebleness to the fact
+that he had been originally appointed to the army from civil life, and
+that he had not enjoyed the benefits of an East Point education.</p>
+
+<p>As soon as Sam was installed in his new<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[Page 283]</a></span> quarters, in the colonel's tent
+of his regiment, he started out with Cleary to see the great city and
+examine the scene of the late siege. They found the Jap quarter the most
+populous. The inhabitants who had fled had returned, and the streets
+were taking on their normal aspect. Near the boundary of this district
+they saw a house with a placard in the Jap language, and asked an
+Anglian soldier who was passing what it meant.</p>
+
+<p>"That's one of the Jap placards to show that the natives who live there
+are good people who have given no offense," said he.</p>
+
+<p>"Let's go in and pay them a call," said Cleary.</p>
+
+<p>They entered, and passing into a back room found a woman nursing a man
+who had evidently been recently shot in the side. She shrank from them
+with terror as they entered, and made no answer to their request for
+information. As they passed out they met a young native coming in, and
+they asked him what it meant.</p>
+
+<p>"Some Frank soldiers shot him because he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[Page 284]</a></span> could not give them money. It
+had all been stolen already," said the lad in pigeon English.</p>
+
+<p>"But the placard says they are loyal people," said Cleary.</p>
+
+<p>"What difference does that make to them?" was the reply.</p>
+
+<p>Farther on in a lonely part of the town they heard cries issuing from
+the upper window of a house. They were the cries of women, mingled with
+oaths of men in the Frank language. Suddenly two women jumped out of the
+window, one after the other, and fell in a bruised mass in the street.
+Sam and Cleary approached them and saw that they had received a mortal
+hurt. They were ladies, handsomely dressed. The first impulse of Sam and
+Cleary was to take charge of them, but seeing two natives approach, they
+called their attention to the case and walked away.</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose it's best not to get mixed up with the affairs of the other
+armies," said Sam.</p>
+
+<p>The quarter assigned to the Tutonians they were surprised to find quite
+deserted by the inhabitants.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[Page 285]</a></span>"I tell you, those Tutonians know their business," said Sam. "They won't
+stand any fooling. Just see how they have established peace! We have a
+lot to learn from them."</p>
+
+<p>They saw a crowd collected in one place.</p>
+
+<p>"What is it?" asked Sam of a soldier.</p>
+
+<p>"They're going to shoot thirty of these damned coolies for jostling
+soldiers in the street," he answered.</p>
+
+<p>Sam regretted that they had no time to wait and see the execution.</p>
+
+<p>As they reentered their own quarter they saw a number of carts loaded
+down with all sorts of valuable household effects driven along. They
+asked one of the native drivers what they were doing, and he replied in
+pigeon English that they were collecting loot for the Rev. Dr. Amen.
+Farther on some of their own soldiers were conducting an auction of
+handsome vases and carved ornaments. Sam watched the sale for a few
+minutes, and bought in one or two beautiful objects for a song for
+Marian.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[Page 286]</a></span>"Where did they get all this stuff?" he asked of a lieutenant.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, anywhere. Some of it from the houses of foreign residents even. But
+we don't understand the game as well as old Amen. He's a corker. He's
+grabbed the house of one of his old native enemies here, an awfully rich
+chap, and sold him out, and now he's got his converts cleaning out a
+whole ward. He's collected a big fine for every convert killed and so
+much extra for every dollar stolen, and he's going to use it all for the
+propagation of the Gospel. He's as good as a Tutonian, he is."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm glad we have such a man to represent our faith," said Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"He's pretty hard on General Taffy, tho," said the lieutenant. "He says
+we ought to have the Tutonian mailed fist. Taffy is much too soft, he
+thinks."</p>
+
+<p>Sam bit his lips. He could not criticize his superior officer before a
+subaltern, but he was tempted to.</p>
+
+<p>On reaching headquarters Sam found that he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[Page 287]</a></span> was to take charge of a
+punitive expedition in the North, whose chief object was to be the
+destruction of native temples, for the purpose of giving the inhabitants
+a lesson. He was to have command of his own regiment, two companies of
+cavalry, and a field-battery. They were to set out in two days. He spent
+the intermediate time in completing the preparations, which had been
+well under way before his arrival, and in studying the map. No one knew
+how much opposition he might expect.</p>
+
+<p>It was early in the morning on a hot summer day that the expedition left
+the Capital. Sam was mounted on a fine bay stallion, and felt that he
+was entirely in his element.</p>
+
+<p>"What camp is that over there on the left?" he asked his orderly.</p>
+
+<p>"That's the Anglian camp, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"Are you sure. I can't see their colors. They must have moved their
+camp."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir, I'm sure. I passed near there last night and I saw
+half-a-dozen of the men blacking their officers' boots and singing,
+'Britons, Britons, never will be slaves!' It<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[Page 288]</a></span> must be a tough job too,
+sir, for everybody's boots are covered with blood. The gutters are
+running with it."</p>
+
+<p>"I wish we had them with us to-day," said Sam. "They have done such a
+lot of burning in South Africa that they could show us the best way."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir. But then temple-burning is finer work than burning
+farmhouses, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"That is true," said Sam.</p>
+
+<p>Before night they had visited three deserted towns and burned down the
+temple in each with its accompanying pagoda. There is something in the
+hearts of men that responds to great conflagrations, and the whole force
+soon got into the spirit of it and burned everything they came across.
+Sam enjoyed himself to the full. His only regret was that there was no
+enemy to overcome. They camped out at night and continued the same work
+for several days, all the natives fleeing as soon as they came in sight.
+At last they reached the famous white temple of Pu-Sing, which was the
+chief object of religious devotion in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[Page 289]</a></span> whole province. This was to
+be absolutely destroyed, notwithstanding its great artistic beauty, and
+then they were to return to the city in triumph. As they drew near to
+the building two or three shots were fired from it, and one soldier was
+wounded in the arm. The usual cursing began, and the men were restive to
+get at the Porsslanese garrison. Sam ordered the infantry to fire a
+volley, and then, as the return fire was feeble, he ordered the squadron
+of cavalry to charge, leading it himself. The natives turned and fled as
+soon as they saw them coming, and the cavalry, skirting the enclosure of
+the temple, followed them beyond and cut them down without mercy.</p>
+
+<p>"Give them hell!" cried Sam. "Exterminate the vermin!" and he swore,
+quite naturally under the circumstances, like a trooper.</p>
+
+<p>Some of the natives fell on their knees and begged for quarter, but it
+was of no use. Every one was killed. They numbered about two hundred in
+all. When the horsemen returned to the temple they found the infantry
+already at work at the task of looting it.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[Page 290]</a></span> Everything of value that could be carried was taken out, and the larger
+statues and vases were broken to pieces. Then the woodwork was cut away
+and piled up for firewood, and finally the whole pile set on fire. In
+all this work the leader was a sergeant of infantry who seemed to have a
+natural talent for it. Sam had noticed him before at the burning of the
+other temples, but now he showed himself more conspicuously capable. As
+the work of piling inflammable material against the walls of polished
+marble, inlaid with ivory, was nearing completion, Sam sent for this man
+so that he might thank and congratulate him. The soldier came up, his
+hands black with charcoal and his face smudged as well.</p>
+
+<p>"You've done well, sergeant," said Sam. "I will mention you to the
+general when we return."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you, sir," said the man, and his voice sounded strangely
+familiar. Sam peered into his face. He had certainly seen it before.</p>
+
+<p>"What is your name, sergeant?"</p>
+
+<p>"Thatcher, sir."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[Page 291]</a></span>"Why, of course, you're Thatcher&mdash;Josh Thatcher of Slowburgh. Don't you
+remember that night at the hotel when we had a drink together? Don't you
+remember Captain Jinks?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir, but I didn't know you was he&mdash;a colonel, too, sir," said the
+man, as Sam shook his hand warmly.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm glad to see that you're doing credit to your town," said Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"They'll be surprised to hear it at home, sir," said Thatcher. "They was
+always down on me. They never gave me a chance. Here they all speaks to
+me like you do, sir. Why, Dr. Amen slapped me on the back and called me
+a fine fellow when I brought him in a big load of stuff. I got it from
+houses of people I didn't even know, and he said I was a good fellow. At
+Slowburgh I took a chicken now and then, and only from somebody who'd
+done me some mean trick, and they said I was a thief. Once or twice I
+burned a barn there just for fun, and never anybody's barn that wasn't
+down on me and rich enough to stand<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[Page 292]</a></span> it, and they said I was a criminal.
+And as for women, if they ever seed me with one, they all said I was
+dissolute and a disgrace to the place, and here I have ten times more of
+'em than I want, and everybody says it's all right, and they made me
+corporal and sergeant, and the generals talked to me like I was
+somebody, and I swear as much as I like. I never shot anybody at home. I
+suppose they'd have strung me up if I had, and here I just pepper any
+pigtail I like. They called me a criminal at Slowburgh, just think of
+that! I say that criminals are just soldiers who ain't got a job&mdash;who
+ain't had any chance at all, I says. I wasn't ever judged right, I
+wasn't."</p>
+
+<p>There were tears in Thatcher's eyes as he ended this speech.</p>
+
+<p>"You're a fine chap," said Sam. "I'll tell all about you when you get
+home. This war has been the making of you. How are the other Slowburgh
+boys?"</p>
+
+<p>"They're all right, except my cousin Tom. He's down sick with something.
+He's run about a little too much. He always was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[Page 293]</a></span> a-sparking. He never
+knowed how to take care of himself. Jim Thomson was wounded once, but
+he's all right now. We've all had fever, but that's over too. But the
+fire's spreading, sir; we'd better get out of this."</p>
+
+<p>As he spoke a heavy charred beam fell just in front of him, and the end
+of it came down with its full weight on Sam's leg, snapping the bone in
+two near the ankle. The foot lay at right angles, and the bone
+protruded. Several soldiers lifted the log and Thatcher drew Sam out,
+and they bore him in haste out of the building. He was laid on the
+ground quite unconscious, at some distance from the temple, while the
+flames roared and leaped toward heaven, wrapping the graceful, lofty
+nine-story pagoda in their folds. It was in a beautiful garden that he
+lay, near a pool filled with lotus flowers and at the end of a rustic
+bridge. The air was heavy with the perfume of lilies. A surgeon was
+called, and before long he was able to put the foot in place, but only
+after sawing off a large piece of bone. A cart was obtained, Sam was
+laid in it, a bottle of whisky<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[Page 294]</a></span> was poured down his throat, and the
+journey to the city began. The patient on coming to himself experienced
+no pain. The liquor he had taken made him feel supremely happy. He was
+in an ecstasy of exultation, and would have liked to embrace all
+mankind. But gradually this feeling wore off and his leg began to pain
+him, at first slightly, then more and more until it became excruciating.
+The road was almost impassable, and every jolt caused him agony. For
+twelve hours he underwent these tortures until he reached the camp in
+the city, and was at once transferred to a temporary hospital which had
+been improvised in a public building. Here he lay for many weeks,
+suffering much, but gradually regaining the use of his leg. He was in
+charge of a particularly efficient woman doctor from home who had
+volunteered to serve with the Red Cross Society. Sam felt most grateful
+to her for her care, but he strongly disapproved of her attitude to
+things military. She seemed to have a contempt for the whole military
+establishment, insisted on calling him "young man,"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[Page 295]</a></span> altho he was a
+colonel, usually addressed lieutenants as "boys," and laughed at
+uniforms, salutes, and ceremonies of all kinds.</p>
+
+<p>"Men are the silliest things in the world," she said one day. "Do you
+suppose women would have a War Department that spent a lot of money on
+bombshells to blow people up and then a lot more on Red Cross Societies
+to piece them together again? Why, we would just leave the soldiers at
+home, and save all the money, and it would be just the same in the end."</p>
+
+<p>"Not the kind of women I know," said Sam, thinking of Marian.</p>
+
+<p>"I mean my kind of woman," said the doctor. "Do you think we'd sell guns
+and rifles to the Porsslanese and teach them how to use them, and then
+go to work and fight them after having armed them?" And she laughed a
+merry laugh.</p>
+
+<p>"And do you think we'd pay men to invent all sorts of infernal machines
+like the Barnes torpedo, and then have our big ships blown up by them in
+time of peace. That is what<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[Page 296]</a></span> brought on the whole Castalian and Cubapine
+war. The idea of praising a man like Barnes! He's been a curse to the
+world."</p>
+
+<p>"It was really a blessing," said Sam. "It has spread civilization and
+Christianity all over."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, that's one way of doing it," said she. "But when there are more
+women like me we'll take things out of the hands of you silly men and
+run them ourselves. Now, young man, you've talked enough. Turn over and
+go to sleep."</p>
+
+<p>Cleary called on his friend almost every day and kept him informed. He
+sent home glowing accounts of Sam as the conqueror of the Great White
+Temple, and described his sufferings for his country with artistic
+skill. He also began work on the series of articles which Sam was
+expected to write for <i>Scribblers' Magazine</i>. His gossip about the
+events in the various camps entertained Sam very much, altho he was
+often irritated as well. In his capacity of correspondent Cleary saw and
+knew everything.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[Page 297]</a></span>"Sam," said he one day, as the invalid was sitting up in an easy-chair
+at the window&mdash;"Sam, it's so long since I was at East Point that I'm
+becoming more and more of a civilian. You army people begin to amuse me.
+There's always something funny about you. The Tutonians are the funniest
+of all. The little red-cheeked officers with their blond mustaches
+turned up to their eyes are too funny to live. You feel like kissing
+them and sending them to bed. And the airs they put on! One of their
+soldiers happened to elbow a lieutenant the other day, and the chap ran
+him through with his sword, and no one called him to account. The
+officers jostle and browbeat any civilian who will submit to it, and
+then try to get him into a duel, but I believe they're a cowardly lot at
+bottom. No man of real courage would bluster all over the place so."</p>
+
+<p>"I admire their discipline," said Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"And then there's the Franks. They're not quite so conceited, but
+they're awfully touchy. I think the mustaches measure con<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[Page 298]</a></span>ceit. The
+Tutonians' stick up straight, the Franks' stick right out at each side
+waxed to a point, and ours droop downward."</p>
+
+<p>Sam began to twist his mustache upward, but it would not stay.</p>
+
+<p>"I was in to see a Frank military trial the other day," said Cleary. "It
+was the most comical thing. There were three big generals on the court.
+I mean big in rank. They were about four feet high in size, and they
+kept looking at their mustaches in hand-glasses and combing their hair
+with pocket-combs. They were trying one of their lieutenants for having
+sold some secret military plans to a Tutonian attach&eacute;. Now the joke of
+it is that military attach&eacute;s are appointed just for the purpose of
+buying secrets, and everybody knows it. They're licensed to do it. And
+then when they do just what they're licensed for, everybody makes a
+fuss. Well, the secrets were sold; there wasn't the slightest reason for
+thinking this lieutenant had sold them, but they had to punish somebody.
+They say they drew his name from a box. They<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[Page 299]</a></span> had three officers to
+testify against him, and they were the stupidest liars I ever saw. They
+just blundered from beginning to end, and the president of the court
+helped them out and told them what to say, and corrected them. The third
+man said nothing at all except, 'Yes, my general; yes, my general.' Then
+they called the witnesses for the accused, and two officers stepped
+forward, when a couple of orderlies grabbed each of them, stuffed a gag
+into their mouths, and carried them out, while the court looked the
+other way, and the crowd shouted, 'Long live the army!' The court
+adjourned on account of the 'contumacy of the witnesses for the
+defense.' I went in again the next morning, and they announced that both
+the witnesses had committed suicide. Then the president took a judgment
+out of his pocket which I had seen him fingering all the first day, and
+read it off just as it had been written before the trial began,
+condemning the poor devil to twenty years' imprisonment. I never saw
+such a farce. Everybody shouted for the army, and the little generals
+kissed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[Page 300]</a></span> each other and cried, and they had a great time of it. And the
+president made a speech in which he said that they had saved the army
+and consequently the country too, and that honor and glory and the
+fatherland had been redeemed. They've all been promoted and decorated
+since. They're a queer lot, those Frank officers."</p>
+
+<p>"We ought not to be too quick in judging foreigners," said Sam. "Their
+methods may seem strange to us, but we are not competent to criticize
+them. Let each army judge for itself."</p>
+
+<p>"As a matter of fact," said Cleary, "every army is down on the others.
+If you believe what they say about each other they're a pretty bad lot.
+They all say that the Mosconians are barbarians, and they call the
+Tutonians thugs. The rest of them call the Franks woman-hunters, and
+they all call us and the Anglians auctioneers and looters and
+shopkeepers, and drunkards, and we're known as temple-burners and
+vandals too."</p>
+
+<p>"What an outrage!" ejaculated Sam.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[Page 301]</a></span>"The Anglians are more like us, but they've got a few old generals and
+then a lot of small boys, and nothing much between. I should think the
+generals would feel like school-masters. I told one of their officers
+that, and he said it was better than having second lieutenants
+seventy-five years old as we do. We're loving each other a lot just now,
+the Anglians and us, but one of our naval officers let on to me that
+they were dying to have a war with them. You see, since South Africa
+nobody's afraid of them except the Porsslanese, and they don't read the
+papers. And how the Anglians despise the Franks! Why, we were discussing
+lying in war at a lunch-party, and one of their generals was there, a
+rather dense sort of a machine of a man. They had been saying that lying
+was an essential part of war, and that an officer must be a good liar
+and able to deceive the enemy well, as well as a good fighter, and the
+conversation drifted off into the question of lying in general. Somebody
+asked the general if he would say he was a Tutonian to save his life.
+'Of course,'<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[Page 302]</a></span> he answered. 'But would you say you were a Frank under the
+same circumstances?' asked some one else. 'Certainly not,' he said.
+Everybody roared, but he didn't see any joke, and looked as grave as an
+owl all the rest of the afternoon. Then the commanders are all so
+jealous of each other. They are spying on each other and putting sticks
+in each other's wheels. Officers are queer people. There's only one
+profession that can compete with them for feline amenities, and that is
+the actress profession."</p>
+
+<p>"Cleary," said Sam, "I let you talk this way for old acquaintance's
+sake, but I wouldn't take it from any one else."</p>
+
+<p>"Fiddlesticks! You know I'm right. The Anglian officers like to hint at
+the frauds in our quartermaster's department at Havilla, but I shut them
+up by asking how much their officers made off the horses they bought for
+South Africa in Hungary. Then they shut up like a clasp-knife. Officers
+talk a lot about their 'brother officers,' and you'd think they loved
+each other a lot, but I find they're all glad so<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[Page 303]</a></span> many were killed in
+South Africa because it gives them a lot of promotion. I tell you the
+officers of all the armies like to have a good list of dead officers
+after each battle, if they are only their superiors in rank. I've been
+picking up all I can among the different soldiers, and learning a lot. I
+was just talking to a lot of Anglian soldiers now. They were sharpening
+sabers and bayonets on grindstones. One of the older ones was telling me
+how they used to flog in the army. They had a regular parade, and the
+drummers used to lay on the lash, while a doctor watched so that they
+shouldn't go too far. Sometimes the young subalterns who were in command
+would faint away at the sight.</p>
+
+<p>"'But it was so manly, sir,' the fellow said to me. 'The army isn't what
+it was. But the other armies keep it up still, and we still birch
+youngsters in the navy so we needn't despair of the world.'"</p>
+
+<p>"When will the campaign be over?" asked Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"There's no telling. All the armies are<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[Page 304]</a></span> afraid to leave, for fear the
+ones that are left will get some advantage from the Porsslanese
+Government. They're a high old lot of allies. It's a queer business. But
+the missionaries are as queer as any of them. You ought to have heard
+old Amen last Sunday. How he whooped things up! He took his text from
+the Gospel of St. Loot, I think! He was trying to stir up Taffy to be
+more severe. Amen ought to be a soldier. Our minister plenipotentiary
+isn't a backward chap either. I went through the Imperial palace with
+him and his party the other day, and they pretty nearly cleaned it out,
+just for souvenirs, you know. He didn't take anything himself, as far as
+I could see; but his women, bless my soul, they filled their pockets
+with jade and ivory and what-not. There were some foreign looters in
+there at the same time, great swells too, and they just smashed the
+plate-glass over the cabinets and filled their pockets and their arms
+too. One old Porsslanese official was standing there, a high mandarin of
+some sort, and he had an emerald necklace around his neck.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[Page 305]</a></span> Some
+diplomat or other walked up to him and quietly took it off, and the old
+man didn't stir, but the tears were rolling down his cheeks."</p>
+
+<p>"He had no right to complain," said Sam. "We clearly have the right to
+the contents of a conquered city by the rules of war."</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps. But there are some curious war rules. Some of the armies shoot
+all natives in soldiers' uniforms because they are soldiers, and then
+they shoot all natives who resist them in civil dress, because they are
+not soldiers and have no right to fight. I suppose they ought to go
+about naked. They used to kill their prisoners with the butt-end of
+their rifles, but that breaks the rifles, and now they generally use the
+bayonet."</p>
+
+<p>"Here are some newspapers," said he on another occasion. "You've been
+made a brigadier for capturing Gomaldo. Isn't that great? But they
+<i>will</i> call you 'Captain Jinks' at home, no matter what your rank is.
+The papers say so. The song has made it stick."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm sorry for that," said Sam. "It would be pleasanter to be called
+'General.'"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[Page 306]</a></span>"It's all the same," said Cleary. "Wasn't Napoleon called the Little
+Corporal? It's really more distinguished."</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps it is," said Sam contentedly.</p>
+
+<p>"Some of the papers criticize us a little too," added Cleary. "They say
+we are acting brutally here and in the Cubapines. Of course only a few
+say it, but their number is increasing."</p>
+
+<p>"They make themselves ridiculous," said Sam. "They don't see how
+ludicrous their suggestions are that we should actually retire and let
+these countries relapse into barbarism. As that fellow said at Havilla,
+they have no sense of humor."</p>
+
+<p>"And yet," retorted Cleary, "our greatest humorists, Mark Swain, Mr.
+Tooley, and the best cartoonists, and our only really humorous paper,
+<i>Knife</i>, are on that side."</p>
+
+<p>"But they are only humorists," cried Sam, "mere professional jokers. You
+can't expect serious sense from them. They are mere buffoons. The
+serious people here, such as Dr. Amen, are with us to a man."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[Page 307]</a></span>"I saw old Amen get caught the other day," said Cleary. "I was
+interviewing the colonel of the 15th, and in came Amen and began talking
+about the Porsslanese&mdash;what barbarians they were, no religion, no
+belief, no faith. Why, the idea of self-sacrifice was utterly unknown to
+them! Just then in came a young officer and said, 'Colonel, the son of
+that old native we're going to shoot this afternoon for looting, is
+bothering us and says he wants to be shot instead of his father. What
+shall we do with him?' Amen said good-day and cleared out. By the way,
+the colonel of the 15th is in a hole just now. He was shut up in the
+legations, you know, and all the women there were down on him because he
+wouldn't make the sentries salute them when the men were dead tired with
+watching. They are charging him with cowardice. There'll never be an end
+of this backbiting. It's almost as sickening as the throat-cutting and
+stabbing. I confess I'm getting sick of it all. When you see a private
+shoot an old native for not blacking his boots, when the poor fellow
+was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[Page 308]</a></span> trying to understand him and couldn't, and smiling as best he
+could, it's rather tough; and I've seen twenty babies if I've seen one
+lying in the streets with a bayonet hole in them. They have executions
+every day in one camp or another. I saw one coolie, who had been working
+fourteen hours at a stretch loading carts, shot down because he hadn't
+the strength to go on."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm afraid the heat is telling on you, Cleary," said Sam. "This is all
+sickly sentimentality. War is war. The trouble with you is that there
+has been no regular campaign on to occupy your attention. This lying
+about doing nothing is a bad thing for everybody. Wait till the Tutonian
+Emperor comes out and we'll have something to do."</p>
+
+<p>"He won't find any enemy to fight," said Cleary.</p>
+
+<p>"Trust him for that," replied Sam. "He's every inch a soldier, and he'll
+find the way to make war, depend upon it. He's a religious man too, and
+he will back up the missionaries better than we've done."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[Page 309]</a></span>"Yes. Amen thinks the world of him. Amen ought to have been a Tutonian
+soldier. He says the best imagery of religion comes from war. I told him
+I had an article written about a fight which said that our men 'fought
+like demons' and 'yelled like fiends,' and I would change it to read
+that they fought like seraphs and yelled like cherubim, but he didn't
+think it was funny."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">[Page 310]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIII" id="CHAPTER_XIII"></a>CHAPTER XIII</h2>
+
+<h1>The War-Lord</h1>
+
+
+<div class="wrap_area">
+
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+
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+
+<p>
+
+S soon as Sam was well enough to be moved the doctors sent him down to
+the coast, and Cleary, who had been up and down the river several times
+in the course of his newspaper work, went with him. Sam still felt
+feeble, and altho he could walk without a crutch, he now had a decided
+limp which was sure to be permanent. They arrived at the port a few days
+before the expected arrival of the Emperor, and the whole place was
+overflowing with excitement. The Emperor, who had never seen a skirmish,
+was notwithstanding<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[Page 311]</a></span> considered the greatest general of his time, and he
+was coming now to prove it before the world and incidentally to wreak
+vengeance upon a people, one of whom had killed his ambassador. The town
+was profusely decorated, the Tutonian garrison was increased, and Count
+von Balderdash, the commander-in-chief, himself took command. Six fleets
+were drawn up in the wide bay to await the coming of the war-lord. It
+was announced that he would make his entry at night, and that the hour
+of arrival had been timed for a dark moonless night. This was asserted
+to be for the better display of fireworks. Finally, one morning the
+Tutonian fleet of four or five large vessels was sighted in the
+distance. They steamed slowly up and down in the distance until night
+fell, and then, as their colored electric lights, outlining the masts
+and funnels, became distinct in the darkness, they began to approach.
+Each of the awaiting fleets was distinguished with particular-colored
+lights, and they had taken their position at a considerable distance
+from the shore, leaving<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">[Page 312]</a></span> a passage near the ruined forts for the
+Emperor. Sam and Cleary found a good lookout on a dismantled bastion,
+and saw the whole parade. As the leading vessel came near the first
+fleet the latter saluted with its guns. Suddenly the lights on the
+advancing ship were extinguished, and a strong flash-light was throw
+from above upon the forward deck. There in bold relief stood a single
+figure, brilliantly illuminated by the light. Cleary and Sam turned
+their field-glasses upon it.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p>"By Jove! it's the Emperor," cried Cleary. "He's got on his admiral's
+uniform, and now he's passing his own fleet that Balderdash brought with
+him."</p>
+
+<p>They looked at the striking scene for some minutes, and the crowds on
+the wharves and shores murmured with surprise.</p>
+
+<p>"Bless my soul! he has disappeared," said Cleary again.</p>
+
+<p>Sure enough, he had suddenly passed out of sight, and as suddenly the
+flash-light went out and the lights on the masts reappeared. In another
+moment these lights were extin<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">[Page 313]</a></span>guished, and the flash-light revealed a
+form standing in the same place in a theatrical attitude with raised
+sword and uplifted face.</p>
+
+<p>"I believe it's he again," said Cleary. "He must have a trap-door. He's
+got on another uniform. I think it's a Frank admiral's uniform. There go
+the Frank guns. He's passing their fleet."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, it is a Frank naval uniform," said a foreign officer near them, as
+he scrutinized the deck with his glasses.</p>
+
+<p>Before each of the fleets the same maneuvre was carried out. As their
+guns fired, the Emperor would disappear for a few moments, and in an
+incalculably short time he would appear again in the uniform of an
+admiral of the fleet in question. When he had passed the last fleet he
+disappeared once more, and came back to sight clad in the white and
+silver armor of a general officer of his own army, with helmet and
+plume. The flash-light now changed colors through the whole gamut of the
+rainbow, and the Emperor knelt in the attitude of Columbus discovering
+America.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">[Page 314]</a></span>Sam was immensely impressed.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Cleary!" he said, "if we only had an Emperor."</p>
+
+<p>"The President is doing his best," said Cleary. "Don't blame him."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, but what can he do? Why haven't we some one like that to embody the
+ideal of the State, to picture us to ourselves, to realize our
+aspirations?"</p>
+
+<p>As he said this a strange noise arose from the crowd near the
+landing-stage where the Emperor was about to alight. The far greater
+part of this crowd was composed of natives, and they had been entirely
+taken aback by the exhibition. They were just beginning to understand
+it, and as the war-lord moved about the deck followed by the glare of
+the flash-light, and again struck an attitude before descending into the
+gig which was to take him ashore, some one of the Porsslanese in the
+crowd laughed. His neighbor laughed too, then another and then another,
+until the whole native multitude was laughing. The laugh rippled along
+the shore through the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">[Page 315]</a></span> long stretch of natives collected there like the
+swells from a passing steamer. It seemed to extend back from the shore
+through the whole town, and, tho it was undoubtedly fancy, Sam thought
+he heard it spreading, like the rings from a stone thrown into the
+water, over the entire land. The foreigners stood aghast. The
+Porsslanese are not a laughing people. They had never been known to
+laugh before except in the most feeble manner. The events of the past
+year had not been especially humorous, and the coming of the great
+war-lord was far from being a laughing matter. Yet with the perversity
+of heathen they had selected this impressive occasion for showing their
+incurable barbarism and bad taste. Sam fairly shuddered.</p>
+
+<p>"It's a sacrilege," he cried. "I believe that nothing short of
+extermination will reclaim this unhappy land. They are calling down the
+vengeance of heaven upon them."</p>
+
+<p>They walked back to town with the foreign officer.</p>
+
+<p>"He's a wonderful man, the Emperor," said<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">[Page 316]</a></span> he, in indifferent English.
+"How quickly he changed his clothes, and what a compliment it was!"</p>
+
+<p>"A sort of lightning-change artist," said Cleary. "He could make his
+fortune at a continuous performance."</p>
+
+<p>In the dark Sam blushed for his friend, but fortunately their companion
+did not understand the allusion.</p>
+
+<p>"You should have seen him when he visited our Queen," he said. "She came
+to meet him in the uniform of a Tutonian hussar, breeches and all. You
+can imagine how he was touched by it. That very afternoon he called upon
+her dressed in the costume of one of our royal princesses with a long
+satin train. It made him wonderfully popular. Our Queen responded at
+once by making his infant daughters colonels of several of our
+regiments. One of them is colonel of mine," he added proudly.</p>
+
+<p>"What would you do if you went to war with Tutonia, and one of the kids
+should order you to shoot on your own army?" asked Cleary. "It might be
+embarrassing."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">[Page 317]</a></span>But the foreigner did not understand this either.</p>
+
+<p>"And to think that these Porsslanese dogs have received him with
+laughter!" said he.</p>
+
+<p>At eleven o'clock on the same evening the Emperor was closeted with his
+aged field-marshal, von Balderdash, in a handsomely furnished
+sitting-room. A Turk's head had been set up in the middle of the room,
+and His Majesty, dressed in the uniform of a cavalry general, was
+engaged in making passes at it with a saber. He had already taken a ride
+on horseback with his staff. The field-marshal stood wearily leaning
+against the wall at the side of a desk piled up with papers.</p>
+
+<p>"We have avenged the death of our ambassador," Balderdash was saying.
+"We have sent out five punitive expeditions in all. Our quarter of the
+imperial city shows the power of arms more completely than any other. We
+have set the highest standard, and our army is the admiration of all."</p>
+
+<p>The count watched the face of his master as he spoke, but there was no
+sign of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">[Page 318]</a></span> satisfaction in it. The Emperor was out of humor.</p>
+
+<p>"We have not done enough," he said. "If we had, those pagans would not
+have ventured to laugh&mdash;yes, actually to laugh&mdash;in our imperial
+presence. Balderdash, you have not done your duty. I shall take command
+myself at once. We must have a real punitive expedition, and not one of
+your imitations. If they want war, let them have it."</p>
+
+<p>"We can not have war, Your Majesty, without an enemy, and we can find no
+enemy. All their armed men are killed or have fled, and the rest of the
+population run away from us as soon as we appear."</p>
+
+<p>"Count," said the Emperor sternly, "do you remember your oath to our
+person? Do you know your duties as a field-marshal?"</p>
+
+<p>"I think so, Your Majesty."</p>
+
+<p>"Is it not your duty to provide every requisite for war at my command?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Your Majesty."</p>
+
+<p>"Then I depend upon you to provide an enemy. What military requisite is
+more im<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">[Page 319]</a></span>portant? Remember the fate of Fismark, and do your duty. We must
+have a war. That is what I have come here for, and I do not propose to
+be disappointed. We must have a punitive expedition at once. What are my
+engagements for to-morrow?"</p>
+
+<p>"Your Majesty's mustache artist is coming at 5:30," replied the count,
+looking at a memorandum. "Breakfast at 6&mdash;inspection of infantry at
+6:30&mdash;naval maneuvres at 8&mdash;reception of our officers at
+10:30&mdash;reception of foreign officers at 11:30&mdash;reception of civilians at
+12&mdash;luncheon at 12:30&mdash;photographer from 1 to 3. We have made no
+appointments after 3, Your Majesty."</p>
+
+<p>"Then put down the punitive expedition for 3:15," said the war lord,
+twisting his mustache in front of his eyes. "I propose to have this
+whole nation kow-tow before me in unison before I leave their miserable
+land. Take the necessary measures at once for the ceremony. Now I am
+going to call out the whole garrison and see if they are kept in
+readiness. You may go, and send me an aide-de-camp. You<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">[Page 320]</a></span> understand that
+you must find me an enemy on whom I can wreak vengeance for all these
+wrongs."</p>
+
+<p>"I understand, Your Majesty," said the count, bending low before him. "I
+accept this Gospel of Your Majesty's most blessed Person," and he took
+his leave.</p>
+
+<p>The expedition did not start promptly at 3:15, for unexpected
+complications arose. The other powers wanted to send out punitive
+expeditions too, and they sought to have it established that the
+Porsslanese laugh was directed against all the fleets as well as against
+the Emperor. A judicious distribution of decorations persuaded all the
+armies to drop this pretension except the Anglian, and it was finally
+arranged that the Tutonian and Anglian armies should cooperate and take
+the field together under the Emperor's immediate command. A week had
+elapsed before this force was prepared, but it finally started out,
+General Fawlorn commanding the Anglian contingent.</p>
+
+<p>Sam, who was still only convalescent and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">[Page 321]</a></span> who had been assigned some
+duties connected with forwarding despatches which left him a great deal
+of leisure, looked with envious eyes upon the departing host. He had
+never seen anything like the magnificence of the uniforms of the
+Emperor's staff. He envied them their gilt and stars, and he envied them
+the prospect of winning the great battles which Balderdash had promised
+them. They marched at once upon a fortified town in which a large force
+of Fencers were reported to be established. They besieged it for six
+days according to all the rules of the Tutonian manual, and finally
+entered it with great precautions, and found it absolutely empty. At one
+village a regiment of Anglian Asiatics cut to pieces a hundred natives
+who were alleged to be Fencers, but it transpired afterward that none of
+them were armed. Balderdash was frightened half to death, expecting his
+imperial master to protest against the lack of opposition, but, strange
+to say, he took it very well and delivered orations on all occasions
+extolling the prowess of his troops in putting to flight the hordes of
+a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_322" id="Page_322">[Page 322]</a></span> vast empire. This campaign lasted a month, and the expedition finally
+returned to the port and was received with all the marks of glory that
+Tutonian officialism could command. The Emperor at once cabled to
+several kings and all his relations that Providence had graciously
+preserved him in the midst of great dangers and brought his enterprise
+to a successful termination.</p>
+
+<p>"They may be great soldiers," said Cleary one day to Sam, "but they
+don't understand the newspaper business. The Emperor has a natural
+talent for advertising, but it hasn't been properly cultivated. They
+oughtn't to have let it leak out that there wasn't even a battle. Why,
+Taffy says he could go from one end of the Empire to the other with a
+squadron of cavalry! As for me, I shouldn't mind trying it without the
+cavalry. When they did kill any people, it was like killing pheasants at
+one of his famous battues. I wonder he wasn't photographed in the middle
+of a pile of them, the way he is when he goes shooting at home. Perhaps
+he'll get up some sport here<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323">[Page 323]</a></span> in a big hen-coop. I'll suggest it to
+Balderdash."</p>
+
+<p>Sam refused to think ill of the great war-lord, and embraced every
+opportunity to see him. He had been formally presented to him at a
+reception of officers, but there was a crowd present, and Sam did not
+expect him to recognize him again. On one occasion Sam happened to be
+standing in the street when the Emperor, accompanied by some of his
+officers, came past on foot. Sam stood on one side and saluted. To his
+surprise the Emperor stopped and beckoned to him. Sam came forward,
+bowing, blushing, and stammering.</p>
+
+<p>"I am glad to see an officer of your country here, General," said His
+Majesty. "May I ask your name? Ah, Jinks! I have heard your name before.
+What do you think of expansion, General?"</p>
+
+<p>"I beg Your Majesty's pardon," said Sam, "but I do not think. I obey
+orders."</p>
+
+<p>The Emperor gave an exclamation of surprise and delight.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_324" id="Page_324">[Page 324]</a></span>"Hear that, gentlemen," said he in his own language, turning to his
+officers. "He does not think; he obeys orders! There is a model for you.
+There is a motto for you to learn. God has given you an Emperor to think
+for you. Our friend here, with only a President to fall back on, has
+perceived the truth that a soldier must not think. He thinks at his
+peril. General," he added in English, "you have given my army a lesson
+to-day which they will never forget. It will give me pleasure to
+decorate you with the Green Cockatoo, third class."</p>
+
+<p>Sam began to stammer something.</p>
+
+<p class="figcenter"><a name="page324" id="page324"></a><img src="images/page324.png" title="page324" alt="page324" height="663" width="400" /></p>
+
+<h4>THE PERFECT SOLDIER</h4>
+<h6>"THE EMPEROR GAVE AN EXCLAMATION OF SURPRISE AND DELIGHT"<br /><br /><br /><br /></h6>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes, I remember. Your Government does not allow you to receive it.
+If that restriction is ever removed, let me be informed," and the
+Emperor passed on, while Sam determined to write to his uncle and have
+this miserable civilian law changed. It so happened that there was a
+great dearth of news at this time, and Cleary made the most of this
+episode. It did almost as much to make General Jinks famous as anything
+that he had done<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_325" id="Page_325">[Page 325]</a></span> before, and he was widely advertised at home as the
+officer who had astounded the Emperor by his wisdom and given a lesson
+to the finest army in the world.</p>
+
+
+
+<p>"Sam, your luck never gives out," said Cleary. "They'll make you a
+major-general, I expect, now."</p>
+
+<p>"I should rather like to have the thanks of Congress," answered Sam, as
+if that were a mere bagatelle. This conversation occurred in a
+restaurant. A young officer was sitting alone at the next table, and he
+gave his order to the waiter in a high, penetrating voice.</p>
+
+<p>"Bless my soul! if that isn't Clark," cried Cleary. "See, he's a second
+lieutenant still. Let's ask him over to our table."</p>
+
+<p>"Go ahead," said Sam, "but don't say anything about East Point."</p>
+
+<p>Cleary invited him over as a fellow countryman, and the three men dined
+together, never once saying anything to denote that they had met before.
+Whether Clark noticed that Cleary was rather persistent in offering him<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_326" id="Page_326">[Page 326]</a></span>
+the red pepper for every course, it was impossible to determine.</p>
+
+<p>It was generally supposed that the Emperor had done all that could be
+done in Porsslania, but those who believed this, knew little of the
+resources of the first soldier of Christendom. Even Count von Balderdash
+was ignorant of the card which his master had determined to play in view
+of all mankind.</p>
+
+<p>"Balderdash," said he one night, as the poor count sat trying to repress
+his yawns and longing for bed,&mdash;"Balderdash, we have shown the heathen
+here what we can do. We have exacted vengeance from them. Now I wish to
+show to the civilized world, and especially to their armies here, that
+we have the best army, the best discipline, the greatest power on earth,
+and the bravest Christians in our ranks. I have not told you yet what I
+propose to do, but the time has come to go ahead with it. In our vessel,
+the <i>Eagle</i>, which we brought with us, there are confined thirty persons
+convicted at home of the frightful crime of lese-majesty, a crime which
+shows that the criminal<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_327" id="Page_327">[Page 327]</a></span> is atheistic, anarchistic, and unfit to live. I
+had them selected among those who have near relations here in the army.
+They all have either sons, brothers, or fathers enlisted here. Of course
+at home our wretched parliamentary system would make it inadvisable to
+have them executed. Here there is no such difficulty. You have often
+heard me at the annual swearing in of recruits tell them that they are
+now my children and must do what I say, even if I should order them to
+shoot down their own parents. I wish to show the world that this is so,
+and that my soldiers believe it and will act upon it. Such an army will
+inspire terror indeed. Most of the prisoners are men, but I have
+included among them two or three of the most abandoned women, who have
+been imprisoned for criticizing my sacred person. You approve of my
+plan?"</p>
+
+<p>"I approve of all that Your Majesty ever suggests."</p>
+
+<p>"Of course it makes no difference whether you do or not, but I wish you
+to have the prisoners brought ashore. You must seek out<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_328" id="Page_328">[Page 328]</a></span> their relatives
+among the troops, but do not let them know why. Then fix the execution
+for some day next week, and have a general parade of all the troops on
+that occasion."</p>
+
+<p>The Emperor's secret was well kept, and, except that a special parade
+was to be held, no one knew what the object was. A glittering array of
+soldiers met the war-lord's eyes when he entered the public square where
+the army was drawn up. In pursuance of his orders the enlisted men who
+were related to the prisoners were alined in front of the center with a
+captain in command of them. The Emperor directed his horse to the spot
+and addressed the whole army, applying his remarks particularly,
+however, to the detail immediately before him.</p>
+
+<p>"My children," said he, "when you took the oath of allegiance as my
+soldiers you became members of my family, and it became your solemn duty
+to do my bidding, whatever that bidding might be. My word became for you
+the Word of God. You gave your consciences into my keeping, knowing that
+God<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_329" id="Page_329">[Page 329]</a></span> had commissioned me to relieve you of that responsibility. From
+that moment it was your aim to become perfect soldiers, with your minds
+and consciences deposited in my hands for safe-keeping. From that day
+forth you no longer had minds nor consciences&mdash;your whole duty was
+summed up in the obligation to obey orders. That is the soldier's only
+duty. And I know, my children, that you are perfect soldiers and that
+you stand ever ready to do that duty. Soldiers in other armies may
+occasionally forget their calling and indulge in the forbidden fruits of
+reason and conscience, but the Tutonian soldier never! We all know this.
+For us no proof is necessary. But I wish to demonstrate the fact to the
+world. I have brought over with me across the sea certain of your
+relations who have been guilty of the unparalleled crime of
+lese-majesty. I have determined that they deserve death, and that you
+shall carry out the execution. I have so arranged it that each of the
+condemned shall be shot by his nearest relation, be it father, son, or
+brother. You will show the world that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_330" id="Page_330">[Page 330]</a></span> you are ready, nay, proud to
+carry out these my commands. I congratulate you on being selected for
+this noble and patriotic task. You are now before the footlights at the
+center of the world's stage. Remember that the eyes of all mankind are
+upon you and that you are my children. Field-marshal, carry out my
+orders!"</p>
+
+<p>Count von Balderdash gave some orders in an undertone; the troops opened
+on the left, and disclosed a row of prisoners, including several women,
+standing bound and blindfolded against a wall, each one at a distance of
+several yards from his neighbor. The captain ordered the detail into
+position, gave the necessary orders to load, aim, and fire, and the
+condemned men and women fell to the ground, each one pierced by the
+bullet of his or her near relation.</p>
+
+<p>The great concourse, composed largely of soldiers of the various foreign
+armies (for most of them had now been withdrawn from the Capital and
+Gin-Sin), looked on with wonder at this spectacle. Sam, who was
+standing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_331" id="Page_331">[Page 331]</a></span> with the inventor Cope, scanned the faces of the executioners
+with care, and was unable to detect the slightest sign of emotion in
+them. They had not been prepared in the least for the ordeal; they did
+not even know that their relations had been brought from home, and yet
+they did their duty as soldiers without changing the stolid expression
+of their faces.</p>
+
+<p>"Wonderful, wonderful!" he said to Cope. "These are indeed perfect
+soldiers. Why, they move like clockwork, like marvelous machines. And
+what a remarkable man the Emperor is&mdash;without question the first soldier
+of his time and of all time. Was there ever anything like it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Never," answered the inventor.</p>
+
+<p>Sam walked back to his lodgings alone. He wished to think, and purposely
+avoided company. He did not notice the soldiers in the streets, nor the
+natives in their round, pointed straw hats. He ran into a man carrying
+water in two buckets hung from the ends of a pole balanced on his
+shoulders, and nearly upset his load. He started back and collided with
+a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_332" id="Page_332">[Page 332]</a></span> native woman with a baby tied to her back. When he reached his house,
+he sat down in an easy-chair in his bedroom and thought and thought and
+thought. For some hours his mind was filled with unmixed admiration for
+the Emperor and his army. He felt like an artist who had just seen a new
+masterpiece that surpassed all the achievements of the ages, or a
+musician who had listened to a new symphony that summed up and
+transcended all that had ever gone before. Again and again he pictured
+to himself the great war-lord in his helmet and white plume, explaining
+so eloquently and admirably the duties of a soldier, and then his
+soldiers obeying his orders as if their service were a religion to them,
+as indeed it was. It grew dark, but Sam did not heed the darkness.
+Dinner-time came and went, but he was in a region far above such vulgar
+bodily needs.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, if we only had an emperor," he thought,&mdash;"and such an emperor! Why
+was I not born a Tutonian?"</p>
+
+<p>This was an unpatriotic thought, and Sam<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_333" id="Page_333">[Page 333]</a></span> was ashamed of it. Yet it was
+true, he would gladly have found himself one of His Majesty's subjects
+and a member of his incomparable army. Then he recalled his memorable
+interview with the Emperor, and rejoiced in the remembrance that he had
+deserved and received his commendation. He tried to imagine how it would
+feel to be one of his officers, or even one of his privates. If he had
+been selected as one of the squad to show the perfection of their
+discipline, how gladly he would have taken his place in line with the
+rest! He would have obeyed without flinching, he was sure of it. He put
+himself in the place of one of the squad. He is ordered to take his
+position opposite one of the condemned. He looks and sees that it is his
+Uncle George. Would he obey the order to shoot? Most certainly. The
+musket goes off and his uncle falls. He goes through the list of his
+friends and relations. He does not quite like to shoot the girls, but he
+does it. It is his duty. His commander-in-chief, who represents his
+Creator, has ordered it. He can rely implicitly on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_334" id="Page_334">[Page 334]</a></span> his wisdom. Then he
+thinks of Cleary. Yes, he would shoot Cleary down without hesitation.
+And then comes the turn of his father and mother. He has no trouble with
+the former, for he is sure that his father as a man must understand his
+feelings, and he sees a smile of approval on his face as he, too, falls
+prostrate. With his mother it is more difficult. There had not been much
+sympathy between them in recent years, yet he recalled his early boyhood
+on the farm, and it went against him to aim his piece at her. But after
+all it was his duty, and with an inaudible sigh he pulled the trigger.
+It was done. No one could have noticed his reluctance. It was quite
+likely that some of the soldiers that afternoon felt as much compunction
+as that. But as Sam went over all this long list of tests and passed
+them successfully, he felt, almost unconsciously, that he was coming to
+a precipice. His sense of happiness had left him, and he began to dread
+the end of his cogitations. There was a trial in store that he was
+afraid of facing. In order to postpone it he went over<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_335" id="Page_335">[Page 335]</a></span> all his friends
+and relations again, and added mere acquaintances to the list. He busied
+himself in this way for an hour or two, but at last the final question
+forced itself upon him and insisted upon an answer. Would he be willing
+to shoot Marian under orders? It was with misgivings that he began to
+imagine this episode. As before, he marched to his place and lifted his
+rifle to aim. He sees before him the figure which had been haunting his
+dreams ever since he left East Point. She is bound; a handkerchief is
+tied over her eyes, but he sees the mouth and longs to kiss it. He has a
+strong impulse to run forward and throw his arms around her. The command
+"Fire!" is given, but&mdash;he does not shoot. He can not. He has disobeyed
+orders! He, the man whose one aim in life has been to become a perfect
+soldier, who only just now was considering himself fit to be a soldier
+of the war-lord, had disobeyed orders; he had shown himself a mutineer,
+a deserter, a traitor; he had lost his patriotism and loyalty; he had
+dishonored the flag; he had trampled under foot all the gods<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_336" id="Page_336">[Page 336]</a></span> that he
+had worshiped now for many years. He had flatly broken the only code of
+morals that he knew&mdash;he was a coward, a hypocrite, a mere civilian,
+masquerading in the uniform of an officer! Sam buried his face in his
+hands and the tears trickled down through his fingers. Then he sprang up
+and walked to and fro for a long time. At last he took Marian's
+photograph from his pocket and put it on his dressing-table. He must be
+a man. He must hold true to his faith. He screwed up his courage and
+went through the forms of the afternoon in his room dimly lighted by
+lanterns in the street. He stood up in the line before the Emperor, and
+again listened to his inspiring speech. Now he felt sure that he would
+not fail. He placed himself opposite the photograph when the order was
+given. He raised an imaginary gun and aimed with assurance&mdash;but just
+then his eye fell upon the face which he could barely distinguish. He
+saw Marian again as she had been when he bade her farewell. True, she
+was as much a believer in the military scheme of life as he was, but he
+knew<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_337" id="Page_337">[Page 337]</a></span> by instinct that she would draw the line somewhere. She was not
+created to be a martyr to her faith. The order "Fire!" came, but Sam,
+instead of obeying, threw down his musket and ran forward, seized the
+photograph and kissed it. He looked up, half expecting to see a crowd of
+spectators eying him with derision. He cast himself upon his bed with
+his clothes on and tossed about for a long time, until at last sleep
+came to his relief.</p>
+
+<p>When he awoke in the morning the sun had long been up. In the first
+moments of waking and before he opened his eyes, he could not recall
+what it was that was troubling him. Suddenly the whole situation came
+back to him, tenfold clearer than before. He saw at once beyond all
+possibility of contradiction that he could not shoot Marian, no matter
+who ordered him to do it; that for him the ideal of a perfect soldier
+was altogether unattainable, and that he was obliged to admit to himself
+that his entire life was a failure. The public might praise and acclaim
+him, but he was essentially a fraud and could never secure his own
+approval.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_338" id="Page_338">[Page 338]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIV" id="CHAPTER_XIV"></a>CHAPTER XIV</h2>
+
+<h1>Home Again</h1>
+
+
+<div class="wrap_area">
+
+ <img src="images/chap_14.png" alt="chap_14" height="530" width="400" />
+
+ <div class="shape_wrap">
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+ </div>
+
+<p><br />
+
+HEN Sam got up and began to undress to take his bath, his head swam so
+that he was obliged to lie down again. He tried again two or three
+times, but always with the same result, and finally he rang for a
+servant and sent for an army surgeon. The doctor came at once, took his
+temperature with a thermometer, and, after examining him, pronounced<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_339" id="Page_339">[Page 339]</a></span>
+that he had a bad attack of fever, probably typhoid. He advised him to
+go to the hospital, and before noon Sam found himself comfortably
+installed in a hospital bed, screened off by a movable partition from a
+ward of fever patients. The doctor's surmise proved to be correct, and
+for weeks he was dangerously ill, much of the time being delirious. He
+suffered once or twice also from relapses, and showed very little
+recuperative force when the fever finally left him. Meanwhile he was
+very low-spirited. The idea preyed upon his mind that he was no soldier
+and could never be one, and he felt that the resulting depression had a
+great deal to do with his protracted illness. Cleary was assiduous in
+his attentions, but, intimate as they were, Sam could never bring
+himself to confess his culpable weakness to him. As he became
+convalescent he had other visitors, and among them Mr. Cope, the
+inventor of explosives and artillery.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p>"I am at work at a great invention which I shall owe partly to you and
+partly to the Emperor," said he on one occasion. "Do you<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_340" id="Page_340">[Page 340]</a></span> remember that
+at that execution the Emperor said that the perfect soldier has no
+conscience or reason?" Sam winced. "And then you called my attention to
+the fact that the men performed their part like machines. That set me
+thinking. I am always on the lookout for suggestions, and there was one
+ready-made. Do you see? Why shouldn't a machine be made to take the
+place of a soldier? A great idea, isn't it? Now you see we've already
+done something in that line. A torpedo is simply an iron soldier that
+swims under water and needs no breath, and does as he is told. Think how
+absurd it is in battle to have a field-battery come up under fire at a
+gallop! They swing round, unlimber, load, and fire, then harness again,
+swing round again, and off they are. Meanwhile perhaps half the men and
+horses have been killed. Wouldn't it be better to have the whole battery
+a machine, instead of only the guns? The general could stay behind out
+of range, as he does to-day, and direct the whole thing with an electric
+battery and a telescope. It is not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_341" id="Page_341">[Page 341]</a></span> a difficult matter when you once
+accept the principle, and the principle can be extended to cavalry and
+infantry just as well. It will be a great thing for the nations that are
+best at mechanics, and that means you and us."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't see," said Sam, "how you can get on without the courage of
+brave men."</p>
+
+<p>"Courage! Why, what is more courageous than a piece of steel? It
+wouldn't be easy to frighten it. And it is just so with all soldierly
+qualities. Do you want obedience? What is more obedient than a machine?
+I suppose you admit that a human soldier may disobey orders sometimes."</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps," said Sam, blushing uneasily.</p>
+
+<p>"You may be sure that a steel soldier won't unless he is disabled, and a
+human soldier may be disabled too. Then the Emperor said a soldier
+should not reason. There's no danger of a steel soldier trying that.</p>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 15em;">
+"'Theirs not to reason why.<br />
+Theirs but to do and die.'<br />
+</div>
+
+<p>"Why, the Light Brigade at Balaklava won't be in it with them. And it's
+just the same with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_342" id="Page_342">[Page 342]</a></span> regard to conscience. A piece of steel has no
+conscience. What we want is a machine soldier. A soldier must be
+obedient, and he must be without fear, conscience, or a mind of his own.
+In all these respects a machine can surpass a man. Why, you yourself, in
+praising those Tutonian soldiers, said that they went like clockwork.
+That's the highest military praise possible."</p>
+
+<p>Sam was much disturbed by this conversation. Mr. Cope went on to tell
+how his Government had spent &pound;23,000 to fire a single shot and test one
+of his new projectiles, but Sam was not interested. Then the inventor
+began to rally him about the lack of interest of soldiers in the
+inventions which they used.</p>
+
+<p>"If you had had to depend on yourselves for inventions," he said, "you
+would still be fighting with cross-bows, or perhaps more likely with
+your teeth and finger-nails. No soldier ever invented anything. We
+inventors are the real military men."</p>
+
+<p>At last Sam's unconscious tormentor took his departure, and the invalid
+rang for the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_343" id="Page_343">[Page 343]</a></span> hospital orderly so that he might tell him not to let him
+in again. To his surprise a new orderly appeared, a negro whose face was
+strangely familiar.</p>
+
+<p>"What is it, sah?" he said.</p>
+
+<p>"Is that you, Mose?" cried Sam. "Why, it's almost as good as being at
+home again."</p>
+
+<p>"Bress my soul, Massa Jinks&mdash;I mean General, have you been a-hurtin'
+yourself again?" and the man chuckled to himself till his whole body
+shook. Under Mose's care Sam made more rapid progress and soon was able
+to go out in a sedan-chair, borne by three men, like a mandarin. The
+winter passed away and spring was about to set in. There was no prospect
+of active service in Porsslania, the Powers being unable to agree upon
+any policy. The Emperor had already gone home, and the various armies
+were much reduced in strength. Cleary had been ordered to return by his
+newspaper, and had taken passage in a passenger steamer for the first of
+May.</p>
+
+<p>"Why can't you come with me?" he said to Sam. "You're entitled to a
+leave of absence,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_344" id="Page_344">[Page 344]</a></span> and when you get to Whoppington you can apply for
+some other berth."</p>
+
+<p>Sam followed this wise advice and obtained a furlough of three months,
+and on the day fixed for sailing they embarked for home.</p>
+
+<p>Sam was still an invalid, but the voyage did him a great deal of good,
+and before they had been a week at sea he began to look quite like his
+old self. There were few passengers who interested him, but he became
+acquainted with one man of note, a Porsslanese literatus, who was
+attached to the legation at Whoppington, and sat on the other side of
+the captain of the steamer at meals. This gentleman, who bore the name
+of Chung Tu, was greatly interested in military matters and listened to
+Sam's accounts by the hour. The night before their arrival at St. Kisco,
+the regular dinner was, as usual, converted into a banquet, and a band
+was improvised for the occasion. At the close of dinner the martial
+hymns of all nations were played, ending with "Yankee Doodle." It was
+impossible to resist the impulse to laugh as this national jig brought
+up the rear, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_345" id="Page_345">[Page 345]</a></span> Sam was much displeased that the foreigners on board,
+and there were many, should have laughed at his country. When he went up
+on deck he found Cleary conversing with Chung Tu, and he placed his
+steamer-chair beside theirs and joined the conversation.</p>
+
+<p>"It's a great pity," said he, "that we have such a national air as
+'Yankee Doodle.' It holds us up to ridicule."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you think so?" answered Chung Tu, who spoke English perfectly. "That
+depends upon the point of view. You see you take the military point of
+view. We Porsslanese are not a military nation. We do not think much of
+armies. We do not try to spread our territory by force, and we never
+encroach on our neighbors' land, altho we are really overcrowded.
+Perhaps that is the reason people dislike us. We are not much of an
+empire either. We have very little central authority, and only a handful
+of officials. We have free speech, and even the Emperor can be freely
+criticized without fear. We have no conscription, and no one need carry
+a passport, as they<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_346" id="Page_346">[Page 346]</a></span> have to in some countries. We are almost a
+democracy. We have no exclusive hereditary rank. Any one may become a
+mandarin if he learns enough to deserve it. We only wanted to be left
+alone without armies, and we did not want to buy guns and ships. That is
+all. We are almost a democracy, and that is the reason that I have
+always studied your history with care. I have studied your state papers
+and your hymns. I have made a special study of them, and I have come to
+the opposite conclusion from you as to 'Yankee Doodle.' It seems to me
+to be the work of a great poet and prophet."</p>
+
+<p>"What do you mean?" asked Sam.</p>
+
+<p>"Let us consider it seriously," said Chung Tu. "Have you a copy of it?"</p>
+
+<p>"No," said Sam, laughing.</p>
+
+<p>"Then please repeat it for us, and I will write it down."</p>
+
+<p>Sam began to recite, but he found it difficult to keep his face
+straight:</p>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 15em;">
+<p>"'Yankee Doodle went to town,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Riding on a pony.</span><br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_347" id="Page_347">[Page 347]</a></span>
+He stuck a feather in his crown<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">And called him macaroni.'"</span><br />
+</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>"That is not like my version," said the attach&eacute;, pulling a piece of
+paper from the pocket of his silk jacket. "Here is mine," and he read it
+solemnly and with emphasis:</p>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 15em;">
+<p>
+"'Yankee Doodle came to town,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">A-riding on a pony.</span><br />
+He stuck a feather in his cap<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">And called it macaroni.'</span><br /></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>"Which reading is correct?" he asked of Cleary.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm sure I don't know," said Cleary, laughing.</p>
+
+<p>"How careless you are of your country's literature! In Porsslania we
+would carefully guard the sayings of our ancestors and preserve them
+from alteration. You have what you call the 'higher criticism.' You
+should direct it to the correction of this most important poem. I have
+studied the matter as carefully and accurately as a foreigner can, and I
+am satisfied that my version is the most authentic. Come now, let us
+study it. Take the first two lines:</p>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 15em;">
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_348" id="Page_348">[Page 348]</a></span>
+"'Yankee Doodle came to town<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">A-riding on a pony.'</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>"There is nothing difficult in that. You may say that the name is a
+strange one, and I admit that 'Doodle' is a curious surname, but 'Yang
+Kee' is a perfectly reasonable one from a Porsslanese point of view, and
+leads me to suppose that the wisdom contained in this poem came
+originally from our wise men. Perhaps the name is put there as an
+indication of the fact. However, let us accept the name. The hero came
+to town riding on a pony. That was a very sensible thing to do. Remember
+that those lines were written long before the discovery of railways or
+tram-cars or bicycles or automobiles. You may say that he might have
+taken a carriage or one of your buggies, but you forget that the roads
+were exceedingly bad in those days, as bad as our roads near the
+Imperial City, and it would have been dangerous perhaps to attempt the
+journey in a vehicle of any kind. In riding to town on a pony, then, he
+was acting like a ra<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_349" id="Page_349">[Page 349]</a></span>tional man. But let us read the rest of the verse:</p>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 15em;">
+<p>"'He stuck a feather in his cap<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">And called it macaroni.'</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>"For some reason or other which is not revealed, he puts a feather in his
+cap, and immediately he begins to act irrationally and to use language
+so absurd that the reading itself has become doubtful. What is the
+meaning of this? A man whose conduct has always been reasonable and
+unexceptionable, suddenly adopts the language of a lunatic. What does it
+mean? You have sung this verse for a century and more, and you have
+never taken the trouble to seek for the meaning."</p>
+
+<p>Sam and Cleary did not attempt to defend their neglect.</p>
+
+<p>"It is clear to me," proceeded the philosopher, "it is very clear to me
+that it is an allegory. What is the feather which he puts in his cap? It
+is the most conspicuous feature of the military uniform, the plume, the
+pompon, which marks all kinds of military dress-hats. When he speaks of
+his hero as having assumed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_350" id="Page_350">[Page 350]</a></span> the feather, he means that he has donned the
+uniform of a soldier. He has come to town, in other words, to enlist.
+Then behold the transformation! He begins at once to act irrationally.
+The whole epic paints in never-fading colors the disastrous effect upon
+the intellect of putting on soldier-clothes. You will pardon me, my
+friends, if I speak thus plainly, but I must open to you the hidden
+wisdom of your own country."</p>
+
+<p>Sam smiled. The idea of taking offense at any nonsense which an ignorant
+pagan should say was quite beneath him.</p>
+
+<p>"But that is not all. The style of the language and of the music is most
+noteworthy. It is highly comical, and its object evidently is to provoke
+a laugh, and at dinner this evening we saw that its object was attained.
+All the other martial hymns to which we listened were grave, ponderous
+compositions from which the element of humor was rigidly excluded. It
+was left for the author of 'Yang Kee' to uncover the ludicrous character
+of militarism&mdash;he has virtually committed your<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_351" id="Page_351">[Page 351]</a></span> nation to it. He was a
+genius of marvelous insight. He saw clearly then what but few of your
+fellow citizens are even now aware of, that there is nothing more
+comical than a soldier. I am convinced that he was a Porsslanese who had
+the good fortune to sow in your literature the seed of truth. You think
+that as a nation you have a sense of humor. I have studied your humorous
+literature. You laugh at mothers-in-law and messenger-boys and domestic
+servants, and many other objects which are altogether serious and have
+no element of humor in them, and at the same time you are blind to the
+most absurd of spectacles, the man who dresses up in feathers and gold
+lace and thinks it is honorable to do nothing for years but wait for a
+pretext to kill somebody," and Chung Tu leaned back in his chair and
+smiled.</p>
+
+<p>"It is we who have the sense of humor," he added. "When our common
+people laughed at the Emperor in his uniforms, they showed the same
+sound sense that appears in 'Yang Kee.' I thank you, my dear friends,
+for lis<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_352" id="Page_352">[Page 352]</a></span>tening to me so kindly and without anger, but I hope to preach
+these ideas to your people, and as I take my text from your national
+hymn, they must listen to me. Then there is another common expression
+among you which shows, as so many proverbs do, the fundamental truth.
+When a story is incredible you say 'Tell that to the marines,'
+signifying that only a marine would be stupid enough to believe it. Now
+what is a marine? As the Anglian poet says, he is 'soldier and sailor
+too,' in other words, he epitomizes the army and navy. It is the
+military man who is foolish enough to believe anything and who keeps
+alive the most absurd superstitions and customs. The ancient Greeks cast
+a side-light on this truth, for their word for private soldier was
+'idiot.' And on account of this strange stupidity of soldiers, things
+that would be disgraceful in private life become glorious in war. Their
+one virtue is obedience, unqualified by any of the balancing virtues,
+and they wear liveries to show that they are servile. And then the
+foolish things they try to do! You<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_353" id="Page_353">[Page 353]</a></span> are familiar with the Peace
+Conference&mdash;generals and admirals spending weeks in uniform with swords
+at their sides to determine how to stop fighting, as if there were
+anything to do but to stop! I believe they had the grace to turn the war
+pictures in the conference room to the wall. But fancy sending butchers
+to a conference in the interests of vegetarianism! Of course nothing was
+done or could be done there. And the Emperor in his uniform, drunk with
+militarism, wanted us&mdash;all our nation&mdash;wanted <i>me</i>&mdash;to kow-tow before
+him as if he were a god! But he did not get what he wanted from us. His
+own people may grovel before him, but we will not. Oh, these soldiers,
+these soldiers! You look down on your hangmen and butchers. We look down
+on our men-butchers, the soldiers, in the same way. We have soldiers
+just as you have police, but it is a low calling with us, and most
+people would be ashamed to have a soldier in the family. Pardon me, my
+dear sirs. Perhaps I have spoken too plainly. I mean nothing personal,
+but when I think of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_354" id="Page_354">[Page 354]</a></span> these wars, I can not control my tongue.
+Good-night."</p>
+
+<p>So saying, the attach&eacute; gathered up his robes and went below.</p>
+
+<p>"Queer chap," said Sam. "He must be crazy."</p>
+
+<p>"We've treated them rather badly, tho," said Cleary. "I'm glad Taffy
+hasn't had any executions, but our minister and all the rest have been
+insisting on executions of their big people, and no one talks of
+executing any of ours, altho they have suffered ten times as much as we
+have."</p>
+
+<p>"You forget how the affair began," said Sam. "Suppose the Porsslanese
+had sent us missionaries to teach us their religion, and these
+missionaries had gradually got possession of land and also some local
+power of governing, and then we had ruthlessly murdered some of them and
+they had seized all our ports for the purpose of benefiting us, do you
+suppose that we would have risen like those miserable Fencers and
+massacred anybody? It is inconceivable. They<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_355" id="Page_355">[Page 355]</a></span> have the strangest
+aversion to foreigners too."</p>
+
+<p>"Some of them haven't," said Cleary. "Chung Tu is a friendly old soul,
+if he is cracked. He says he believes the Powers have been turned loose
+on his country to punish them for having invented gunpowder. He laughs
+at Cope's inventions. He says his people set the fashion, and then
+wisely stopped when they found that such inventions did more harm than
+good. I think they have a right to complain of us. Why, there's one of
+our soldiers in the steerage with seventeen of their pigtails with the
+scalps still fastened to them as trophies! Old Chung says our ribbons
+and decorations are the equivalent of the scalps dangling at a savage's
+belt. I didn't tell him we had the genuine article. But, come, you had
+better turn in. You'll have a hard day to-morrow. I've advertised your
+coming for all I was worth, and if they don't give you a send-off at St.
+Kisco, it isn't my fault. I'm glad you're well enough to stand it."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm not as well as I look," said Sam. "I've<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_356" id="Page_356">[Page 356]</a></span> lost all my nerve. I'm
+even worrying a little about all my loot in those cases in the hold. It
+sometimes seems that I oughtn't to have taken it."</p>
+
+<p>"What!" cried Cleary. "Well, you are getting squeamish! After all the
+fellows you've killed or had killed, I shouldn't mind an ornament or
+two."</p>
+
+<p>"Killing is a soldier's main business," said Sam. "Oh, well, I suppose
+looting is, too. I won't think anything more about it. Good-night."</p>
+
+<p>While Sam and his friend were conversing on deck, another conversation
+which was to have a portentous effect upon the former's destiny was
+taking place in the upper corridor of the Peckham Young Ladies' Seminary
+at St. Kisco.</p>
+
+<p>"He's perfectly lovely," said a young lady, standing barefoot before her
+door in her night-dress to a group of young ladies similarly attired.
+"I've got his photograph. And I'm not just going to stand still and see
+him pass. It's all very well to have the school drawn up<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_357" id="Page_357">[Page 357]</a></span> in line on the
+wharf&mdash;that's better than nothing&mdash;but I want something more, and I'm
+going to have it."</p>
+
+<p>"What will you do, Sally?" they all cried.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm going to kiss him&mdash;there!" said she.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Sally!"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I will too."</p>
+
+<p>"I believe she will if she says so," said one of the girls. "She won't
+stop at anything. Well, Sally Watson, if you kiss him, I will to."</p>
+
+<p>"And I!" "And I!" exclaimed the others; but at that moment a step was
+heard on the stairs, and the Peckham young ladies sought their beds and
+pretended very hard to be asleep, altho their hearts were thumping
+against their ribs at the mere thought of their daring resolution.</p>
+
+<p>It was at ten o'clock the next morning that the steamer came alongside
+the wharf. The city was in gala dress and flags waved everywhere. The
+day was observed almost as a holiday, and many schools permitted their
+pupils to take part in the procession which awaited the arrival of
+Captain Jinks, as Sam<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_358" id="Page_358">[Page 358]</a></span> was now commonly known in his native land. A
+reception was arranged for him at the City Hall, and the Mayor came down
+to the steamer in a carriage with four horses to escort him thither.
+>From the deck Sam could see a banner stretched across the street, on
+which was an inscription to the "Hero of San Diego, the Subduer of the
+Moritos, the Capturer of Gomaldo, the Conqueror of the Great White
+Temple, and the Friend and Instructor of the Emperor." A few months
+before, Sam would have enjoyed this display without alloy, but now his
+health was really shattered, and in the bottom of his heart he felt that
+he was unworthy of it all, for he was not the perfect soldier he had
+believed he was, and under his uniform beat the heart of a vulgar
+civilian. His military instincts had their limit; his obedience could
+only be relied upon under certain circumstances. He was a mere amateur,
+and had no claim to rank as a military hero at all.</p>
+
+<p>A swarm of reporters settled down upon General Jinks as soon as they
+could get on board, insisting upon having his opinion as to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_359" id="Page_359">[Page 359]</a></span> the growth
+of the city since he had seen it, the superiority of its climate to that
+of any part of the world, and the beauty of its women. Sam answered all
+these questions satisfactorily, and surrendered himself to the committee
+of citizens who had come on deck to welcome him. His luggage was passed
+without delay by the Custom House officials, and he was conducted down
+the wharf toward the carriage which awaited him. With true chivalry
+young ladies' schools had been given the best positions on the wharf,
+and Sam soon found himself passing through a double row of pretty girls.
+He could hear such remarks as this:</p>
+
+<p>"Isn't he good-looking!"</p>
+
+<p>"What a lovely uniform!"</p>
+
+<p>"Hasn't he got a fascinating limp!"</p>
+
+<p>"How pale he is!"</p>
+
+<p>"He does look just like a hero."</p>
+
+<p>Sam flushed slightly at these comments, but suddenly, before he had time
+to collect his thoughts, a slight form sprang forward from the left and
+an inviting face presented itself to his, and with the words, "May I,
+please?"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_360" id="Page_360">[Page 360]</a></span> a hearty kiss was planted on his lips. Sam had no time to
+decline, if he had wished to. A murmur of surprise and delight arose
+from the crowd, and in another moment another damsel rushed upon him,
+and then another and another. Before long he was the center of a throng
+of elbowing young ladies of all kinds, fair, plain, and indifferent, all
+bent upon giving him a kiss. Sam had indeed lost his nerve; for the
+first time in his life he capitulated absolutely and let the attacking
+party work its sweet will. It was with great difficulty that he was
+rescued by the reception committee and finally seated next to the Mayor
+in the landau.</p>
+
+<p>"What a lot of cab-drivers you have there on the wharf!" said Sam to the
+Mayor, after their first greetings. "I never saw so many. Hear them
+crying out to the passengers coming ashore!"</p>
+
+<p>"They're not cab-drivers," he answered. "They're pension agents. They're
+not crying 'Want a cab?' but 'Want a pension?'"</p>
+
+<p>"So they are," said Sam. "What is that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_361" id="Page_361">[Page 361]</a></span> tune the young ladies are
+beginning to sing?"</p>
+
+<p>"Don't you know?" said the Mayor, laughing. "It's 'Captain Jinks.'
+You'll know it well enough before you are here long. Listen."</p>
+
+<p>Sam listened and heard sung for the first time lines that were to be
+imprinted upon his tympanum until they became a torture:</p>
+
+<div style="margin-left: 10em;">
+<p>"I'm Captain Jinks of the Cubapines,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">The pink of human war-machines,</span><br />
+Who teaches emperors, kings, and queens<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">The way to run an army."</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The news of the kissing reached the City Hall before the procession, and
+when he alighted there Sam had to kiss an immense number of women who
+were determined not to be outdone by their sisters at the wharf, while
+the whole crowd sang "Captain Jinks" in a frenzy of enthusiasm. The
+reception accorded to Sam at St. Kisco was so elaborate, and the
+arrangements made to do him honor were so extended, that he was obliged
+to stay there for several days. Meanwhile the news<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_362" id="Page_362">[Page 362]</a></span> of his arrival and
+of his gallantry in kissing his countrywomen, young and old, spread all
+over the land and took hold of the popular imagination. Invitations to
+visit various cities on his way across the Continent began to come in,
+and everywhere Sam was acclaimed as the hero and idol of the people.</p>
+
+<p>"It's great, it's great, old man!" cried Cleary. "Why, that kissing
+business is worth a dozen victories! The people here say that no general
+or admiral has had such a send-off in St. Kisco. Look at to-day's
+papers! Thirteen places have petitioned to have their post-offices named
+after you. There will be Jinksvilles and Jinkstowns everywhere, and one
+is called Samjinks. Then they're naming their babies after you like
+wildfire. Samuela is becoming a common girl's name, and one chap has
+called his girl Samjinksina. All the girls are practising the Jinks
+limp, too. I saw one huge picture of you painted on the dead side of a
+house. It was an ad. of the 'Captain Jinks 5-cent Cigar.' That's the
+limit of a man's ambition, I should say. And now<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_363" id="Page_363">[Page 363]</a></span> they're beginning to
+nominate you for President. I'm going to try to work that up. I'm
+sending a despatch to <i>The Lyre</i> this morning. If they take it up, we
+can put it through. The Republicrats hold their convention at St. Lewis
+next month, and they've been looking around for a military candidate,
+and you're just the thing. Every woman in the country will be for you.
+They won't dare to put up a candidate against you. You'll just have a
+walk-over. That song, 'Captain Jinks,' will do it alone. Everybody is
+singing it."</p>
+
+<p>"I thought I was too young," said Sam. "Isn't there an age limit?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not a bit of it. They abolished that when they amended the Constitution
+and made the President's term six years, and made him ineligible for
+reelection."</p>
+
+<p>"I'd rather have a military position," said Sam. "I'd rather be general
+of the army. But I've lost my nerve&mdash;I'm not well; and perhaps it's just
+as well that I should take a civilian position."</p>
+
+<p>"Civilian position! Nonsense! The Presi<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_364" id="Page_364">[Page 364]</a></span>dent is commander-in-chief of
+the army and navy, and the marines, too, for that matter."</p>
+
+<p>"But he hasn't a uniform," said Sam sorrowfully. "And as for all this
+kissing, I'm sick of it. It tires me to death, and I don't know what
+Marian will think of it. I've written to explain that I can't help it,
+but she will see the reports first in the papers and she may not like it
+at all."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, she's a sensible woman," said Cleary. "She will understand a
+political and military necessity. She won't mind."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_365" id="Page_365">[Page 365]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XV" id="CHAPTER_XV"></a>CHAPTER XV</h2>
+
+<h1>Politics</h1>
+
+
+<div class="wrap_area">
+
+ <img src="images/chap_15.png" alt="chap_15" height="408" width="400" />
+
+ <div class="shape_wrap">
+ <div style="width: 400px;">&nbsp;</div>
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+ <div style="width: 405px;">&nbsp;</div>
+ <div style="width: 400px;">&nbsp;</div>
+ <div style="width: 395px;">&nbsp;</div>
+
+
+
+ </div>
+
+<p><br /><br />
+
+UT Marian did mind, and for once Cleary was mistaken. She was delighted
+at the prominence which Sam had achieved, and saw him mentioned as a
+candidate for President with pride and gratification, but she did not
+see how that excused his promiscuous osculation of the female population
+of the country, and she determined that it should cease. She wrote to
+him frequently and decidedly on the subject, and he reported her
+protests to Cleary, who absolutely refused to allow them.</p>
+
+<p>"It won't do," said he, as they discussed the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_366" id="Page_366">[Page 366]</a></span> subject at a hotel in a
+small city on their line of progress. "This kissing is your strong
+point. <i>The Lyre</i> is backing you up on the strength of it. So is the
+Benevolent Assimilation Trust, Limited. In every city and town the girls
+have turned out, and you've captured them hands down. If you stop now it
+will upset the whole business. The Convention delegates are coming out
+for you by the dozen. Our committee is working it up so that it will be
+nearly unanimous. There won't be another serious candidate, and I doubt
+if they put anybody up against you when you're nominated. You're as good
+as President now, but you must go on kissing. That's all there is of
+it."</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p>Sam wrote to Marian rehearsing these arguments, and he got Cleary to
+write too, but the letters had no effect. At last he received a telegram
+from her announcing her intention of meeting him at St. Lewis. She
+reached that city before him and was present at the station when he
+arrived, altho he did not know it, and from a good point of vantage she<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_367" id="Page_367">[Page 367]</a></span>
+saw him kissing the young ladies of that city by wholesale to an
+accompaniment of "Captain Jinks." It was more than she could stand, and
+when she joined her <i>fianc&eacute;</i> at the hotel the meeting was very different
+from the one he had so often pictured to himself. It was a stormy scene,
+intermixed with tender episodes, but she gave it as her ultimatum that
+the kissing must cease forthwith, and, in order to give a good reason
+for it, she insisted that they be married at once. Sam was willing to
+take this course, and Cleary was called into their counsels. At first he
+bitterly opposed the project, but Marian's blandishments finally
+succeeded, and she gained him as an ally. He was sent as an emissary to
+the campaign committee and presented the case as strongly as he could
+for her. The proposition really seemed most plausible. Could anything
+help the chances of a candidate more than his marriage to a handsome
+young woman? The committee had doubts on the subject and waited in
+person on Miss Hunter, but she persuaded them as she had persuaded
+Cleary, and furthermore<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_368" id="Page_368">[Page 368]</a></span> convinced them that whether they were persuaded
+or not the marriage would take place. Marian determined to fix the hour
+for the next day. She pledged the committee to secrecy, and no word of
+the proposed wedding got into the papers. At noon a clergyman was called
+into the hotel, and in Sam's private sitting-room the pair were married
+with Cleary and a few of the members of the committee as witnesses.
+Almost before the ceremony was over they could hear the newsboys crying
+out the tidings of the event.</p>
+
+<p>"It's out of the question to talk about a wedding-tour," said Sam, after
+the ceremony. "I can't walk in the streets alone without being mobbed,
+and with Marian we could not keep the clothes on our backs. Just hear
+them singing 'Captain Jinks' now!"</p>
+
+<p>"Mark my words, dear," said his wife. "You will see when we get the
+papers to-morrow with the news of our marriage, that it has made you
+more popular than ever. Now send out word to the reporters that you will
+not do any more public kissing."<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_369" id="Page_369">[Page 369]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>In obedience to these orders Cleary, acting as go-between, conveyed the
+information as gently as he could to the representatives of the press,
+that as a married man General Jinks expected to be spared the ordeal of
+embracing all the young ladies of the country.</p>
+
+<p>No one was prepared for the striking effect which this news, coupled
+with that of the marriage, had upon the newspapers and their readers.
+The first papers which Sam and his wife saw on the following morning
+were those of St. Lewis. They expressed sorrow at the fact that Captain
+Jinks had taken such a resolution when only a handful of the fair women
+of St. Lewis had had the opportunity of saluting him. Were they less
+beautiful and attractive than the ladies of St. Kisco who had kissed him
+to their hearts' content? Marian was visibly annoyed when she saw these
+articles, but she advised her husband to wait till they received the
+papers from other cities. These journals came, but, alas! they went
+rapidly from bad to worse. The Eastern papers with scarcely an exception
+took up the strain of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_370" id="Page_370">[Page 370]</a></span> those of St. Lewis. Why did Captain Jinks
+discriminate against the women of the East? He had kissed the whole
+West. Probably he had also kissed all the women of the Cubapines and
+Porsslania. It was only the women of the East that he could not find
+heart to salute in the same way. Here was a hero indeed, who insulted
+one-half of his own nation! It might have been expected that the Western
+press would have come to Sam's support, but they did not. They accused
+him of gross deception in not announcing that he had been from the first
+engaged to be married. Their young women had been fraudulently induced
+to kiss lips which had already been monopolized, but which they had been
+led to believe to be as free as the air of heaven. Black indeed must be
+the soul of a man who could stoop to such deception! As the days went on
+the public became more excited and the attacks more ferocious. It was
+rumored that his <i>fianc&eacute;e</i> had married him against his will, that she
+was a virago and a termagant. Would the country be contented to see the
+Executive Mansion<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_371" id="Page_371">[Page 371]</a></span> ruled by petticoats, and by those of a hussy at that?
+What sort of a hero was the man who could be ordered about by a woman
+and could not call his soul his own? Then they began to overhaul his
+record. Was he really the hero of San Diego? Was it not the mistakes of
+Gomaldo which caused his defeat? Was it not true that the boasted
+subjugation of the Moritos was brought about by the superstitious fear
+of the savages inspired by the figures tattooed on the captain's body?
+And the capture of Gomaldo, was it anything but a green-goods game on a
+large scale? What, too, was the burning of the great White Temple but an
+act of vandalism? And as for the friendship and praise of the Emperor,
+who was the Emperor, anyway, but an effete product of an exhausted
+civilization? Then had not Captain Jinks opposed the promotion of men
+from the ranks? What sort of a democrat was this? Sam felt these thrusts
+keenly. He had had no idea of the fickleness of the people, and it was
+hard to believe that in a single day they had ceased to adore him and
+begun to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_372" id="Page_372">[Page 372]</a></span> revile him; and yet such was the case. Marian was also
+overcome with mortification, and she heaped reproaches upon him for
+their forlorn condition. Cleary proved himself to be a stanch friend.</p>
+
+<p>"It's too bad, old man," he said. "It'll blow over, but you'll have to
+withdraw a while for repairs. The bottom has dropped out of your boom,
+and of course you can't be a candidate for President. Let's go quietly
+home. I'll go along with you. <i>The Lyre</i> has had to drop you for the
+time. <i>Scribblers'</i>/i> has sent back the first article I wrote for you,
+and they say your name has lost its commercial value. I've seen Jonas.
+He's here to make sure of a friendly candidate, and he says you're out
+of the question. He's doing well, I tell you. I asked him how it paid to
+run a war for half a million a day and get a trade in return of a few
+millions a year? 'It's the people pay for the war and we get the trade,'
+said he. He'd like to have you President to help them along, but he says
+it won't be possible. It's a shame. You'd have run so well, if&mdash;&mdash;Your
+platform<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_373" id="Page_373">[Page 373]</a></span> of 'Old Gory, the Army and Navy,' would have swept everything
+before it. But never mind. We'll try it again some day. I suppose your
+luck couldn't hold out forever."</p>
+
+<p>"Thanks, my dear Cleary," said Sam, grasping his hand. "You've been a
+true friend. I don't think it makes much difference. I am a sick man,
+and I must go home as soon as I can."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_374" id="Page_374">[Page 374]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XVI" id="CHAPTER_XVI"></a>CHAPTER XVI</h2>
+
+<h1>The End</h1>
+
+
+<div class="wrap_area">
+
+ <img src="images/chap_16.png" alt="chap_16" height="598" width="400" />
+
+ <div class="shape_wrap">
+
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+
+
+ </div>
+
+<p><br /><br /><br /><br />
+
+AM was indeed a sick man, and the journey to the East proved to be a
+severe strain upon him. Cleary saw that it would be unwise to let him
+travel alone with his wife, and accordingly he accompanied him to
+Slowburgh, which was on the way to Homeville. They arrived in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_375" id="Page_375">[Page 375]</a></span> the
+afternoon, and Sam could hardly walk to the carriage which awaited him.
+He was put to bed as soon as he reached his uncle's house, and on the
+advice of his uncle's doctor they sent at once to the county town for a
+trained nurse to take charge of him, for it was out of the question for
+him to travel farther. There was no train which Cleary could
+conveniently take that evening to the metropolis, and he accepted the
+urgent invitation of Congressman Jinks to spend the night. It so
+happened that it was a gala day for Slowburgh. Four of her soldier sons
+had returned a few days before from Porsslania and the Cubapines, and
+this day had been set aside for a great celebration and a mass-meeting
+at the Methodist church to welcome them. The procession was to take
+place early in the evening, and after supper Cleary went out alone to
+watch the proceedings, leaving his friend to the care of his relatives.
+He took his place on the curbstone of the principal street and was soon
+conversing with his neighbors on each side, one of whom was our old
+friend, Mr. Reddy, and the other<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_376" id="Page_376">[Page 376]</a></span> the young insurance agent whose
+acquaintance Sam had made at the hotel.</p>
+
+<p>"It's going to be a great show," said the former. "I wish I was spry
+enough to parade too. It's going to be splendid, but it won't come up to
+the time we had when I came back from the war. They've kept them four
+boys drunk three days for nothing, but we was drunk a month."</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p>"They've sobered them down for this evening, I believe," said the young
+man.</p>
+
+<p>"They've done their best," said Reddy, "and I think they'll go through
+with it all right. It's a great time for them, but they'll have their
+pension days all the rest of their lives to remind them of it, four
+times a year."</p>
+
+<p>"Who are going to take part in the procession?" asked Cleary.</p>
+
+<p>"They're going to have all the military companies and patriotic
+societies of these parts," answered Reddy, "and then the firemen too of
+course; but they won't amount to much, for most of them are in the
+societies, and they'd rather turn out in them."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_377" id="Page_377">[Page 377]</a></span>"What societies are there?" said Cleary.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, there's the Grandsons of the Revolution and the Genuine Grandsons
+of the Revolution, and the Daughters of Revolutionary Camp-Followers and
+the Genuine Daughters, and then the Male Descendants of Second Cousins
+of Heroes, and the Genuine Male Descendants, and the Connections by
+Marriage of Colonial Tax-Collectors, and then the Genuine Connections,
+and a lot of others I can't remember."</p>
+
+<p>"The names seem to go in pairs," said Cleary.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, you see, they always have a fight about something in these
+military societies, and then they split, and the party that splits away
+always takes the same name and puts 'Genuine' in front of it. That's the
+way it is."</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose these societies do a lot of good, don't they?" asked Cleary.
+"These splits and quarrels remind me of the army. They must spread the
+military spirit among the people."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_378" id="Page_378">[Page 378]</a></span>"Yes, they do," said the young man. "It's what they call <i>esprit de
+corps</i>. If fighting is military, they fight and no mistake, and the
+women fight more than the men. I don't know how many lawsuits they've
+had. Half of them won't speak to the other half. But they're all united
+on one thing, I can tell you, and that is in wanting to put down the
+Cubapinos."</p>
+
+<p>"That they are," cried Reddy. "That's why they call 'em 'Patriotic
+Societies.' It was our ancestors as fought for freedom that they made
+the societies for. Our ancestors were patriotic and fought for freedom
+oncet, and now we're going to be patriotic and stick by the government
+just like they did."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, they fought for freedom, that's true. And what are the Cubapinos
+fighting for?" asked the young man.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, shucks!" cried Reddy. "I ain't a-going to argher with you. What
+were we talking about? Oh, yes. We were saying that them societies fight
+together. They do fight a good deal, that's a fact, and there's no end
+of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_379" id="Page_379">[Page 379]</a></span> trouble in our militia battalion too. They all want to be captain,
+and they don't get on somehow as well as the fire companies. But still
+it's a fine thing to see all this military spirit. I didn't see a
+uniform for years, and now you can't hire a man to dig a ditch who
+hasn't got a stripe on one leg of his trousers at any rate. Girls like
+soldiers, I tell you, and they like pensions too. I've just got married
+myself. My wife is seventeen. Now I've drawed my pension for nearly
+forty years, and she'll draw it for sixty more if she has any luck;
+that'll make over a hundred. That's something like. Why, if one of these
+fellows is twenty now and marries a girl of seventeen when he's ninety,
+and she lives till she's ninety, they can keep drawing money for a
+hundred and fifty years, and no mistake. It's better than a savings
+bank. Here they come!"</p>
+
+<p>The procession had formed round the corner at the other end of the main
+street, and now the band began to play, and the column could be seen
+advancing. First the band passed with an escort of small boys running
+along in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_380" id="Page_380">[Page 380]</a></span> the gutter on either side. Then came two carriages containing
+the heroes, two in each. They held themselves stiffly and took off their
+hats, and no one would have supposed that they had drunk too much if the
+fact had not been universally understood by the public. Behind them came
+a line of other carriages in which were seated the magnates of the town,
+including the office-holders and the prominent business men. They all
+had that self-important air which is inseparable from such shows and
+which denotes that the individual is feeling either like a great man or
+a fool. Then came the militia battalion, a rather shamefaced lot of
+young men who seemed to be painfully aware that they were not at all
+real heroes like the soldiers in the carriages, but merely make-believe
+imitations. The patriotic societies followed, genuine and non-genuine,
+resplendent in "insignia," sashes, and badges.</p>
+
+<p>"There's my wife, she's a G.C.M.C.T.C.," said Reddy proudly, pointing
+out a very plain young woman with gold spectacles. "And here come the
+Genuine Ancestors of Future<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_381" id="Page_381">[Page 381]</a></span> Veterans. See that old woman there on the
+other side? She made all the fuss. You see when anybody wants to get
+into a society and finds they can't get in they go off and start
+another. And some people that hadn't any tax collectors or connections
+or anything, they just got up the 'Ancestors of Future Veterans,' and
+everybody in town wanted to get into that. And old Miss Blunt there, she
+wanted to come in too, and she's over seventy, and they said she
+couldn't be an ancestor nohow, and she said she could and she would, and
+they voted forty-one to forty against her, and the forty went off and
+founded the Genuine Ancestors, and they're twice as big as the others
+now. Hear 'em applaud?"</p>
+
+<p>The old lady walked along with a martial tread, and was loudly cheered
+as she passed.</p>
+
+<p>"Now we'd better get into the church if we want seats," said the young
+man, and Cleary followed him, leaving the ancient warrior behind. The
+church was very crowded and very hot, and Cleary had to sit on a step of
+the platform, but it was an exhibition of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_382" id="Page_382">[Page 382]</a></span> patriotism worth beholding.
+The band played with great gusto, and the whole audience was at the
+highest pitch of excitement. The chairman made an address, and Josh
+Thatcher responded in a few words for himself and his three companions.
+Then flowers were presented to them, and a little girl recited the
+"Charge of the Light Brigade," but the main feature of the program was
+the oration of Dr. Taylor, the pastor of the church. He was famed as an
+orator not only in his denomination and in the county but in the
+National Order of Total Abstinence, of which he was a leading light. In
+his address he welcomed the four heroes back to their hearths and
+firesides. He thanked them for having conquered so many lands and spread
+the blessings of civilization and Christianity to the ends of the earth.</p>
+
+<p>"We have been told, my friends, by wicked and unpatriotic scoffers, that
+these wars have stirred up the passions of our people, that there are
+more lynchings and deeds of violence than ever before, and that negro
+soldiers re<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_383" id="Page_383">[Page 383]</a></span>turning from the war have shot down citizens from
+car-windows. I have even been told that its effect is to be seen in the
+attempts of worthy citizens, including a distinguished judge, to have
+the whipping-post reestablished in our midst. I can only say for myself
+that such traitors and traducers should be the first victims of the
+whipping-post. (Cheers.) So far from crime having increased since the
+departure of these young heroes, I can testify that there has been a
+marked decrease in our community. Since they left, not a single barn has
+been burned, not a chicken stolen. My friend, Mrs. Crane, informs me
+that she keeps more chickens than ever before, and that she has not
+missed one in over a year. I am also told that during the absence of
+these young men the amount of liquor drunk in our town has sensibly
+diminished. The war then has been a blessing to us and to our nation."</p>
+
+<p>During these remarks Josh Thatcher, who was sitting in the front row,
+gave sundry digs in the ribs to his cousin Tom, and they both laughed
+aloud.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_384" id="Page_384">[Page 384]</a></span>"We welcome our heroes back," continued the orator. "We open our arms to
+them. All that we have is theirs. We applaud their manly courage and
+Christian self-sacrifice. We shall never, never forget their services,
+and we shall recite their noble deeds to our children and to our
+children's children."</p>
+
+<p>The meeting broke up with three cheers and a tiger for each of the four
+heroes. For an hour later the crowds stood in the street talking over
+the great events of the day, each of the young veterans forming the
+center of an admiring group, Tom Thatcher being surrounded by a bevy of
+pretty girls who seemed to find nothing objectionable in his pimpled
+face and hoarse voice. Cleary stood for a long time watching them and
+talking with the insurance man.</p>
+
+<p>"It's their night," said the latter, "but it won't last long. We know
+them too well. When the barns begin to burn again, folks'll all know
+what it means. I wish they'd keep a war going a long way off forever for
+these fellows. It would be a good riddance. And<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_385" id="Page_385">[Page 385]</a></span> that's all talk of old
+Taylor's anyway. He won't take them to his heart, not by a great deal. I
+heard Dave Black ask him for a job to-day, and he wants a man too, and
+he said, 'What&mdash;an ex-soldier? Not much!' The words were out of his
+mouth before he knew what he'd said. He's a slick one."</p>
+
+<p>When Cleary returned to Mr. Jinks' house, he found Sam much worse, and
+the gravest fears were entertained as to his recovery. In the morning he
+was a little easier, and Cleary was able to have a little talk with him
+before he left. Sam had been told by the doctor that his condition was
+serious, and he had no desire to get well.</p>
+
+<p>"You must brace up, old man," said Cleary cheerily. "I'll come back in a
+few days and we'll lay out our plans for the future. You're the finest
+soldier that ever lived, and I haven't done with you yet."</p>
+
+<p>"Don't say that, don't say that!" cried Sam. "I'm no soldier at all. I
+wanted to be a perfect soldier, and I can't. It's that that's breaking
+my heart. I don't mind the nomi<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_386" id="Page_386">[Page 386]</a></span>nation for President nor anything else
+in comparison. My poor wife! Why did I let her marry a coward like me? I
+can't tell you now, but if I'm alive when you come here again I'll tell
+you all."</p>
+
+<p>"Nonsense, old man," said Cleary. "You've got the fever on you again.
+It's in your blood. When it gets out, you'll be all right."</p>
+
+<p>It was with tears in his eyes that Cleary bade his friend good-by, for
+he could see that he was a very sick man. It was impossible, however,
+for him to remain longer, and as Sam's wife and cousin were there to
+nurse him, and his father and mother had been telegraphed for, he felt
+that there was no necessity for him to remain.</p>
+
+<p>After the lapse of three weeks Cleary received the sad news that Sam had
+shown unmistakable signs of insanity and had been removed to an insane
+asylum. His father wrote that while his insanity was of a mild form, the
+doctors thought it best for him to be placed in an institution where he
+could receive the most scientific treatment. Six months later Cleary,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_387" id="Page_387">[Page 387]</a></span>
+who was now one of the editors of the <i>Lyre</i>, went on a sad pilgrimage
+to see his friend. The asylum was several hours away from the metropolis
+beyond East Point, and was none other than the great building which they
+had described to the chief of the Moritos. Cleary took a carriage at the
+station and drove to his destination, and at last arrived at the huge
+edifice in the midst of its wide domain. He went into the reception-room
+and explained his errand. After a while a young doctor came to him, and
+told him that he could have an interview with Captain Jinks at once, and
+offered to act as his guide. It was a long walk through corridors and
+passages and up winding stairs to Sam's apartment, and Cleary questioned
+the doctor as they went.</p>
+
+<p>"Captain Jinks is a dear fellow," said the doctor in response to his
+inquiries. "We are all fond of him. At first he was a little intractable
+and denied our right to direct him, but now that we've got it all down
+on a military basis, he will do anything we tell him. I believe he would
+walk out of the window if I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_388" id="Page_388">[Page 388]</a></span> ordered him too. But I have to put on a
+military coat to make him obey. We keep one on purpose. As soon as he
+sees it on anybody he's as obedient as a child. He's such a perfect
+gentleman, too. It's a very sad case. Here's his room."</p>
+
+<p>The doctor knocked.</p>
+
+<p>"Who goes there?" cried a husky voice, which Cleary hardly recognized as
+Sam's.</p>
+
+<p>"A friend," answered the doctor.</p>
+
+<p>"Advance, friend, and give the countersign," said the same voice.</p>
+
+<p>"Old Gory!" cried the doctor, with most unmilitary emphasis, and he
+opened the door and they entered.</p>
+
+<p>Cleary saw what seemed to be the shadow of Sam, pale, haggard, and
+emaciated, sitting in a shabby undress uniform before a large deal
+table. Upon the table was a most elaborate arrangement of books and
+blocks of wood, apparently representing fortifications, which were
+manned by a dilapidated set of lead soldiers&mdash;the earliest treasures of
+Sam's boyhood, which had been sent to him from home at his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_389" id="Page_389">[Page 389]</a></span> request. Sam
+did not lift his eyes from the table, and moved the men about with his
+hand as if he were playing a game of chess.</p>
+
+<p>"Here is a friend of yours to see you, Captain," said the doctor.</p>
+
+<p>Sam slowly raised his head and looked at Cleary for some time without
+recognizing him. Gradually a faint smile made its appearance.</p>
+
+<p>"I know you," he said in the same strained voice. "I know you.
+You're&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Cleary," said Cleary.</p>
+
+<p>"Cleary? Cleary? Let me see. Why, to be sure, you're Cleary." And he
+rose from his chair unsteadily and took the hand that Cleary offered
+him.</p>
+
+<p>"How are you, old man? I'm so glad to see you again," said Cleary.</p>
+
+<p>"And so am I," said Sam, who now seemed to be almost his old self again.
+"Sit down."</p>
+
+<p>Cleary drew up a chair to the table, while the doctor retired and shut
+the door.</p>
+
+<p>"How are you getting on?" said Cleary. "You're going to get well soon,
+aren't you?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_390" id="Page_390">[Page 390]</a></span>"I am well now," said Sam. "I was awfully ill, I know that, but it all
+came from my mind. I think I told you that. My heart was breaking
+because I couldn't be a perfect soldier. I had to face the question and
+grapple with it. It was an awful experience; I can't bear to speak of it
+or even think of it. But I won. I'm a perfect soldier now! I can do
+anything with my men here, and I will obey any order I receive, I don't
+care what it is."</p>
+
+<p>As he spoke of his experience a pained expression came over his face,
+but he looked proud and almost happy when he announced the result of the
+conflict.</p>
+
+<p>"They say I'm a lunatic, I know they do," he continued, looking round to
+see that no one else was present, and lowering his voice to a whisper.
+"They say I'm a lunatic, but I'm not. When they say I'm a lunatic they
+mean I'm a perfect soldier&mdash;a complete soldier. And they call those fine
+fellows lead soldiers! Lunatics and lead soldiers indeed! Well, suppose
+we are! I tell you an army of lead soldiers with a lunatic at the head
+would be the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_391" id="Page_391">[Page 391]</a></span> best army in the world. We do what we're told, and we're
+not afraid of anything."</p>
+
+<p>Sam stopped talking at this juncture and went on for some time in
+silence maneuvering his troops. Finally he picked up the colonel with
+the white plume, and a ray of light from the afternoon sun fell upon it,
+and he held it before him, gazing upon it entranced. The door opened,
+and the doctor entered.</p>
+
+<p>"I fear you must go now, Mr. Cleary. He can't stand much excitement.
+He's quiet now. Just come out with me without saying anything," and
+Cleary followed him out of the room, while Sam sat motionless with his
+eyes fixed on his talisman.</p>
+
+<p>"He sits like that for hours," said the doctor. "It's a kind of
+hypnotism, I think, which we don't quite understand yet. I am writing up
+the case for <i>The Medical Gazette</i>. It's a peculiar kind of insanity,
+this preoccupation with uniforms and soldiers, and the readiness to do
+anything a man in regimentals tells him to."</p>
+
+<p>"It's rather more common, perhaps, out of asylums than in them,"
+muttered Cleary, but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_392" id="Page_392">[Page 392]</a></span> the doctor did not hear him. "Do you think he will
+ever recover, doctor?" he continued.</p>
+
+<p>The doctor shook his head ominously.</p>
+
+<p>"And will he live to old age in this condition?"</p>
+
+<p>"He might, if there were nothing else the matter with him, but there is,
+and perhaps it's a fortunate thing. He's got a new disease called
+filariasis, a sort of low fever that he picked up in the Cubapines or
+Porsslania. There's a good deal of it among the soldiers who have come
+back. We have a lot of lunatics from the army here and several of them
+have this new fever too. It wouldn't kill him alone, either, but the two
+things together will surely carry him off. He will hardly live another
+half-year."</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose his family is looking out for him?" said Cleary.</p>
+
+<p class="figcenter"><a name="page392" id="page392"></a><img src="images/page392.png" title="page392" alt="page392" height="614" width="400" /></p>
+<h4>HARMLESS</h4>
+<h6>"HE SITS LIKE THAT FOR HOURS"<br /><br /><br /><br /></h6>
+
+<p>"His mother visits him pretty regularly, and his father comes
+sometimes," said the doctor, "but I think his wife has only been here
+twice. And she's living at East Point, too, only an hour or two away.
+She's a born flirt,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_393" id="Page_393">[Page 393]</a></span> and I think she's tired of him. I'm told that one
+of this year's graduates there, a fellow named Saunders, is paying
+attention to her, and when the poor captain dies, I doubt if she remains
+long a widow."</p>
+
+<p>"Then I suppose there is nothing I can do for the dear old chap?" asked
+Cleary, with tears in his eyes, as he took his leave of the doctor at
+the door of the building.</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing at all, my dear sir. He has everything he wants, and in fact he
+wants nothing but his lead soldiers. He won't even let us give him a new
+set of them. And he has all the liberty he wants on the grounds here,
+and he can walk or even take a drive if he wishes to, for he is
+perfectly harmless."</p>
+
+<p>"Perfectly harmless!" repeated Cleary to himself, as he got into his
+carriage. "What an idea! A perfectly harmless soldier!"</p>
+
+
+<h4>THE END</h4>
+
+
+<hr style='width: 85%;' />
+
+
+
+<div style="margin-left: 5em;">
+<h5 class="left">Transcriber's Notes<br /></h5>
+<p>For consistency the following changes have been made.</p>
+
+<ul>
+<li>Page 3 firearms changed to fire-arms</li>
+<li>Page 10 field marshal changed to field-marshal</li>
+<li>Page 134 got here? changed to got here?"</li>
+<li>Page 168 out on at once on changed to out at once on</li>
+<li>Page 202 exclamed changed to exclaimed</li>
+<li>Page 202 out of it? changed to out of it.</li>
+<li>Page 219 you along.' changed to you along."</li>
+<li>Page 237 "'I'm a changed to 'I'm a</li>
+<li>Page 273 exclamed changed to exclaimed</li>
+<li>Page 295 bomb-shells changed to bombshells</li>
+<li>Page 349 "'He stuck changed to 'He stuck</li>
+<li>Page 357 "and I!" And I!" changed to "And I!" "And I!"</li>
+<li>Page 382 denommination changed to denomination</li>
+</ul>
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Captain Jinks, Hero, by Ernest Crosby
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Captain Jinks, Hero, by Ernest Crosby
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Captain Jinks, Hero
+
+Author: Ernest Crosby
+
+Illustrator: Dan Beard
+
+Release Date: September 22, 2006 [EBook #19353]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CAPTAIN JINKS, HERO ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Jacqueline Jeremy, Suzanne Shell and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ [Illustration: CAPTAIN JINKS, HERO
+ "SAM WAS TAKEN STRADDLING A CHAIR" [_Page 124_]]
+
+
+
+ Captain Jinks
+ Hero
+
+ BY
+
+ ERNEST CROSBY
+
+ _Author of
+ "Plain Talk in Psalm and Parable"_
+
+ _Illustrations by_
+ DAN BEARD
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+ NEW YORK AND LONDON
+ FUNK & WAGNALLS COMPANY
+
+ 1902
+
+
+
+ COPYRIGHT, 1902,
+ By FUNK & WAGNALLS COMPANY
+
+ _Registered at Stationers' Hall, London_
+
+ _Printed in the United States_
+
+ _Published February, 1902_
+
+
+
+
+ _TO_
+ F. C.
+
+
+
+ CONTENTS AND CARTOONS
+
+ CHAPTER PAGE
+
+ I. A BOMBSHELL, 1
+ II. EAST POINT, 14
+ III. LOVE AND COMBAT, 34
+ IV. WAR AND BUSINESS, 60
+ V. SLOWBURGH, 89
+ VI. OFF FOR THE CUBAPINES, 117
+ VII. THE BATTLE OF SAN DIEGO, 151
+ VIII. AMONG THE MORITOS, 185
+ IX. ON DUTY AT HAVILLA, 216
+ X. A GREAT MILITARY EXPLOIT, 240
+ XI. A DINNER PARTY AT GIN-SIN, 250
+ XII. THE GREAT WHITE TEMPLE, 277
+ XIII. THE WAR-LORD, 310
+ XIV. HOME AGAIN, 338
+ XV. POLITICS, 365
+ XVI. THE END, 374
+
+
+
+ FULL-PAGE ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+ PAGE
+
+ CAPTAIN JINKS, HERO, _Frontispiece_
+ _"Sam was taken straddling a chair."_
+
+ WAR'S DEMAND, 6
+ _"But what did he want of soldiers?"_
+
+ THE MANLY SPORT AT EAST POINT, 56
+ _"Starkey stood off and gave him his 'coup de grace.'"_
+
+ A BLOOD BROTHERHOOD, 120
+ _"A big company to grab everything.... The
+ Benevolent Assimilation Company, Limited."_
+
+ TWO OF A KIND, 206
+ _"There are four marks."_
+
+ CONSENT OF THE GOVERNED, 238
+ _"What business have these people to talk about
+ equal rights?"_
+
+ WINNERS OF THE CROSS, 266
+ _"He got the Victorious Cross in South Africa."_
+
+ THE PERFECT SOLDIER, 324
+ _"The Emperor gave an exclamation of surprise
+ and delight."_
+
+ HARMLESS, 392
+ _"He sits like that for hours."_
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER I
+
+ A Bombshell
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+
+ "Bless my soul! I nearly forgot," exclaimed Colonel Jinks, as he came
+ back into the store. "To-morrow is Sam's birthday and I promised Ma to
+ bring him home something for a present. Have you got anything for a boy
+ six years old?"
+
+ "Let me see," answered the young woman behind the counter, turning
+ round and looking at an upper shelf. "Why, yes; there's just the thing.
+ It's a box of lead soldiers. I've never seen anything like them
+ before"--and she reached up and pulled down a large cardboard box.
+ "Just see," she added as she opened it. "The officers have swords that
+ come off, and the guns come off the men's shoulders; and look at
+ the----"
+
+ "Never mind," interrupted the colonel. "I'm in a hurry. That'll do very
+ well. How much is it?"
+
+ And two minutes later he went out of the store with the box in his hand
+ and got into his buggy, and was soon driving through the streets of
+ Homeville on his way to his farm.
+
+ No one had ever asked Colonel Jinks where he had obtained his title. In
+ fact, he had never put the question to himself. It was an integral part
+ of his person, and as little open to challenge as his hand or his foot.
+ There are favored regions of the world's surface where colonels, like
+ poets, are born, not made, and good fortune had placed the colonel's
+ birthplace in one of them. For the benefit of those of my readers who
+ may be prejudiced against war, and in justice to the colonel, it should
+ be stated that the only military thing about him was his title. He was
+ a mild-mannered man with a long thin black beard and a slight stoop,
+ and his experience with fire-arms was confined to the occasional
+ shooting of depredatory crows, squirrels, and rats with an ancient
+ fowling-piece. Still there is magic in a name. And who knows but that
+ the subtle influence of the title of colonel may have unconsciously
+ guided the searching eyes of the young saleswoman among the Noah's arks
+ and farmyards to the box of lead soldiers?
+
+ The lad for whom the present was intended was a happy farmer's boy, an
+ only child, for whom the farm was the whole world and who looked upon
+ the horses and cows as his fellows. His little red head was constantly
+ to be seen bobbing about in the barnyard among the sheep and calves, or
+ almost under the horses' feet. The chickens and sparrows and swallows
+ were his playmates, and they seemed to have no fear of him. The black
+ colt with its thick legs and ruffled mane ran behind its gray dam to
+ hide from every one else, but it let Sam pat it without flinching. The
+ first new-hatched chicken which had been given to him for his very own
+ turned out to be a rooster, and when he found that it had to be taken
+ from him and beheaded he was quite inconsolable and refused absolutely
+ to feast upon his former friend. But with this tenderness of
+ disposition Sam had inherited another still stronger trait, and this
+ was a deep respect for authority, and such elements of revolt as
+ revealed themselves in his grief over his rooster were soon stifled in
+ his little heart. He bowed submissively before the powers that be. From
+ the time when he first lisped he had called his parents "Colonel Jinks"
+ and "Mrs. Jinks." His mother had succeeded with great difficulty in
+ substituting the term "Ma" for herself, but she could not make him
+ address his father as anything but "Colonel," and after a time his
+ father grew to like it. No one knew how Sam had acquired the habit; it
+ was simply the expression of an inherently respectful nature. He
+ reverenced his father and loved his father's profession of farmer. His
+ earliest pleasure was to hold the reins and drive "like Colonel Jinks,"
+ and his earliest ambition was to become a teamster, that part of the
+ farm work having peculiar attractions for him.
+
+ In the afternoon on which we were introduced to the Colonel, Sam was
+ watching on the veranda for his father's return, and was quick to spy
+ the parcel under his arm, and many were the wild guesses he made as to
+ its contents. The Colonel left it carelessly upon the hall table, and
+ Sam could easily have peeped into it, but he would as soon have thought
+ of cutting off his hand.
+
+ "What's in that box in the hall, Colonel Jinks?" he asked in an
+ embarrassed voice at supper, as he fingered the edge of the tablecloth
+ and looked blushingly at his plate.
+
+ "Oh, that?" replied his father with a wink--"that's a bombshell." And a
+ bombshell indeed it proved to be for the Jinks family.
+
+ The box was put upon a table in the room in which little Sam slept with
+ his parents, and he was told that he could have it in the morning. He
+ was a long time going to sleep that night, trying to imagine the
+ contents of the mysterious box. Not until he had quite made up his
+ mind that it was a farmyard did he finally drop off. At the first break
+ of day Sam was out of bed. With bare feet he walked on tiptoe across
+ the cold bare floor and seized the precious box. He lifted the lid at
+ one corner and put in his hand and felt what was there, and tried to
+ guess what it could be. Perhaps it was a Noah's Ark; but no, if those
+ were people there were too many of them. He would have to give it up.
+ He took off the cover and looked in. It was not a farmyard, at any
+ rate, and the corners of his mouth became tremulous from
+ disappointment. No, they were soldiers. But what did he want of
+ soldiers? He had heard of such things, but they had never been anything
+ in his life. He had never seen a real soldier nor heard of a
+ toy-soldier before, and he did not quite know what they were for. He
+ crept back to bed crestfallen, his present in his arms. Sitting up in
+ bed he began to investigate the contents of the box. It was a complete
+ infantry battalion, and beautiful soldiers they were. Their coats were
+ red, their trousers blue, and they wore white helmets and carried
+ muskets with bayonets fixed. Sam began to feel reconciled. He turned
+ the box upside-down and emptied the soldiers upon the counterpane. Then
+ he noticed that they were not all alike. There were some officers, who
+ carried swords instead of rifles. He began to look for them and single
+ them out, when his eye was caught by a magnificent white leaden plume
+ issuing from the helmet of one of them. He picked up this soldier, and
+ the sight of him filled him with delight. He was taller and broader
+ than the rest, his air was more martial--there was something inspiring
+ in the way in which he held his sword. His golden epaulets were a
+ miracle of splendor, but it was the plume, the great white plume, that
+ held the boy enthralled. A ray of light from the morning sun, reflected
+ by the window of the stable, found its way through a chink in the blind
+ and fell just upon this plume. The effect was electric. Sam was
+ fascinated, and he continued to hold the lead soldier so that the
+ dazzling light should fall on it, gazing upon it in an ecstasy.
+
+ [Illustration: WAR'S DEMAND
+ "BUT WHAT DID HE WANT OF SOLDIERS?"]
+
+ Sam spent that entire day in the company of his new soldiers,--nothing
+ could drag him away from them. He made his father show him how they
+ should march and form themselves and fight. He drew them up in hollow
+ squares facing outward and in hollow squares facing inward, in column
+ of fours and in line of battle, in double rank and single rank.
+
+ "What are the bayonets for, Colonel Jinks?"
+
+ "To stick into bad people, Sam."
+
+ "And have the bad people bayonets, too?"
+
+ "Yes, Sam."
+
+ "Do they stick their bayonets into good people?"
+
+ "Oh, I suppose so. Do stop bothering me. If I'd known you'd ask so many
+ questions, I'd never have got you the soldiers."
+
+ His parents thought that a few days would exhaust the boy's devotion to
+ his new toys, but it was not so. He deserted the barnyard for the lead
+ soldiers. They were placed on a chair by his bed at night, and he could
+ not sleep unless his right hand grasped the white-plumed colonel. The
+ smell of the fresh paint as it peeled off on his little fingers clung
+ to his memory through life as the most delicious of odors. He would
+ tease his father to play with the soldiers with him. He would divide
+ the force in two, and one side would defend a fort of blocks and books
+ while the other assaulted. In these games Sam always insisted in having
+ the plumed colonel on his side. Once when Sam's colonel had succeeded
+ in capturing a particularly impregnable fortress on top of an
+ unabridged dictionary his father remarked casually:
+
+ "He's quite a hero, isn't he, Sam?"
+
+ "A what?" said Sam.
+
+ "A hero."
+
+ "What is a hero, Colonel Jinks?" And his father explained to him what a
+ hero was, giving several examples from history and fiction. The word
+ took the boy's fancy at once. From that day forward the officer was
+ colonel no longer, he was a "hero," or rather, "the hero." Sam now
+ began to save his pennies for other soldiers, and to beg for more and
+ more as successive birthdays and Christmases came round. He played at
+ soldiers himself, too, coaxing the less warlike children of the
+ neighborhood to join him. But his enthusiasm always left them behind,
+ and they tired much sooner than he did of the sport. He persuaded his
+ mother to make him a uniform something like that of the lead soldiers,
+ and the stores of Homeville were ransacked for drums, swords, and belts
+ and toy-guns. He would stand on guard for hours at the barnyard gate,
+ saluting in the most solemn manner whoever passed, even if it was only
+ a sparrow. The only interest in animals which survived his change of
+ heart was that which he now took in horses as chargers. He would ride
+ the farm-horses bare-back to the trough, holding the halter in one hand
+ and a tin sword in the other with the air of a field-marshal. When
+ strangers tapped him on the cheek and asked him--as is the wont of
+ strangers--"What are you going to be, my boy, when you grow up?" he
+ answered no longer, as he used to do, "A driver, sir," but now
+ invariably, "A hero."
+
+ It so happened some two or three years after Sam's mind had begun to
+ follow the paths of warfare that his father and mother took him one day
+ to an anniversary celebration of the Methodist Church at Homeville, and
+ a special parade of the newly organized "John Wesley Boys' Brigade" of
+ the church was one of the features of the occasion. If Mrs. Jinks had
+ anticipated this, she would doubtless have left Sam at home, for she
+ knew that he was already quite sufficiently inclined toward things
+ military; but even she could not help enjoying the boy's unmeasured
+ delight at this, his first experience of militarism in the flesh. The
+ parade was indeed a pretty sight. There were perhaps fifty boys in
+ line, ranging from six to eighteen years of age. Their gray uniforms
+ were quite new and the gilt letters "J.W.B.B." on their caps shone
+ brightly. They marched along with their miniature muskets and fixed
+ bayonets, their chubby, kissable faces all a-smile, as they sang
+ "Onward, Christian Soldiers," with words adapted by their pastor:
+
+ "Onward, Christian soldiers,
+ 'Gainst the heathen crew!
+ In the name of Jesus
+ Let us run them through."
+
+ By a curious coincidence their captain had a white feather in his cap,
+ suggesting at a considerable distance the plume of the leaden "hero."
+ Sam was overcome with joy. He pulled the "hero" from his pocket (he
+ always carried it about with him) and compared the two warriors. The
+ "hero" was still unique, incomparable, but Sam realized that he was an
+ ideal which might be lived up to, not an impossible dream, not the
+ denizen of an inaccessible heaven. From that day he bent his little
+ energies to the task of removing his family to Homeville.
+
+ It is not so much strength as perseverance which moves the world.
+ Colonel Jinks had laid up a competence and had always intended to
+ retire, when he could afford it, to the market town. Among other
+ things, the school facilities would be much better in town than in the
+ country. Mrs. Jinks in a moment of folly took the side of the boy,
+ and, whatever may have been the controlling and predominating cause,
+ the fact is that, when Sam had attained the age of twelve, the Colonel
+ sold the farm and bought one of the best houses in Homeville. Sam at
+ once became a member of the John Wesley Brigade and showed an aptitude
+ for soldiering truly amazing. Before he was fourteen he was captain,
+ and wore, himself, the coveted white feather, and his military duties
+ became the absorbing interest of his life. He thought and spoke of
+ nothing else, and he was universally known in the town as "Captain
+ Jinks," which was often abbreviated to "Cap." No one ever passed
+ boyhood and youth in such congenial surroundings and with such complete
+ satisfaction as "Cap" Jinks of the John Wesley Boys' Brigade.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER II
+
+ East Point
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+
+ But our relation to our environments will change, however much pleased
+ we may be with them, and "Cap" Jinks found himself gradually growing
+ too old for his brigade. The younger boys and their parents began to
+ complain that he was unreasonably standing in the way of their
+ promotion, and a fiery mustache gave signs to the world that he was now
+ something more than a boy. Still he could not bring himself to
+ relinquish the uniform and the white plume. A life without military
+ trimmings was not to be thought of, and there was no militia at
+ Homeville. Consequently he remained in the Boys' Brigade as long as he
+ could. When at last he saw that he must resign--he was now
+ two-and-twenty--he felt that there was only one course open to him, and
+ that was to join the army; and he broached this plan to his parents.
+ His mother did not like the idea of giving up her only son to such a
+ profession, but Colonel Jinks took kindly to the suggestion. It would
+ bring a little real militarism into the family and give a kind of _ex
+ post facto_ justification to his ancient title. "Sam, my boy," said he,
+ "you're a chip of the old block. You'll keep up the family tradition
+ and be a colonel like me. I will write to your Uncle George about it
+ to-morrow. He'll get you an appointment to East Point without any
+ trouble. Sam, I'm proud of you."
+
+ Uncle George Jinks, the only brother of the Colonel, was a member of
+ Congress from a distant district, who had a good deal of influence with
+ the Administration. The Colonel wrote to him asking for the cadetship
+ and rehearsing at length the young captain's unusual qualifications and
+ his military enthusiasm. A week later he received the answer. His
+ brother informed him that the request could not have come at a more
+ opportune moment, as he had a vacancy to fill and had been on the point
+ of calling a public examination of young men in his district for the
+ purpose of selecting a candidate; but in view of the evident fitness of
+ his nephew, he would alter his plans and offer him the place without
+ further ceremony. He wished only that Sam would do credit to the name
+ of Jinks.
+
+ It was on a beautiful day in June that "Cap" Jinks bade farewell to
+ Homeville. The family came out in front of the house, keeping back
+ their tears as best they could at this the first parting; but Sam, tho
+ he loved them well, had no room in his heart for regret. There was a
+ vision of glory beckoning him on which obliterated all other feelings.
+ The Boys' Brigade was drawn up at the side of the road and presented
+ arms as he drove by, and he saw in this the promise of greater things.
+ As he sat on the back seat of the wagon by himself behind the driver,
+ he took from his pocket the old original "hero," the lead officer of
+ his boyhood, and gazed at it smiling. "Now I am to be a real hero," he
+ thought, "and all the world will repeat the name of Sam Jinks and read
+ about his exploits." He put the toy carefully back in his breast
+ pocket. It had become the talisman of his life and the symbol of his
+ ambitions.
+
+ The long railway journey to East Point was full of interest to the
+ young traveler, who had never been away from home before. His mind was
+ full of military things, but he saw no uniforms, no arms, no
+ fortifications anywhere. How could people live in such a careless,
+ unnatural fashion? He blushed with shame as he thought to himself that
+ a foreigner might apparently journey through the country from one end
+ to the other without knowing that there was such a thing as a soldier
+ in the land. What a travesty this was on civilization! How baseless the
+ proud boasts of national greatness when only an insignificant and
+ almost invisible few paid any attention to the claims of military
+ glory! The outlook was indeed dismal, but Sam was no pessimist.
+ Obstacles were in his dictionary "things to be removed." "I shall have
+ a hand in changing all this," he muttered aloud. "When I come home a
+ conquering general with the grateful country at my feet, these wretched
+ toilers in the field and at the desk will have learned that there is a
+ nobler activity, and uniforms will spring up like flowers before the
+ sun." Where Sam acquired his command of the English language and his
+ poetic sensibility it would be difficult to say. It is enough to know
+ that these faculties endeavored, not without success, to keep pace with
+ his growing ambition for glory.
+
+ Sam's first weeks at East Point were among the happiest in his life.
+ Here, at any rate, military affairs were in the ascendant. His ideal of
+ a country was simply an East Point infinitely enlarged. His neat gray
+ uniform seemed already to transform him into a hero. When he thought
+ of the great soldiers who had been educated at this very place, he felt
+ a proud spirit swelling in his bosom. One night in a lonely part of the
+ parade-ground he solemnly knelt down and kissed the sod. The military
+ cemetery aroused his enthusiasm, and the captured cannon, the names of
+ battles inscribed here and there on the rocks, and the portraits of
+ generals in the mess-hall, all in turn fascinated him. As a new arrival
+ he was treated with scant courtesy and drilled very hard, but he did
+ not care. Tho his squad-fellows were almost overcome with fatigue, he
+ was always sorry when the drill came to an end. He never had enough of
+ marching and counter-marching, of shouldering and ordering arms. Even
+ the "setting-up" exercises filled him with joy. When cavalry drills
+ began he was still more in his element. His old teamster days now stood
+ him in good stead. In a week he could do anything with a horse,--he
+ understood the horse, and the horse trusted him. When he first emerged
+ from the riding-school on horseback in a squadron and took part in a
+ drill on the great parade-ground, he was prouder than ever before. He
+ went through it in a delirium, feeling like a composite photograph of
+ Washington and Napoleon. When the big flag went up in the morning to
+ the top of the towering flag-staff, Sam's spirits went up with it, and
+ they floated there, vibrating, hovering, all day; but when the flag
+ came down at night, Sam did not come down. He was always up, living an
+ ecstatic dream-life in the seventh heaven.
+
+ One night as Sam lay in his tent dreaming that he had just won the
+ battle of Waterloo, he heard a voice close to his ears.
+
+ "Jinks!"
+
+ "Yes, sir."
+
+ "Here is an order for you to report at once up in the woods at old Fort
+ Hut. The password is 'Old Gory'; say that, and the sentinel will let
+ you out of camp. Go along and report to the colonel at once."
+
+ "What is it?" cried Sam. "Is it an attack?"
+
+ "Very likely," said the voice. "Now wake up your snoring friend there,
+ for he's got to go too. What's his name?"
+
+ "Cleary," answered Sam, and he proceeded gently to awaken his tent-mate
+ and break the news to him that the enemy was advancing. It was not easy
+ to rouse the young man, but finally they both succeeded in dressing in
+ the dark, and hastened away between the tents across the most remote
+ sentry beat. They were duly challenged, whispered the countersign, and
+ in a few moments were climbing the rough and thickly wooded hill to the
+ fort.
+
+ "I wonder who the enemy is," said Sam.
+
+ "Enemy? Nonsense," replied Cleary. "They're going to haze us."
+
+ "Haze us? Good heavens!" said Sam. He had heard of hazing before, but
+ he had been living in such a realm of imagination for the past weeks
+ that the gossip had never really reached his consciousness, and now
+ that he was confronted with the reality he hardly knew how to face it.
+
+ "Yes," said Cleary, "they're going to haze us, and I wonder why I ever
+ came to this rotten place anyhow."
+
+ "Don't, don't say that," cried Sam. "You were at Hale University for a
+ year or two, weren't you? Did they do any hazing there?"
+
+ "Not a bit. They stopped it all long ago. The professors there say it
+ isn't manly."
+
+ "That can't be true," said Sam, "or they wouldn't do it here. But why
+ has it kept up here when they've stopped it at all the universities?"
+
+ "I don't know," said Cleary, "but perhaps it's wearing uniforms. I feel
+ sort of different in a uniform from out of it, don't you?"
+
+ "Of course I do," exclaimed Sam. "I feel as if I were walking on air
+ and rising into another plane of being."
+
+ "Well--ye-es--perhaps, but I didn't mean that exactly," answered
+ Cleary. "But somehow I feel more like hitting a fellow over the head
+ when I'm in uniform than when I'm not, don't you?"
+
+ "I hadn't thought of that," said Sam, "but I really think I do. Do you
+ think they'll hit us over the head?"
+
+ "There's no telling. There's Captain Clark of the first class and
+ Saunders of the third who are running the hazing just now, they say,
+ and they're pretty tough chaps."
+
+ "Is that Captain Clark with the squeaky voice?" asked Sam.
+
+ "Yes, he spoiled it taking tabasco sauce when he was hazed three years
+ ago. They say it took all the mucous membrane off his epiglottis."
+
+ There was silence for a time.
+
+ "Saunders is that fellow with the crooked nose, isn't he?" asked Sam.
+
+ "Yes; when they hazed him last year they made him stand with his nose
+ in the crack of a door until they came back, and they forgot they had
+ left him, and somebody shut the door on his nose by mistake. But he's
+ an awfully plucky chap. He just went on standing there as if nothing
+ had happened."
+
+ "Splendid, wasn't it?" cried Sam, beginning to see the heroic
+ possibilities of hazing. "Do you suppose that they have always
+ hazed here?"
+
+ "Yes, of course."
+
+ "And that General German and General Meriden and all the rest were
+ hazed here just like this?"
+
+ "Yes, to be sure."
+
+ Sam felt his spirits soaring again.
+
+ "Then I wouldn't miss it for anything," said he. "It has always been
+ done and by the greatest men, and it must be the right thing to do.
+ Just think of it. Meriden has walked up this very hill like you and me
+ to be hazed!" There was exultation in his tone.
+
+ "Well, I only hope Meriden looked forward to it with greater joy than I
+ do," said Cleary, with a dry laugh. "But here we are."
+
+ Before them under the ruined walls of the old redoubt called Fort Hut,
+ stood a small group of cadets, indistinctly lighted by several moving
+ dark-lanterns. While they were still twenty yards away, two men sprang
+ out from behind a tree, grasped them by the arms, tied their elbows
+ behind them, and, leading them off through the woods for a short
+ distance, bound them to a tree out of sight of the rest, and left them
+ there with strict injunctions not to move. It never entered into the
+ head of either of the prisoners that they might disobey this order, and
+ they waited patiently for events to take their course. As far as they
+ could make out by listening, some others of their classmates were
+ already undergoing the ordeal of hazing. They could hear water
+ splashing, suppressed screams and groans, and continual whispering. The
+ light of the lanterns flickered through the trees, now and then
+ illuminating the topmost branches. Presently a man came and sat down
+ near them, and said:
+
+ "Don't get impatient. We're nearly ready for you." It was the voice of
+ one of their two captors.
+
+ "May I ask you a question, sir?" said Sam.
+
+ "Blaze away," responded the man.
+
+ "Was General Gramp hazed at this same place, do you know?"
+
+ "Yes," said the man. "In this very same place. And while he was
+ waiting he sat on that very log over there."
+
+ Sam peered with awe into the darkness.
+
+ "May I--do you think I might--just sit on it, too?" asked Sam.
+
+ "Certainly," said the cadet affably, untying the rope from the tree and
+ leading Sam over to the log, where he tied him again.
+
+ Sam sat down reverently.
+
+ "How well preserved the log is," said Sam.
+
+ "Yes," said the guard; "of course they wouldn't let it decay. It's a
+ sort of historical monument. They overhaul it every year. Anyway it's
+ ironwood."
+
+ Sam thought to himself that perhaps some day the log might be noted as
+ the spot where the great General Jinks sat while awaiting his hazing,
+ and tears of joy rolled softly down over his freckles. He was still
+ lost in this emotion when steps were heard approaching and the
+ lantern-light drew nearer.
+
+ "Come, Smith, bring the prisoners in," said the same voice that had
+ waked Sam in his tent. He looked at the speaker and recognized the
+ tall, hatchet-faced, crook-nosed Saunders. Two or three cadets
+ unfastened Sam and Cleary, still, however, leaving their arms bound
+ behind them, and brought them to the open place under the wall where
+ Sam had first seen them. Sam now saw nothing; walking in the steps of
+ Generals Gramp and German, he felt the ecstasy of a Christian martyr.
+ He would not have exchanged his lot with any one in the world. Cleary,
+ however, who possessed a rather mundane spirit, took in the scene.
+ Twenty or thirty cadets were either standing or seated on the ground
+ round a circle which was illuminated by several dark-lanterns placed
+ upon the ground. In the center of the circle were a tub of water, some
+ boards and pieces of rope, and two large baskets whose contents were
+ concealed by a cloth.
+
+ "Come, boys," squeaked Captain Clark, a short, thickset fellow who
+ looked much older than the others and who spoke in a peculiar cracked
+ voice. "Come, let's begin by bracing them up."
+
+ "Bracing" was a process adopted for the purpose of making the patient
+ assume the position of a soldier, only very much exaggerated--a
+ position which after a few minutes becomes almost intolerable. Cleary
+ and Sam were promptly taken and tied back to back to an upright stake
+ which had escaped their observation. They were tied at the ankle, knee,
+ waist, under the arms, and at the chin and forehead. By tightening
+ these ropes as desired and placing pieces of wood in between, against
+ the back, the hazers made each victim stand with the chest pushed
+ preternaturally forward and the chin and abdomen drawn preternaturally
+ back. Cleary found this position irksome from the start, and soon
+ decidedly painful, but Sam was proof against it. In fact, he had been
+ practising just this position for eight or ten years, and it now came
+ to him naturally. Cleary soon showed marks of discomfort. It was a warm
+ night, and the sweat began to stand out on his forehead. As far as he
+ was concerned the hazing was already a success, but Sam evidently
+ needed something more.
+
+ "Here, give me the tabasco bottle," whispered Clark to Smith.
+
+ As the latter brought the article from one of the baskets, Sam said to
+ him in a low voice,
+
+ "Did General Gramp take it out of that same bottle?"
+
+ "Yes," said Smith; "strange to say, it's the very same one, and all
+ through his life afterward he took tabasco three times a day."
+
+ Sam rolled his eyes painfully to catch a glimpse of the historic
+ bottle. Clark took it and applied it to Sam's lips. It was red-hot
+ stuff, and the whole audience rose to watch its effect upon the victim
+ at the stake. Sam swallowed it as if it had been lemonade. In fact, he
+ was only aware of the honor that he was receiving. He had only enough
+ earthly consciousness left to notice that one of the cadets in the
+ crowd was photographing him with a kodak, and accordingly he did not
+ even wink.
+
+ "By Jove, he's lined with tin," ejaculated Saunders, whose deflected
+ nose gave him a sinister expression. "You ought to have had his
+ plumbing, Clark."
+
+ "Shut up and mind your own business," said Clark. "Come, let's give him
+ the tub. This won't do. That other chap's happy enough where he is."
+
+ Sam was untied again and led forward to the middle of the ring, the
+ faithful Smith still keeping close to him.
+
+ "Is that an old tub?" whispered Sam, still standing stiffly as if his
+ body had permanently taken the "braced" shape.
+
+ "I should say so. All the generals were ducked in it. Kneel down there
+ and look in. Do you see that round dent in the middle? That's where
+ General Meriden bumped his head in it. He never did things by halves."
+
+ Sam did as he was told, and he felt that he was in a proper attitude
+ upon his knees at such a shrine. To him it was holy water.
+
+ "Now, Jinks," squeaked Clark.
+
+ "Yes, sir," answered Sam.
+
+ "Stand on your head now in that tub, and be quick about it."
+
+ Sam fixed his mind upon General Meriden in the same circumstances, drew
+ in his breath, and endeavored to stand on his head in a foot of water,
+ holding on to the rim of the tub with his hands. His legs waved
+ irresolutely in the air with no apparent unity of motive, and bubbles
+ gurgled about his neck and shoulders.
+
+ "Grab his legs!" shouted Clark.
+
+ Two cadets obeyed the order, and Clark took out his watch to time the
+ ordeal. The instants that passed seemed like an age.
+
+ "Isn't time up?" whispered Saunders.
+
+ "Shut up, you fool, haven't I got my watch open?" replied Clark. "But,
+ good heavens!" he added, "take him out--I believe my watch has
+ stopped." And he shook it and put it to his ear.
+
+ Sam was hauled out and laid on the grass, but he was entirely
+ unconscious. His tormentors were thoroughly scared. Fortunately they
+ had all gone through a course of "first aid to the injured," and they
+ immediately took the proper precautions, holding him up by the feet
+ until the water ran out of his mouth and nose, and then rolling him on
+ the tub and manipulating his arms. At last some faint indications of
+ breathing set in, and they concluded to carry him down to his tent.
+ Using two boards as a stretcher, six of them acted as bearers, and the
+ procession moved toward the camp. Cleary would have been forgotten, had
+ he not asked them to untie him, which they did, and he followed behind,
+ walking most stiffly. As they neared the camp the party separated. Two
+ of the strongest took Sam, whose mind was wandering, to his tent, and
+ Clark made Cleary come and spend the night with him, lest anxiety at
+ Sam's condition might impel him to report the matter to the
+ authorities. How they all got to their tents in safety, and how the
+ password happened to be known to all of them, we must leave it to the
+ officers in command at East Point to explain. Sam was dropped upon his
+ bunk without much consideration. The two cadets waited long enough to
+ make sure that he was breathing, and then they decamped.
+
+ "It's really a shame," said Smith to Saunders, who tented with
+ him, before he turned over to sleep; "it's really a shame to leave
+ that fellow there without a doctor, but we'd all get bounced if it
+ got out."
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER III
+
+ Love and Combat
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+
+ At reveille the next morning, as the roll was called in the company
+ street, Private Jinks did not answer to his name. They found him in his
+ tent delirious and in a high fever. His pillow was a puddle of water.
+ It was necessary to have him taken to the hospital, and before long he
+ was duly installed there in a small separate room. The captain of his
+ company instituted an inquiry into the causes of his illness and
+ reported that he had undoubtedly fainted away and thrown water over
+ himself to bring himself to. The surgeon in charge of the hospital
+ thereupon certified that this was the case, and in this way bygones
+ officially became bygones. It was late in the afternoon before Sam
+ recovered consciousness. A negro soldier, who had been detailed to
+ act as hospital orderly, was adjusting his bed-clothes, and Sam opened
+ his eyes.
+
+ "Gettin' better, Massa Jinks?" said the man, smiling his good will.
+
+ "Company Jinks, all present and accounted for," cried Sam, saluting as
+ if he were a first sergeant on parade.
+
+ "You're here in de hospital, Massa," said the man, who was known as
+ Mose; "you ain't on parade sure."
+
+ Sam looked round inquiringly.
+
+ "Is this the hospital?" he asked. "Why am I in the hospital?"
+
+ "You've been hurtin' yourself somehow," answered Mose with a low
+ chuckle. "There's lots of fourth-class men hurts themselves. But
+ you'll be all right in a week."
+
+ "In a week!" exclaimed Sam. "But I can't skip drills and everything for
+ a week!"
+
+ "Now, don't you worry, Massa Jinks. You're pretty lucky. We've had some
+ men here hurted themselves that had to go home for good, and some of
+ 'em, two or three, never got well, and died. But bless you, you'll soon
+ be all right. Doctor said so."
+
+ Sam had to get what consolation he could from this. His memory began to
+ come back, and he recalled the beginning of the hazing.
+
+ "Is Cadet Cleary in the hospital?" he asked.
+
+ "No, sah."
+
+ "Won't you try to get word to him to come and see me here, if he can?"
+
+ "Yes, Massa, I'll try. But they won't always let 'em come. Maybe
+ they'll let him Sunday afternoon."
+
+ Sure enough, Cleary succeeded in getting permission to pay Sam a call
+ on Sunday.
+
+ "Well, old man, I've got to thank you for letting me out of a lot
+ of trouble," he cried as he clasped Sam's hand and sat down by the
+ bedside.
+
+ "Did they duck you, too?" asked Sam. "You must be stronger than I am.
+ It's a shame I couldn't stand it."
+
+ "No. When they'd nearly killed you they let me off. Don't you be
+ ashamed of anything. They kept you in there five minutes--I'm not
+ sure it wasn't ten. If you weren't half a fish, you'd never have
+ come to, that's all there is of that. And after you'd drunk all
+ that tabasco, too!"
+
+ "Is my voice quite right?" asked Sam.
+
+ "Yes, thank fortune, there's no danger of your squeaking like
+ Captain Clark."
+
+ Sam sighed.
+
+ "And is my nose quite straight?"
+
+ "Yes, of course; why shouldn't it be?"
+
+ Sam sighed again.
+
+ "I'm afraid," he said, "that no one will know that I've been hazed."
+
+ He was silent for a few minutes. Then a smile came over his face.
+
+ "Wasn't it grand," he went on, "to think that we were following in
+ the steps of all the great generals of the century! When I put my
+ head into the tub and felt my legs waving in the air, I thought of
+ General Meriden striking his head so manfully against the bottom,
+ and I thanked heaven that I was suffering for my country. I tried
+ to bump my head hard too, and it does ache just a little; but I'm
+ afraid it won't show."
+
+ He felt his head with his hand and looked inquiringly at Cleary, but
+ his friend's face gave him no encouragement, and he made no answer.
+
+ "I think I saw somebody taking a snap-shot of me up there," said Sam.
+ "Do you think I can get a print of it? I wish you'd see if you can get
+ one for me."
+
+ "It's not so easy," said Cleary. "He was a third-class man, and of
+ course we are not allowed to speak to him. They've just divided us
+ fourth-class men up among the rest to do chores for them. My boss is
+ Captain Clark, and he's the only upper-class man I can speak to, and
+ he would knock me down if I asked him about it. You'd better try
+ yourself when you come out."
+
+ "Who am I assigned to?" asked Sam.
+
+ "To Cadet Smith, and he's a much easier man. You're in luck. But my
+ time's up. Good-by," and Cleary hurried away.
+
+ Sam Jinks left the hospital just one week after his admission. He might
+ have stayed a day or two longer, but he insisted that he was well
+ enough and prevailed upon the doctor to let him go. He set to work at
+ once with great energy to make up for lost time and to learn all that
+ had been taught in the week in the way of drilling. The morning after
+ his release, when guard-mounting was over, Cleary told him that Cadet
+ Smith wished to speak to him, and Sam went at once to report to him.
+
+ "Jinks," said Smith, when Sam had approached and saluted, "I am going
+ down that path there to the right. Wait till I am out of sight and then
+ follow me down. I don't want any one to see us together."
+
+ "All right, sir," said Sam.
+
+ When Smith had duly disappeared, Sam followed him and found him
+ awaiting him in a secluded spot by the river. Sam saluted again as he
+ came up to him.
+
+ "I suppose you understand, Jinks, that none of us upper-class men can
+ afford to be seen talking to you fourth-class beasts?"
+
+ "Yes, sir."
+
+ "Of course, it wouldn't do. Don't look at me that way, Jinks. When an
+ upper-class man is polite enough to speak to you, you should look down,
+ and not into his face."
+
+ Sam dropped his eyes.
+
+ "Now, Jinks, I wanted to tell you that you've been assigned to me to do
+ such work as I want done. I'm going to treat you well, because you seem
+ to be a pretty decent fellow for a beast."
+
+ "Thank you, sir," said Sam.
+
+ "Yes, you seem disposed to behave as you should, and I don't want to
+ have any trouble with you. All you'll have to do is to see that my
+ boots are blacked every night, keep my shirts and clothes in order,
+ take my things to the wash, clean out my tent, and be somewhere near
+ so that you can come when I call you; do you understand?"
+
+ "Yes, sir."
+
+ "Oh, then, of course, you must make my bed, and bring water for me, and
+ keep my equipments clean. If there's anything else, I'll tell you. If
+ you don't do everything I tell you, I'll report it to the class
+ committee and you'll have to fight, do you understand?"
+
+ "Yes, sir."
+
+ "That will do, Jinks; you may go."
+
+ "I beg your pardon, sir. May I ask you a question?"
+
+ "What?" shouted Smith. "Do you mean to speak to me without being
+ spoken to?"
+
+ "I know it's very wrong, sir," said Sam, "but there's something I want
+ very much, and I don't know how else to get it."
+
+ "Well, I'll forgive you this time, because I'm an easy-going fellow. If
+ it had been anybody else but me, you'd have got your first fight. What
+ is it? Out with it."
+
+ "Please, sir, when I was haz--I mean exercised the other night, I
+ saw somebody taking photographs of it. Do you think I could get
+ copies of them?"
+
+ "What do you want them for?" asked Smith suspiciously.
+
+ "I'd like to have something to remember it by," said Sam. "I want to be
+ able to show that I did just what Generals Gramp and German did."
+
+ Smith smiled. "All right," he replied. "I'll get them for you if I can,
+ and I'll expect you to work all the better for me. Now go."
+
+ "Oh, thank you, sir--thank you!" cried Sam; and he went.
+
+ That night he and Cleary talked over the situation in whispers as they
+ lay in their bunks.
+
+ "I don't like this business at all," said Cleary. "I didn't come
+ to East Point to black boots and make beds. It's a fraud, that's
+ what it is."
+
+ "Please don't say that," said Sam. "They've always done it,
+ haven't they?"
+
+ "I suppose so."
+
+ "Then it must be right. Do you think General Meriden would have done it
+ if it had been wrong? We must learn obedience, mustn't we? That's a
+ soldier's first duty. We must obey, and how could we learn to obey
+ better than by being regular servants?"
+
+ "And how about obeying the rules of the post that forbid the whole
+ business, hazing and all?" asked Cleary.
+
+ Sam was nonplussed for a moment.
+
+ "I'm not a good hand at logic," he said. "Perhaps you can argue me
+ down, but I _feel_ that it's all right. I wouldn't miss this special
+ duty business for anything. It will make me a better soldier and
+ officer."
+
+ "Sam," said Cleary, who had now got intimate enough with him to use his
+ Christian name,--"Sam, you were just built for this place, but I'll be
+ hanged if I was."
+
+ The summer hastened on to its close, and the first-and third-class men
+ had a continual round of social joys. The hotel on the post was full of
+ pretty girls who doted on uniforms, and there were hops, and balls,
+ and flirtations galore. The "beasts" of the fourth class were shut out
+ from this paradise, but they could not help seeing it, and Sam used his
+ eyes with the rest of them. He had never before seen even at a distance
+ such elegance and luxury. The young women especially, in their gay
+ summer gowns, drew his attention away sometimes even from military
+ affairs. There was a weak spot in his make-up of which he had never
+ before been aware. There was one young woman in particular who caught
+ his eye, a vision of dark hair and black eyes which lived on in his
+ imagination when it had vanished from his external sight. Sam actually
+ fancied that the young woman looked at him with approving eyes, and he
+ was emboldened to look back. It was impossible for social intercourse
+ between a young lady in society and a fourth-class "beast" to go
+ further than this, and at this point their relations stood, but Sam was
+ sure that the maiden liked his looks. It so happened that her most
+ devoted admirer was none other than Cadet Saunders, who was continually
+ hovering about her. Sam was devoured with jealousy. In his low estate
+ he was even unable to find out her name for a long time. He could not
+ speak to upper-class men, and his classmates knew nothing of the gay
+ world above them. However, he discovered at last that she was a Miss
+ Hunter from the West. His informant was a waiter at the hotel whom he
+ waylaid on his way out one night, for cadets were forbidden to enter
+ the hotel.
+
+ "I suppose she has her father and mother with her?" Sam suggested.
+
+ "Oh, no, sir. She's all alone. She's been here all alone every summer
+ this six years."
+
+ "That's strange," said Sam. "Hasn't she a protector?"
+
+ "Oh, yes! she has protectors enough. You see, she's always engaged."
+
+ "Engaged!" exclaimed the unhappy youth. "How long has she been engaged,
+ and to whom?"
+
+ "Why, this time she's only been engaged two weeks," said the waiter,
+ "and it's Cadet Saunders she's engaged to; but don't worry, sir, it's
+ an old story. She's been engaged to a different man every summer for
+ six years, and at first she generally had two men a summer. She began
+ with officers of the first class, two in a year; then she fell off to
+ one in a season; then she dropped to third class; and now she has Mr.
+ Saunders because his nose isn't just right, sir, if I may say so."
+
+ Sam hardly knew what to think. The news of her engagement had plunged
+ him into despair, but the information that engagement was with her a
+ temporary matter was decidedly welcome; and even if it were couched in
+ language that could hardly be called flattering, still he was glad to
+ hear it. Sam thanked the waiter and gave him a silver coin which he
+ could ill spare from his pay, but he was satisfied that he had got his
+ money's worth.
+
+ Sam ruminated deep and long over this hard-wrung gossip. He could not
+ believe that the object of his dreams was no longer in her first
+ girlhood. There was some mistake. Then it was absurd to suppose that
+ she was reduced to the acceptance of inferior third-class men. How
+ could a waiter understand the charms of Saunders' historical nose?
+ Evidently she had selected him from the whole corps on account of his
+ exploits as an object of hazing. Sam almost wished that Saunders' nose
+ was a blemish, for it would help his chances, but candor obliged him to
+ admit that it was, on the contrary, one of his rival's strong points,
+ and he sighed once again to think that he bore no marks on his own
+ person of the hazing ordeal. All that Sam could do now was to wait. He
+ recognized the fact that no girl with self-respect would speak to a
+ "beast," and he determined to be patient until in another twelvemonth
+ he should have become a full-fledged third-class man himself. The other
+ engagements had proved ephemeral, why not that with Saunders?
+ Fortunately this new sentiment of Sam's did not interfere with his
+ military work. Instead of that it inspired him with new fervor, and he
+ now strove to be a perfect soldier not only for its own sake, but for
+ her sake too.
+
+ Meanwhile Saunders began to imagine that Sam looked at his _fiancee_ a
+ little too frequently and long, and he determined to punish him for it.
+ How was this to be done? In his deportment toward the upper-class men
+ Sam was absolutely perfect, and had begun to win golden opinions from
+ instructors and cadets alike. He always did more than was required of
+ him, and did it better than was expected. He treated all upper-class
+ men with profound respect, and he did it without effort because it came
+ natural to him. He never ventured to look them in the eye, and he
+ blushed and stammered when they addressed him. Saunders tried to find a
+ flaw in his behavior so that he might have the matter taken up by the
+ class committee, but there was no flaw to be found. Self-respect
+ prevented him from giving the real reason, his jealousy; besides, it
+ was out of the question to drag in the name of a lady.
+
+ One day Saunders, Captain Clark, Smith, and some other cadets were
+ discussing the matter of fourth-class discipline, and the merits of
+ some recent fights which had been ordered between fourth-class men
+ and their seniors for the purpose of punishing the former, when
+ Saunders tried skilfully to lead the conversation round to the case
+ of Sam Jinks.
+
+ "There are some fellows in the fourth class that need a little taking
+ down, don't you think so?" he asked.
+
+ "If there are, take them down," said Clark laconically. "Who do you
+ mean?"
+
+ "Why, there's that Jinks fellow, for instance. He struts about as if he
+ were a major-general."
+
+ "He is pretty well set up, that's a fact," said Smith, "but you can't
+ object to that. I must say he does his work for me up to the handle.
+ Look at that for a shine"; and he exhibited one of his boots to the
+ crowd.
+
+ "I wonder if he can fight?" said Saunders, changing his tactics. "He's
+ a well-built chap, and I'd like to see what he can do. How can we get
+ him to fight if we can't haul him up for misbehaving?"
+
+ "It's easy enough, if he's a gentleman," answered Clark, who was a
+ recognized authority in matters of etiquette.
+
+ "How?" asked Saunders.
+
+ "Why, all you've got to do is to insult him and then he'll have to
+ fight."
+
+ "How would you insult him?" asked Saunders eagerly.
+
+ "The best way," said Clark sententiously, "is to call him a hog in
+ public, and then, if he is a gentleman, he will be ready to fight."
+
+ "I'll do it," said Saunders. "I'm dying to see that fellow fight. Of
+ course, I don't care to fight him. We can get Starkie to do that, I
+ suppose."
+
+ "Yes," said Clark. "We'll select somebody that can handle him and teach
+ him his place, depend on that."
+
+ Saunders set out at once to carry out the program. As soon as he found
+ Jinks in a group of fourth-class men, he went up to him, and cried in a
+ loud voice,
+
+ "Jinks, you're a hog."
+
+ "Yes, sir," said Sam, saluting respectfully.
+
+ "Do you hear what I say? you're a wretched hog."
+
+ "Yes, sir."
+
+ "You're a hog, and if you're a gentleman you'll be ready to fight if
+ you're asked to."
+
+ "Yes, sir," responded Sam, as Saunders turned on his heel and walked
+ away. Somehow Clark's plan did not seem to have worked to perfection,
+ but it must be all right, and he hastened to report the affair to his
+ class committee, who promptly determined that Cadet Jinks must fight,
+ and that their classmate Starkie be requested to represent them in the
+ encounter. Starkie weighed at least thirty pounds more than Sam, was
+ considerably taller, had several inches longer reach of arm, and was a
+ practised boxer. Sam had never boxed in his life. These facts seemed to
+ the committee only to enhance the interesting character of the affair.
+
+ "We're much obliged to you, Saunders," said the chairman. "You've done
+ just right to call our attention to this matter. These beasts must be
+ taught their place. The only manly way to settle it is by having
+ Starkie fight him. You have acted like a gentleman and a soldier."
+
+ The fight was arranged for a Saturday afternoon on the familiar
+ hazing-ground near the old fort. Sam selected Cleary and another
+ classmate for his seconds, and Starkie chose Saunders and Smith.
+
+ "Jinks," said Smith in a moment of unwonted affability, "you've got a
+ chance now to distinguish yourself. I'll see that you get fair play. Of
+ course, you'll have to fight to a finish, but you must take your
+ medicine like a man."
+
+ "Did General Gramp ever have to fight here?" asked Sam, touching
+ his cap.
+
+ "Of course," said Smith, "and on that very ground, too. You don't seem
+ to have read much history."
+
+ The prospect of the fight gave Sam intense joy. His sense of glory
+ seemed to obliterate all anticipation of pain. This was his first
+ opportunity to become a real hero. When he was hazed he only had to
+ suffer; now, on the other hand, he was called upon to act. He got
+ Cleary to show him some of the simplest rules of boxing, and he
+ practised what little he could during the three intervening days. He
+ was quite determined to knock Starkie out or die in the attempt.
+
+ At four o'clock on the day indicated a crowd of first-and third-class
+ men were collected to see the great event. No fourth-class men were
+ allowed to attend except the two seconds. A ring was formed; Captain
+ Clark was chosen as referee; and the two combatants, stripped to the
+ waist, put on their hard gloves and entered the ring. Starkie eyed his
+ antagonist critically, while Sam with a heavenly smile on his face did
+ not focus his eyes at all, but seemed to be dreaming far away. When the
+ word was given, however, he dashed in and made some desperate lunges at
+ Starkie. It was easy to see in a moment that Sam could do nothing. He
+ could not even reach his opponent, his arms were so much shorter. If
+ Starkie held one of his arms out stiffly, Sam could not get near him
+ and was entirely at his mercy. The third-class man consequently set
+ himself leisurely to work at the task of punishing the unfortunate
+ Jinks. Two or three blows about the face and jaw which started the
+ blood in profusion ended the first round. Sam did not recognize the
+ inevitable result of the fight, and was anxious to begin again. He did
+ not seem to feel any pain from the blows. Two or three rounds had the
+ same result, and Sam became weaker and weaker. At last he could only go
+ into the ring and receive punishment without making an effort to avert
+ it, but he did not flinch.
+
+ "Did you ever see such a chap?" said Smith to Saunders. "Let's call the
+ thing off."
+
+ "Nonsense," said the latter. "Wait till he's knocked insensible"; and
+ the rest of the spectators expressed their agreement with him.
+
+ Just then a sound of marching was heard, and a company of cadets were
+ seen coming up the hill in command of an army officer.
+
+ "Hullo, Clark," whispered Smith. "Stop the fight. Here comes old
+ Blair, and he may report us."
+
+ "Not much," said Clark. "He'll mind his own business."
+
+ The company approached within a few yards of the ring.
+
+ "Eyes right!" shouted Captain Blair, and every man in the company
+ turned his eyes away from the assembled crowd, and Blair himself stared
+ into the woods on the other side of the path. The company had almost
+ passed out of sight when Blair's voice was heard again.
+
+ "Front!" and the danger of detection had blown over.
+
+ After this faint interruption, Sam was brought up once more, pale and
+ bloody, and hardly able to stand. Yet he smiled through the blood.
+ Starkie stood off and gave him his _coup de grace_, a full blow in the
+ solar plexus, which doubled him up quite unconscious on the ground.
+ Clark declared the fight finished, and the crowd broke up hastily,
+ leaving Cleary and his associate to get Sam away as best they could.
+ They had a pail of water, sponges and towels, and they bathed his
+ face; and after half an hour's work were rewarded by having him open
+ his eyes. In another half-hour he was able to stand, and supporting him
+ on each side, they led him slowly down to the hospital.
+
+ "What's the matter?" said the doctor as they entered the office. "Oh! I
+ see. You found him lying bleeding up by Fort Hut, didn't you?"
+
+ "Yes, sir," said Cleary.
+
+ "He must have fallen down and hit his head against a stone, don't you
+ think so?"
+
+ "Yes, sir."
+
+ "That's a dangerous place; the pine-needles make it very slippery,"
+ said the doctor, as he entered the case in his records. "Here, Mose,
+ put Cadet Jinks to bed."
+
+ This time Sam was laid up for two weeks, but he felt amply repaid for
+ this loss of time by a visit from no less a person than Cadet Smith.
+
+ "Mind you never tell any one I came here," said Smith, "and treat me
+ just the same when you come out as you did before; but I wanted to
+ tell you you're a brick. I never saw a man stand up to a dressing the
+ way you did, and that's the truth."
+
+ [Illustration: THE MANLY SPORT AT EAST POINT
+ "STARKEY STOOD OFF AND GAVE HIM HIS COUP DE GRACE"]
+
+ Tears of joy rolled down Sam's damaged face.
+
+ "I've brought you those photographs of the hazing, too," said Smith
+ with a laugh. And he produced two small prints from his pocket. Sam
+ took them with trembling hands and gazed at them with rapture. One of
+ them represented Cleary and Jinks tied to the stake, apparently about
+ to be burned to death, and Sam was delighted to see the ultra-perfect
+ position which he had assumed. The other photograph had been taken the
+ moment after Sam's immersion in the tub. He could see his hands
+ clutching the rim, while his legs were widely separated in the air.
+
+ "It might be General Meriden as well as me," he cried joyously. "Nobody
+ could tell the difference."
+
+ "That's so," said Smith.
+
+ "I shall always carry them next my heart," said Sam. "How can I thank
+ you enough? I am sorry that I can't black your boots this week."
+
+ "Oh! never mind," said Smith magnanimously, looking down at his feet.
+ "Cleary does them pretty well. You'll be out before long."
+
+ When Sam was discharged from the hospital the cadet corps had struck
+ camp and gone into barracks for the year. The summer maidens, too, had
+ fled, and East Point soon settled down to the monotony of winter work.
+ Every cadet looked forward already to the next summer: the first class
+ to graduation; the second to the glories of first-class supremacy in
+ camp and ballroom; the third class to their two months' furlough as
+ second-class men; but the fourth class had happier anticipations than
+ any of the rest, for they were to be transformed in June from "beasts"
+ into men, into real third-class cadets, with all the rights and
+ privileges of human beings. Sam's dream was also irradiated with the
+ hope of winning the affections of the fair Miss Hunter, to whom he had
+ never addressed a word, but of whose interest he felt assured. He did
+ not know where the assurance came from, but he had little fear of
+ Saunders now. Next summer Saunders would be away on leave, anyhow. Sam
+ knew, if no one else did, that he had actually fought for the hand of
+ Miss Hunter; and, tho he had been defeated, had not Smith admitted that
+ his defeat was a practical victory? He felt that he had won Miss
+ Hunter's hand in mortal combat, and he dismissed from his mind all
+ doubt on the subject.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER IV
+
+ War and Business
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+
+ Marian Hunter was, as we have already surmised, a lady of experience.
+ She was possessed, as is not uncommonly the case with young ladies at
+ East Point, of an uncontrollable passion for things military. Manhood
+ and brass buttons were with her interconvertible terms, and the idea of
+ uniting her young life to a plain civilian seemed to her nothing less
+ than shocking. The pleasures of her first two or three summers at East
+ Point and of her first half-dozen engagements had partaken of the bliss
+ of heaven. The engagements had never been broken off, they had simply
+ dissolved one into the other, and she had felt herself rising from step
+ to step in happiness. Naturally her conquests filled her with a supreme
+ confidence in her charms. She was not especially fickle by nature, but
+ she discovered that a first-class cadet, particularly if he was an
+ officer and had black feathers in his full-dress hat, was far more
+ attractive to think of than a supernumerary second lieutenant assigned
+ to duty in some Western garrison. Gradually, however, she found herself
+ less certain of winning whom she would. The competition of young girls
+ some two or three years her junior became threatening. She was obliged
+ to give up cadet officers for privates, and then first-class privates
+ for third-class privates, as the hotel waiter had explained to Sam. At
+ the time of Sam's arrival at the Point she was having more difficulty
+ than ever before, and she became thoroughly frightened. She took up
+ with Saunders because he alone came her way, but the engagement was a
+ poor makeshift, and she could not get up any enthusiasm over it. She
+ could hardly pretend to be in love with him, and she felt conscious
+ that she had a foolish prejudice in favor of straight noses. What was
+ she to do? If she was to marry at all in the army--and how could she
+ marry anywhere else?--she must soon make up her mind. Her experience
+ now stood her in good stead. Had she not seen these very first-class
+ cadet officers only three years before as mere despised "beasts," doing
+ all kinds of drudgery for their oppressors? Had she not seen her
+ _fiance_, Saunders, himself, a short twelvemonth ago, with nose intact,
+ slinking like a pariah about the post? She had learned the lesson which
+ the younger girls had yet to learn, that from these unpromising
+ chrysalises the most gorgeous butterflies emerge, and like a wise woman
+ she began to study the fourth class. Sam stood out from his fellows,
+ not indeed as supremely handsome, altho he was not bad-looking, but
+ rather as the soldier _par excellence_ of his class. Marian was an
+ expert in judging the points of a soldier, and she saw at once that he
+ was the coming man. She could not make his acquaintance or speak to
+ him, but she could smile and thus lay the foundations of success for
+ next year. It would be easy thus to reach the heart of a lonely
+ "beast." And she smiled to a purpose, and it was that smile that won
+ the untried affections of Sam Jinks.
+
+ When June at last came and the new fourth-class men began to arrive,
+ Sam felt a new life surge into his soul. For a year he had been duly
+ meek and humble, for such it behooved a fourth-class man to be. Now,
+ however, he began to entertain a measureless pride, such being the
+ proper frame of mind of a man in the upper classes. He watched the
+ hotel sedulously to learn when Miss Hunter had made her appearance. One
+ morning he saw her, and she smiled more distinctly than ever. He knew
+ that his felicity was only a short way off. He must wait two weeks
+ until the graduation ball and the departure of the old first class;
+ then he could undertake to supplant the absent Saunders, who probably
+ knew the history of Miss Hunter and was not unprepared for his fate.
+
+ Meanwhile great events had occurred, and thrown East Point into a state
+ of excitement. The country was at war. Congress had determined to free
+ the downtrodden inhabitants of the Cubapine Islands from the tyranny of
+ the ancient Castalian monarchy. A call for volunteers had been issued,
+ and the graduating cadets were to be hurried to the seat of war. During
+ this agitation news arrived of a great naval victory. The mighty
+ Castalian fleet had been annihilated with great loss of life, while the
+ conquerors had not lost a man and had scarcely interrupted their
+ breakfast in order to secure this crushing triumph. It was in the midst
+ of such reports as these that the susceptible hearts of Sam Jinks and
+ Marian Hunter came together. The graduating class had gone, and Sam had
+ for two days been a full third-class man. For the first time he had
+ occupied the front rank at dress-parade, and seen clearly the officer
+ in command, the adjutant flitting about magnificently, the band
+ parading up and down and turning itself inside out around the towering
+ drum-major, the line of spectators behind, the bright faces and gay
+ parasols, and among them the black eyes of Marian looking unmistakably
+ at him. When at the end of the parade the company officers marched up
+ to salute and the companies were dismissed, Sam saw a member of the new
+ first class talking to her. He was now on an equality with all the
+ cadets, and he boldly advanced and asked for an introduction. At last
+ he had her hand in his, and as he pressed it rather harder than the
+ occasion warranted, he felt his pressure returned. Sam's fate was
+ sealed. He made no formal proposal, it was unnecessary. The engagement
+ was a thing taken for granted. It was a novel experience for Marian as
+ well as for Sam, as now for the first time she meant business. It is
+ impossible in cold ink to reproduce the ecstasies of those many hours
+ on Flirtation Walk, during which Sam opened his heart. For the first
+ time in his life he had found a person as deeply interested in military
+ matters as he was, and as much in love with military glory. He told her
+ his whole history, including the lead soldiers and the Boys' Brigade.
+ He laid bare to her his ambition to be a perfect soldier--a hero. He
+ told her how disappointed he was to find no other cadet so completely
+ wrapped up in his profession as he was, and how in her alone he had now
+ realized his ideal not only of womanhood, but also of appreciation of
+ the soldier's career. He rehearsed the thrilling experiences of hazing,
+ and went over the fight in detail and told her how Saunders had brought
+ it about.
+
+ "The horrid wretch!" she exclaimed, throwing her arms about his neck
+ and kissing him. "I'm so glad they didn't break your nose."
+
+ "Are you really?" he asked, and as he read the truth in her eyes a
+ weight was rolled from his soul.
+
+ He showed her the little lead officer with the plume, which he always
+ carried as a mascot in his breast-pocket, and also the two hazing
+ photographs which kept it company. She was delighted with them all.
+
+ "Oh! you will be a hero," she cried. "I am sure of it, and what a time
+ we shall have of it, you dear thing!"
+
+ With his spare time thus occupied Sam did not see much of Cleary,
+ who now shared another tent. One afternoon late in September he was
+ on the way to the gate of the hotel grounds where he was accustomed
+ to wait until Miss Hunter came out and joined him, when Cleary called
+ him aside.
+
+ "Sam," he said, "I've got something of importance to say to you. Can't
+ you come with me now?"
+
+ "Can't," said Sam. "Miss Hunter's waiting for me."
+
+ "Well, then, beg off to-morrow afternoon. I must have a long talk
+ with you."
+
+ "All right," answered Sam reluctantly. "If I must, I must, I suppose."
+
+ The next day found Sam and Cleary walking alone in the woods engaged in
+ deep conversation.
+
+ "Sam, what would you say to going to the war?" asked Cleary.
+
+ "I'd give anything to go!" exclaimed Sam.
+
+ "You wouldn't want to stay on account of that girl of yours?"
+
+ "No, indeed; she would be the first to want me to go."
+
+ "Then why don't you go?"
+
+ "How can I?" said Sam. "We've got three more years here. That ties us
+ down for that time, and by the time that's over the war will be over
+ too."
+
+ "That's what I think, and I'm sick of this place anyhow. I'm going to
+ resign."
+
+ "Resign!" cried Sam. "Resign and give up your career!"
+
+ "Not altogether, old man. Don't get so excited. What's the use of
+ staying here? We'll get sent off to some out-of-the-way post when we
+ graduate, and perhaps we'll get to be captains before our hair is
+ white, and perhaps we shan't; and then if a war breaks out we'll have
+ volunteers young enough to be our sons made brigadiers over our heads.
+ Aren't they doing it every day? I'm not going to waste my life that
+ way. I want to go to the war now, and I mean to go as a newspaper
+ correspondent."
+
+ "Oh, Cleary!" exclaimed Sam reproachfully.
+
+ "Tut, tut, Sam. You're not up to date. We've got no field-marshals in
+ our army and the newspaper correspondents take their place. Their names
+ are better known than the generals, and they advertise each other and
+ get a big share of the glory; and then they can always decently step
+ aside when they've got enough. They needn't stay on the fighting-line,
+ and that's a consideration. No, I'm sick of ordinary soldiering, but
+ I'm willing to be a field-marshal. My father has an interest in the
+ _Metropolitan Daily Lyre_, and I've written to him for an appointment
+ as correspondent in the Cubapines. What I've learned here will help me
+ a lot. But I want you to go with me."
+
+ "Me? Go with you? Do you think I'd be a newspaper correspondent?"
+
+ "No, of course not. It never entered my head. But why don't you get a
+ commission in the volunteers from your uncle? He can get just what he
+ wants, and they're talking of him for Secretary of War. All you've got
+ to do is to resign here and apply for a commission as colonel. Then
+ you'll probably land as a major, or a captain at any rate. By the time
+ the war is over, you'll be a general, if I know you, and then you can
+ be appointed captain in the regular army on retiring from the
+ volunteers, when our class is just graduating. You're just made for a
+ successful soldier. You've got the ambition and the courage, and you've
+ got just the brains for a soldier. You don't want to remain a
+ lieutenant until you are fifty, do you?"
+
+ There was great force in Cleary's argument, and Sam knew it. East
+ Pointers were scandalized at the manner in which outsiders were
+ jumped into important commands in the field, and when engagements
+ took place the volunteers came in for all the praise, while the
+ regulars who did almost all the work were hardly mentioned.
+
+ "I'll think it over," said Sam. "I'll speak to Marian about it. It's very
+ kind of you to think of me."
+
+ "Not a bit," said Cleary. "I'm looking out for myself. If you go as a
+ major and I go as correspondent, I'll just freeze to you and make a
+ hero of you whether you will or not. I'll make your fortune, and you'll
+ make mine. I'll see that you get a chance, and I know that you'll take
+ it if you get it. You're just cut out for it. Now get permission from
+ the young woman and we'll call it a go."
+
+ The following afternoon Sam walked over the same ground, but this time
+ it was Marian who accompanied him. She was enthusiastic over Cleary's
+ proposition.
+
+ "Just think of it! You'll come back a hero and a general, and I don't
+ know what not, and we'll get married, and the President will come to
+ the wedding; and then we'll have our wedding tour up here, and the
+ corps will turn out and fire a salute, and we'll be the biggest people
+ at East Point. Won't it be splendid?"
+
+ "Perhaps, dear, I'll never come back at all. Who knows? I may get
+ killed."
+
+ "Oh, Sam! if you did, how proud I'd be of it. I'd wear black for a
+ whole year, and they'd put up a monument to you over there in the
+ cemetery and have a grand funeral, and I'd be in the first carriage,
+ and the flag would be draped, and the band would play the funeral
+ march. Oh, dear! how grand it would be, and how all the girls would
+ envy me!"
+
+ Tears came to her eyes as she spoke.
+
+ "Just think of being the _fiancee_ of a hero who died for his country!
+ Oh, Sam, Sam!"
+
+ Sam took her in his arms.
+
+ "You're my own brave soldier's wife," he said. "I'd be almost ready to
+ die for you, but if I don't, I'll come back and marry you. I'll write
+ to uncle for a commission to-night, and ask his advice about resigning
+ here either now or later. It hardly seems true that I may really go to
+ a real war." And his tears fell and mingled with hers.
+
+ Sam's uncle fell in readily with Cleary's scheme. He was a politician
+ and a man of the world, and he saw what an advantage it would be for
+ his nephew to seek promotion in the volunteers, and how much a close
+ friend among the war correspondents could help him. Furthermore, he had
+ heard of Sam's excellent record at East Point and was disposed to lend
+ him what aid could be derived from his influence with the
+ Administration. When Sam's father learned that his brother approved of
+ the project, he offered no objection, and a few weeks after Cleary had
+ broached the subject, both of the young men sent in their resignations,
+ and these were accepted. Cleary left at once for the metropolis to
+ perfect his plans, while Sam remained for a few days at the Point to
+ bid farewell to his betrothed. His uncle had at once sent in his name
+ to the War Department as a candidate for colonel of volunteers with
+ letters of recommendation from the most influential men at the Capital.
+ While Sam was still at East Point he saw in the daily paper that his
+ name had been sent in to the Senate as captain of volunteers with a
+ long list of others, and almost immediately he received a telegram
+ from his uncle announcing his confirmation without question. On the
+ same morning came a letter from Cleary telling him to come at once to
+ town and make the final arrangements before receiving orders to join
+ his regiment. We shall draw a veil over the last interview between Sam
+ and Marian. She was proficient in the art of saying farewell, and
+ nothing was lacking on this occasion to contribute to its romantic
+ effect. They parted in tears, but they were tears of hope and joy.
+
+ Cleary met Sam at the station in the city and took him to a modest
+ hotel.
+
+ "It's going to be bigger thing than I thought," he said, as they sat
+ down together for a good talk in the hotel lobby, after Sam had made
+ himself at home in his room. "I'm going to run a whole combination.
+ I've got in with a man who's a real genius. His name's Jonas. He
+ represents the brewers' trust, and he's going out to start saloons with
+ chattel mortgages on the fixtures. It's a big thing by itself. But then
+ besides that he's got orders to apply for street-railroad franchises
+ wherever he can get them, and he is going to start agencies to sell
+ typewriters and bicycles and some patent medicines, and I don't know
+ what else. You see he wanted to represent the Consolidated Press as a
+ sort of business agent, and _The Daily Lyre_ belongs to the
+ Consolidated, and that's the way I came across him. The fact is he
+ represents pretty much all the capital in the country. It's a big
+ combination. I'll boom him and you, and you'll help us, and then we can
+ get in on the ground floor with him in anything we like. It's a good
+ outlook, isn't it, hey? Have you got your commission yet?"
+
+ "No," said Sam, "not yet. My uncle wants me to come and spend a few
+ days with him at Slowburgh to make my acquaintance, and the commission
+ will go there. I'm to be in the 200th Volunteer Infantry. I don't quite
+ understand all your plans, but I hope I'll get a chance at real
+ fighting for our country, and I should like to be a great soldier. You
+ know that, Cleary."
+
+ "Yes, old man, I know it, and you will be, if courage and newspapers
+ can do it. I'm sorry you didn't get a colonelcy, but captain isn't
+ bad, and we'll skip you up to general in no time. You've always wanted
+ to be a hero, haven't you? Well, the first chance I get I'll nickname
+ you 'Hero' Jinks, and it'll stick, I'll answer for it!"
+
+ "Oh! thank you," said Sam.
+
+ "Now, good-by. I'll come in for you to-morrow and take you in to see
+ our war editor. He's a daisy. So long."
+
+ When on the morrow Sam was ushered into the den of the war editor, he
+ was surprised to see what a shabby room it was. The great man was
+ sitting at a desk which was almost hidden under piles of papers,
+ letters, telegrams, and memoranda. The chairs in the room were equally
+ encumbered, and he had to empty the contents of two of them on the
+ floor before Sam and Cleary could sit down.
+
+ "Ah, Captain Jinks, glad to see you!" he said.
+
+ Sam beamed with delight. It was the first time that he had heard his
+ new title--a title, in fact, to which he had as yet no right.
+
+ "I suppose Mr. Cleary has explained to you," the editor continued, "what
+ our designs are. Editing isn't what it used to be. It has become a very
+ complicated business. In old times we took the news as it came along,
+ and that was all that was expected of us; but if we tried that way of
+ doing things now, we'd have to shut up shop in a week. When we need
+ news nowadays we simply make it. I don't mean that we invent news--that
+ doesn't pay in the long run; people learn your game and you lose in the
+ end. No, I mean that we create the events that make the news. We were
+ running short of news last year, that's the whole truth of it; and so
+ we got up this war. It's been a complete success. We've quadrupled our
+ circulation, and it's doubling every month. We're well ahead of the
+ other papers because it's known as our war, and of course we are
+ expected to know more about it than anybody else."
+
+ "But I thought the war was to free the oppressed Cubapinos--an outburst
+ of popular sympathy with the downtrodden sufferers from Castalian
+ misrule," interposed Sam, flushing. "That's the reason why I applied
+ for a commission, and I am ready to pour out my last drop of blood for
+ my country."
+
+ "Of course you are, my dear captain; of course you are. And your ideas
+ of the cause of the war, as a military man, are quite correct. Indeed,
+ if you will read my editorial of yesterday you will see the same ideas
+ developed at some length."
+
+ He pressed an electric button on his desk, and a clerk entered.
+
+ "Get me a copy of yesterday's paper."
+
+ In a moment it was brought; the editor opened it, marked an article
+ with a dash of his blue pencil, and handed it to Sam.
+
+ "There," said he, "put that in your pocket and read it. I am sure that
+ you will agree with every word of it. Your understanding of the
+ situation does great credit to your insight. That is, if I may use the
+ term, the esoteric side of the question. It is only on the external and
+ material side that it is really a _Daily Lyre's_ war. There's really
+ no contradiction, none at all, as you see."
+
+ "Oh! none at all," said Sam, with a sigh of relief. "I never quite
+ understood it before, and you make it all so clear!"
+
+ "Now you will be prepared by what I have said to comprehend that it's
+ just in this line of creating the news beforehand that we want to make
+ use of you, and at the same time it will be the making of you, do you
+ see?"
+
+ "Not quite," said Sam. "How do you mean?"
+
+ "Why, we understand that you're a most promising military man and that
+ you intend to distinguish yourself. Suppose you do, what good will it
+ do, if nobody ever hears of it? Doesn't your idea of heroism include a
+ certain degree of appreciation?"
+
+ "Yes."
+
+ "Of publicity, I may say?"
+
+ Sam nodded assent.
+
+ "Or even in plain newspaper talk, of advertising?"
+
+ "I shouldn't quite like to be advertised," said Sam uneasily.
+
+ "That's a rather blunt word, I confess; but when you do some fine
+ exploit, you wouldn't mind seeing it printed in full in the papers that
+ the people at home read, would you?"
+
+ "No-o-o, not exactly; but then I should only want you to tell the truth
+ about it."
+
+ "Of course; I know that, but there are lots of ways of telling the
+ truth. We might put it in at the bottom of an inside page and give only
+ a stick to it, or we might let it have the whole first page here, with
+ your portrait at the top and headlines like that"; and he showed him a
+ title in letters six inches long. "You'd prefer that, wouldn't you?"
+
+ "I'm afraid I would," said Sam.
+
+ "Well, if you didn't you'd be a blamed fool, that's all I've got to
+ say, and we wouldn't care to bother about you."
+
+ "I'm sure it's very good of you to take me up," said Sam. "Why do you
+ select me instead of one of the great generals at the front?"
+
+ "Why, don't you see? You wouldn't make a practical newspaper man. The
+ people are half tired of the names of the generals already. They want
+ some new names. It's our business to provide them. Then all the other
+ newspapers are on the track of the generals. We must have a little hero
+ of our own. When General Laughter or General Notice do anything, all
+ the press of the country have got hold of them. They've got their
+ photographs in every possible attitude and their biographies down to
+ the last detail, and pictures of their birthplaces and of their
+ families and ancestors, and all the rest of it. We simply can't get
+ ahead of them, and people are beginning to think that it's not our war
+ after all. When we begin to boom you, they'll find out that we've got a
+ mortgage on it yet. We'll have the stuff all ready here to fire off,
+ and no one else will have a word. It'll be the greatest beat yet,
+ unless Mr. Cleary is mistaken in you and you are not going to
+ distinguish yourself."
+
+ "I don't think he is mistaken," said Sam solemnly. "I do intend to
+ distinguish myself if I get the chance."
+
+ "And we'll see that you have the chance. It's a big game we're playing,
+ but we hold the cards and we don't often lose. You're not the only
+ card, to be sure. We've got a lot of men at the front now representing
+ us. Several of our correspondents have made a hit already, and some of
+ them have made themselves more famous than the generals! Ha, ha! Our
+ head editor is going out next month, and of course we'll see to it that
+ he does wonders. Hullo! there's Jonas now. Why, this is a lucky
+ meeting. Here, Jonas. You know Cleary. Mr. Jonas, Captain Jinks. I'll
+ be blessed if here isn't the whole combination."
+
+ Mr. Jonas, who had come into the room unannounced, and perched himself
+ on the corner of a table, was a rather short man with a brown beard and
+ eye-glasses, and wore his hat on the back of his head.
+
+ "Well, Jonas, how are things going?" asked the editor.
+
+ "A 1. Couldn't be better. I've just been down at Skinner's----"
+
+ "Skinner & Company, one of the biggest financial houses in the street,"
+ the editor explained to Sam.
+
+ "And they've agreed to go the whole job. First of all, it'll be chiefly
+ trade. I showed them the contracts for boots and hats for the army, and
+ they were tickled to death. They'll let us have as much as we want on
+ them. I didn't have the embalmed-beef contract with me--it smells too
+ bad to carry round in my pocket, hee-hee!--but I explained it to them,
+ and it's even better. They're quite satisfied."
+
+ "And how is the beer business going?"
+
+ "Oh! that's a success already. Look at this item," and he pulled a
+ newspaper from his pocket and showed it to the editor.
+
+ "One hundred more saloons in Havilla than there were at this time last
+ year! Can that be possible?" ejaculated the latter.
+
+ "Yes, and I'm behind fifty-eight of them. That agent I sent out ahead
+ is a jewel."
+
+ "Have you been up at the Bible Society?"
+
+ "Yes, and I've got special terms on a hundred thousand Testaments in
+ Castalian and the native languages. That will awaken interest, you see,
+ and then we'll follow it up with five hundred thousand in English, and
+ it will do no end of good in pushing the language. It will be made the
+ official language soon, anyway. What a blessing it will be to those
+ poor creatures who speak languages that nobody can understand!"
+
+ "How is the rifle deal coming out?"
+
+ "Only so-so. The Government will take about three-quarters of the lot.
+ The rest we'll have to unload on the Cubapinos."
+
+ "What!" exclaimed Sam, "aren't they fighting against us now?"
+
+ "Oh! we don't sell them direct of course," added Jonas, "but we can't
+ alter the laws of trade, can we? And they require that things get into
+ the hands of the people who'll pay the most for them, hey?"
+
+ "Naturally," said the editor. "Captain Jinks has not studied political
+ economy. It's all a matter of supply and demand."
+
+ "I'm ashamed to say I haven't," said Sam. "It must be very interesting,
+ and I'm much obliged to you for telling me about it."
+
+ "I suppose it's too early to do anything definite about concessions for
+ trolleys and gas and electric-lighting plants," said the editor.
+
+ "Not a bit of it. That's what I went to see Skinner about to-day. I'm
+ sounding some of the chief natives already, and our people there are
+ all right. Skinner's lawyers are at work at the charters, and I'll
+ take them out with me. We can put them through as soon as we annex
+ the islands."
+
+ "But we promised not to annex them!" cried Sam.
+
+ The editor and Jonas looked knowingly at each other.
+
+ "The captain is not a diplomatist, you see," said the former. "As for
+ that matter, a soldier oughtn't to be. You understand, Captain, that
+ all promises are made subject to the proviso that we are able to carry
+ them out."
+
+ "Certainly."
+
+ "Now it's perfectly clear that we can never fulfil this promise. It is
+ our destiny to stay there. It would be flying in the face of Providence
+ and doing the greatest injury to the natives to abandon them. They
+ would fly at each other's throats the moment we left them alone."
+
+ "They haven't flown at each other's throats where we have left them
+ alone," mused Sam aloud.
+
+ "I didn't say they had, but that they would," explained the editor.
+
+ "Oh! I see," said Sam, and he relapsed into silence.
+
+ "Talking of electric lights," continued Jonas, "I've got a book here
+ full of all sorts of electric things that we'll have to introduce
+ there. There's the electrocution chair; look at that design. They
+ garrote people in the most barbarous manner out there now. We'll
+ civilize them, if we get a chance!"
+
+ "Perhaps they won't have the money to buy all your things," remarked
+ Cleary, who had been a silent and interested spectator of the
+ interview.
+
+ "Yes," said Jonas, "we may have trouble with the poorest tribes. We
+ must make them want things, that's all. The best way to begin is to tax
+ them. I've got a plan ready for a hut-tax of five dollars a year.
+ That's little enough, I should think, but some of them never see money
+ and they'll have to work to get it. That will make them work the
+ coal-and iron-mines. Skinner has his eye on these, too. When the
+ natives once begin to earn money, they'll soon want more and then
+ they'll spend it on us."
+
+ "But the Government there will be too poor to take up great public
+ expenditures for a long time yet," said Cleary.
+
+ "Don't be too sure of that. They haven't even got a national debt.
+ That's one of the first things we'll provide for. They're a most
+ primitive people. Just think of their existing up to the present time
+ without a national debt! They're mere savages."
+
+ "Well," said Cleary, rising, "I think we've taken enough of your
+ valuable time and we must be off."
+
+ "Wait a moment," said the editor. "Have you explained all that I told
+ you to the captain?"
+
+ "Not yet," answered Cleary, "but I'll do it now on the way to his
+ hotel. He is going to leave town to-day, and he may be ordered to sail
+ any day now. I will try to go on the same ship with him."
+
+ "Perhaps I can manage it, too," said Jonas, as he shook hands with the
+ two friends, "if I can finish up all these arrangements. I must be on
+ the ground there as soon as I can."
+
+ As Sam and Cleary left the room the editor and Jonas settled down to a
+ confidential conversation, and there were smiles upon their lips as
+ they began talking.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER V
+
+ Slowburgh
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+
+ While Sam accepted the explanations of the editor and Jonas as
+ expressions of wisdom from men who had had a far wider experience than
+ his, he had some faint misgivings as to some of the business
+ enterprises in which his new friends were embarked, and he hinted as
+ much to Cleary.
+
+ "Some of those things do sound rather strange," answered Cleary, as
+ they walked away, "but you must look at the world in a broad way. Is
+ our civilization better than that of the Cubapinos?"
+
+ "Undoubtedly."
+
+ "Well, then, we must be conferring a favor upon them by giving it to
+ them. We can't slice it up and give them only the plums. That would be
+ ridiculous. They must take us for better and worse. In fact, I think we
+ should be guilty of hypocrisy if we pretended to be better than we are.
+ Suppose we gave them a better civilization than we've got, shouldn't we
+ be open to the charge of misrepresentation?"
+
+ "That's true," said Sam. "I didn't think of that.
+
+ "Yes," Cleary went on; "at first I had some doubts about that saloon
+ business particularly, but the more you think of it, the more you see
+ that it's our duty to introduce them there. It's all a part of our
+ civilization."
+
+ "So it is," said Sam. "And then people have always done things that
+ way, haven't they?"
+
+ "Yes, of course they have."
+
+ "Then it must be all right. What right have we to criticize the doings
+ of people so much wiser than we are? I think you are quite right. As a
+ correspondent you ought to be satisfied that you are doing the right
+ thing. To me as a soldier it's a matter of no importance anyway,
+ because a soldier only does what he's told, but you as a civilian
+ have to think, I suppose, and I'm glad you're satisfied and can make
+ such a conclusive case of it. What was it that the editor wanted you
+ to tell me?"
+
+ "Oh! yes. I came near forgetting. You see what a lot they're going to
+ do for us; now we must help them all we can. They want you to leave
+ behind with them all the material about yourself that you can get
+ together. You must get photographed at Slowburgh in a lot of different
+ positions, and in your cadet uniform and your volunteer rig when you
+ get it. Then you must let them have all your earlier photos if you can.
+ 'Hero Jinks as an infant in arms,' 'Hero Jinks in his baby-carriage,'
+ 'Hero Jinks as a schoolboy'--what a fine series it would make! You
+ know what I mean. Then you must write your biography and your opinions
+ about things in general, and give the addresses of all your friends and
+ relations so that they can all be interviewed when the time comes.
+ You'll do it, won't you? It's the up-to-date way of doing things, and
+ it's the only way to be a military success."
+
+ "If it's the proper way of doing things I'll do it," said Sam.
+
+ "That's a good fellow! I'll send you a list of questions to answer and
+ coach you as well as I can. I'm dying to get off and have this thing
+ started. Isn't Jonas great? He's got just my ideas, only bigger. You
+ see, he explained to me that in this country trusts have grown up with
+ great difficulty, and it was hard work to establish the benefits which
+ they produce for the public. They were fought at every step. But in the
+ Cubapines we have a clean field, and by getting the Government monopoly
+ whenever we want it, we can found one big trust and do ever so much
+ good. I half wish I were a Cubapino, they're going to be benefited
+ so, and without doing anything to deserve it either. Some people
+ are born lucky."
+
+ "I can't quite follow all those business plans," said Sam. "My head
+ isn't trained to it; but I'm glad we're going to do good there, and
+ if I can do something great to bring it about, it will give me real
+ happiness."
+
+ "It will, old man, it will. I'm sure of it," cried Cleary, as he took
+ his leave of Sam in front of the hotel. "Let me know what steamer
+ you're going by as soon as you get orders, and I'll try to manage it
+ to get a passage on her too. They often carry newspaper men on our
+ transports."
+
+ On the following day Sam went to visit his uncle at Slowburgh, a small
+ sea-port of some four thousand inhabitants lying several miles away
+ from the railroad. The journey in the train occupied six hours or more,
+ and Sam spent the time in learning the Castalian language in a handbook
+ he had bought in town. He had already taken lessons in the language at
+ East Point and was beginning to be fairly proficient. He alighted at
+ the nearest station to Slowburgh and entered the rather shabby omnibus
+ which was standing waiting. Sam felt lonely. There was nothing military
+ about the station and no uniform in sight. He no longer wore a uniform
+ himself, and the landscape was painfully civilian. Finally the horses
+ started and the 'bus moved slowly up the road. Sam was impatient. His
+ fellow countrymen were risking their lives thousands of miles away, and
+ here he was, creeping along a country road in the disguise of a private
+ citizen, far away from the post of duty and danger. He looked with
+ disgust at the plowmen in the fields busily engaged in preparing the
+ soil for next year's grain.
+
+ "What a mean, poor-spirited lot," he thought. "Here they are, following
+ their wretched plows without a thought of the brave soldiers who are
+ defending their country and themselves so many leagues away. It is the
+ soldier, suffering from hunger and fever and falling on the battlefield
+ in the agony of death, who makes it possible for these fellows to spend
+ their days in pleasant exercise in the fields. The soldier bears
+ civilization on his back, he supports all the rest, he is the pedestal
+ which bears without complaint the civilian as an idle ornament. The
+ soldier, in short, is the real man, the only perfect product of
+ creation."
+
+ And his heart was filled with thankfulness that he had selected the
+ career of a soldier and that there never could be any doubt of his
+ usefulness to the world. The only other occupants of the omnibus were
+ two men--one of them a commercial traveler, and the other an aged
+ resident of Slowburgh who had been at the county town for the day, as
+ Sam gathered from their conversation.
+
+ "I don't suppose that the war has caused much excitement at Slowburgh?"
+ asked Sam at last, introducing the subject uppermost in his mind.
+
+ "It ain't jest what it was when I went to the war," said the old man;
+ "but there is a deal o' talk about it, and all the young men are
+ wanting to go."
+
+ "Are they?" cried Sam, in delight. "And did you serve in the war? How
+ very interesting! Did you offer your life for your country without hope
+ of reward?"
+
+ "That's just what I did, young man, and if you doubt it, here's my
+ pension that I drew to-day in town, twelve dollars a month, and they've
+ paid it now these thirty-four years."
+
+ "That's a pretty soft thing," said the commercial man. "Better'n
+ selling fountain-pens in the backwoods."
+
+ "A soft thing!" cried the old man, "I ought to have twice as much.
+ There's Abe Tucker gets fifteen dollars because he caught cold on
+ picket duty, and I get a beggarly twelve."
+
+ "Were you severely wounded?" asked Sam.
+
+ "Well, no-o-o, not exactly, tho I might just as well 'a' been. I was
+ down bad with the measles. This is an ongrateful country. Here it is
+ only thirty-five years after the war, and they're only paying a hundred
+ and forty millions a year to only a million pensioners. It's a beggarly
+ shame!"
+
+ "Were there that many men in the war?" asked the traveler.
+
+ "Pretty near it, I reckon. But p'r'aps in thirty-five years there'd be
+ a natural increase. Think of it, a million men throwing away their
+ lives for a nothing like that! I jest tell our young fellers that
+ they'd better stay at home. Why, we've had to fight for what we've got.
+ You wouldn't think it, but we've had to pass around the hat, and shove
+ it hard under the nose of Congress, too, just as if we were beggars and
+ frauds, and as if we hadn't sacrificed everything for our country!"
+
+ "It's an outrage," cried Sam sympathetically. "But I hope you won't
+ keep the young men from going. I'm going soon, and perhaps the country
+ will be more generous in future."
+
+ "Take my advice, young man, and whenever anything happens to you while
+ you're away, take down the names of the witnesses and keep their
+ affidavits. Then you'll be all ready to get your pension as soon as you
+ come back. It took me three years to straighten out mine. Then I got
+ the back pay, of course, but I ought to have had it before. I've got a
+ claim in now for eight dollars more a month running all the way back.
+ It amounts to over three thousand dollars, and I ought to have it."
+
+ "Was that for the measles, too?" asked the stranger.
+
+ The old man glared at his interrogator, but did not deign to reply.
+
+ "Our Congressman, old Jinks, has my claim," he said, turning to Sam.
+ "But he doesn't seem to be able to do anything with it."
+
+ "He's my uncle," said Sam, fearing that he might hear something against
+ his worthy relative.
+
+ "So you're George Jinks' nephew, are you? Are you goin' to be a
+ captain? Do tell! I read about it in the Slowburgh _Herald_ last week.
+ I'm real glad to see you. You're the first officer I've seen in ten
+ years except the recruiting officer last week."
+
+ "Did they have a recruiting officer here, in Slowburgh?" asked Sam.
+
+ "Yes, they did, and there was thirteen fellers wanted to go, but he
+ only took five of 'em, and they hain't gone yet. The rest was too short
+ or too fat or too thin or something."
+
+ "Didn't any more men want to go than that?"
+
+ "No," said the old man. "They all want to wear soldier-clothes, but
+ they don't all want to go fighting. They've got up a militia battalion
+ for them now, and 'most everybody in town's got a uniform. I hadn't
+ seen a uniform in the county before in I don't know how long--except
+ firemen, I should say."
+
+ "I'm so glad they've got them now," cried Sam. "Doesn't it improve the
+ looks of the place? It's so much more homelike and-d-d glorious, don't
+ you think so?"
+
+ The old man had no opportunity to reply, as the 'bus now drew up at the
+ front door of the principal hotel. The commercial traveler got out
+ first and went into the house; the old man followed, and turning to Sam
+ as he passed him, he said with a glance at the vanishing stranger:
+
+ "He's a copperhead, that feller."
+
+ He went on toward the bar-room door, but called back as he went:
+
+ "If you get lonesome over at Jinks', come in here in the evening. Ask
+ for me; my name's Reddy."
+
+ Sam did not get out of the omnibus, but told the driver to take him to
+ Congressman Jinks'; and on they went, first to the right and then to
+ the left along the wide and gently winding streets, which would have
+ been well shaded with maples if the yellow leaves had not already begun
+ to fall. They drove in at last through a gate in a wooden fence and
+ round a semi-circular lawn to the front of a comfortable frame house,
+ and in a few moments he was received with open arms by his relations.
+
+ Congressman Jinks was a widower and had several children, all of whom,
+ however, were away at school except his eldest daughter, a young lady
+ of Sam's age, and his youngest, a girl of seven. The former, Mary, was
+ a tall damsel with fair hair and a decidedly attractive manner. Mr.
+ Jinks reminded Sam of his father with the added elegancies of many
+ years' life at the Capital.
+
+ "Well, Samuel, I am glad to see you at last. We know all about you, and
+ we're expecting great things from you," he cried out in a hearty voice.
+ Sam felt at home at once.
+
+ "Come, Mary, show your cousin his room. Here, give me your grip. Yes,
+ you must let me carry it. Now get ready for supper as soon as you can.
+ It's all ready whenever you are."
+
+ After supper they all sat round a wood fire, for it was a little chilly
+ in the evening now. Mr. Jinks had his little girl in his lap, and they
+ talked over family history and the events of the day. Sam asked who Mr.
+ Reddy was whom he had met in the train.
+
+ "Oh! you mean old Reddy. Was he drunk? No? That's odd."
+
+ "He'd been away for the day drawing his pension," said Sam.
+
+ "Of course," said Mr. Jinks. "I might have known it. That is his one
+ sober day in the month. He sobers up to go to town, but he'll make up
+ for lost time to-night. That twelve dollars will last just a week, and
+ it all goes into the bar-room till. He's been that way ever since I was
+ a boy, tho they say he was a steady enough young fellow before he went
+ to the war. It's a curious coincidence, but there are two or three old
+ rum-soaked war veterans like that hanging round every tavern in the
+ country, and I'd like to know how much pension money goes that way.
+ It's a great system tho, that pension system. I see something of it in
+ Whoppington when I'm attending Congress. It distributes the money of
+ the country and circulates it among the people. I like to see the
+ amount increase every year. It's a healthy sign. I'm trying to get some
+ more for Reddy. It helps the county just that much. Swan, the hotel
+ man, spends it here. I believe in protecting home industries and
+ fostering our home market. I wish you could have heard my speech on the
+ war-tax bill--it covered that point. My, how this war is costing, tho!
+ A million dollars a day! But it's well worth it. The more money we
+ spend and the higher the taxes, the more circulation there is. You
+ ought to see how things are booming at Whoppington. I'm sorry you
+ couldn't come to see me there, but I had to be here this week looking
+ after election matters in my district. In Whoppington all the hotels
+ are full of contractors and men looking for commissions in the army,
+ and promoters and investors, all with an eye to the Cubapines. You can
+ just see how the war has brought prosperity!"
+
+ "I should have liked to see Whoppington very much," said Sam, "but I
+ suppose I must wait till I come back. It must be very different from
+ other cities. You must feel there as if you were at the center of
+ things--at the very mainspring of all our life, I mean."
+
+ "You've hit the nail on the head," said his uncle. "Whoppington holds
+ up all the rest of the country. There is the Government that makes
+ everything go. There's no business there to speak of; no manufacturing,
+ no agriculture in the country round--nothing to distract your attention
+ but the power of the Administration that lies behind all the rest.
+ Just think what this country would be without Whoppington! Just imagine
+ the capital city sinking into the ground and what would we all do? Even
+ here at Slowburgh what would be left for us?"
+
+ "Wouldn't we have breakfast to-morrow morning, papa?" asked the little
+ girl in his lap.
+
+ "Er-er-well, perhaps we might have breakfast----"
+
+ "Wouldn't we have clothes, papa?"
+
+ "Perhaps we might have--but no, we couldn't either; it's the tariff
+ that gives us our clothes by keeping all foreign clothes out of the
+ country, and then we shouldn't have er-er----"
+
+ "It would upset the post-office," suggested Sam, coming to the rescue.
+
+ "Yes, to be sure, that is what I meant. It would cause a serious delay
+ in the mails, that's certain."
+
+ "And then there would be no soldiers," added Sam.
+
+ "Of course. How stupid of me to overlook that. How would you like to
+ see no soldiers in the street?"
+
+ "I shouldn't like it at all, papa."
+
+ "Yes, my dear boy," he proceeded, turning to Sam, "I would not want to
+ have it repeated in my district, but I confess that I am always
+ homesick for Whoppington when I am here. That's the real world there.
+ There's the State Department where they manage all the foreign affairs
+ of the world. What could we do without foreign affairs? And the
+ Agricultural Department. How could we get in our crops without it? And
+ the Labor Department. Every man who does a day's work depends on the
+ Labor Department for his living, we may say. And the----"
+
+ "The War Department," said Sam.
+
+ "Yes, the War Department. We depend on that for our wars. Perhaps at
+ first that does not seem to be so useful, but----"
+
+ "Oh! but, Uncle George, surely it is the most useful of all. What could
+ we do without wars. Just fancy a country without wars!"
+
+ "I don't know but you're right, Sam."
+
+ "And then the Treasury Department depends a good deal on the War
+ Department," said Sam, in triumph, "for without the War Department and
+ the army it wouldn't have any pensions to pay."
+
+ "That's so."
+
+ "Papa," said Mary Jinks, who had modestly taken no part in a
+ conversation whose wisdom was clearly beyond her comprehension--"papa,
+ why didn't everybody go to the war like Mr. Reddy, and then they'd all
+ have pensions and nobody'd have to work."
+
+ "It's their own fault if they didn't," answered her father; "and if
+ some people are overworked they have only their own selves to thank for
+ it. I have no patience with the complaints of these socialists and
+ anarchists that the poor are getting poorer and the number of
+ unemployed increasing. In a country with pensions and war taxes and a
+ tariff there's no excuse for poverty at all."
+
+ "Yes," said Sam, "they could all enlist if they wanted to."
+
+ The following day was spent in driving about the country. Mr. Jinks was
+ obliged to visit the various centers in his Congressional district, and
+ he took Sam with him on one of these expeditions. The country was
+ beautiful in the clear, cold autumn air. The mountains stood out blue
+ on the horizon, and the trees were brilliant with red and yellow
+ leaves. Sam, however, had no eyes for these things. He was eager to
+ hear about the militia company, and was pleased to see several pairs of
+ military trousers, altho they were made to do duty with civilian coats.
+ Such for him were the incidents of the day. After supper in the evening
+ he bethought him of old Reddy's invitation to the hotel bar-room, and
+ thinking that he might learn more about the local military situation
+ there, he excused himself and hied him thither. He found the room
+ crowded with the wiseacres of the place, the Bohemian, drinking element
+ perhaps predominating. The room was so full of smoke that, as Sam
+ entered, he could hardly distinguish its contents, but he saw a
+ confused mass of men in wooden arm-chairs tipped at every conceivable
+ angle, surrounding a tall round stove which was heated white hot. The
+ room was intensely warm and apparently totally wanting in ventilation.
+
+ "Here's my friend, Captain Jinks," said a husky voice which Sam
+ recognized as that of old Reddy. "Here, take this chair near the fire."
+
+ Sam accepted the offered chair, altho he would have preferred a
+ situation a little less torrid.
+
+ "Gentlemen, this is Captain Jinks," said the old man, determined to get
+ all the credit he could from his acquaintance with Sam. "Captain, this
+ is my friend, Mr. Jackson."
+
+ Mr. Jackson was a tall, thin, narrow-chested man with no shoulders, a
+ rounded back, and a gray, tobacco-stained mustache. His face was
+ covered with pimples, and a huge quid of tobacco was concealed under
+ his cheek. He was sitting on a chair tipped back rather beyond the
+ danger-point, and his feet rested on the rim which projected from the
+ stove half-way up. He made no effort to rise, but slowly extended a
+ grimy, clammy hand which Sam pressed with some hesitation.
+
+ "Glad to make your acquaintance, Captain," he drawled in a half-cracked
+ voice that suggested damaged lungs and vocal organs. "Shake hands with
+ Mr. Tucker."
+
+ Mr. Tucker, a little, old, red-faced man on the other side of the
+ stove, advanced and went through the ceremony suggested.
+
+ "We were just a-talking about them Cubapinos," explained Reddy. "The
+ idee of them fellers a-pitching into us after all we've done for 'em.
+ It's outrageous. They're only monkeys anyway, and they ought to be
+ shot, every mother's son on 'em. Haven't we freed 'em from the cruel
+ Castalians that they've been hating so for three hundred years?"
+
+ "They seem to be hating us pretty well just now," said a man in the
+ corner, whose voice sounded familiar to Sam. He turned and recognized
+ the commercial traveler of the day before.
+
+ "They're welcome to hate us," answered Jackson, "and when it comes to
+ a matter of hating I shouldn't think much of us if we couldn't make 'em
+ hate us as much in a year as the Castalians could in three hundred.
+ They're a blamed slow lot and we ain't. That's all there is of it. What
+ do you think, Captain?"
+
+ "I fear," said Sam, "that they don't quite understand the great
+ blessings we're conferring on them."
+
+ "What blessings?" asked the drummer.
+
+ "Why," said Sam, "liberty and independence--no, I don't mean
+ independence exactly, but liberty and freedom."
+
+ "Then why don't we leave them alone instead of fighting them?"
+
+ "What an idee!" exclaimed Tucker. "They don't know what liberty is, and
+ we must teach 'em if we have to blow their brains out."
+
+ "You're too hard on 'em, Tucker," drawled Mr. Jackson. "We mustn't
+ expect too much from pore savages who live in a country so hot that
+ they can't progress like we do." Here Mr. Jackson took off his hat and
+ wiped the beads of perspiration from his brow with a red bandanna
+ handkerchief. "Don't expect too much from cannibals that have their
+ brains half roasted by the tropical sun."
+
+ "That's a fact!" said some one in the throng.
+
+ "Yes," said Jackson, crossing his legs on a level well above his head,
+ "them pore critters need our civilization, that's what they need," and
+ he dexterously squirted a mouthful of tobacco juice on the white-hot
+ stove, where it sizzled and gradually evaporated. "We must make real
+ men of 'em. We must give 'em our strength and vigor and intelligence.
+ They're a dirty lot of lazy beggars, that's the long and short of it,
+ and we must turn 'em into gentlemen like us!"
+
+ A general murmur of approval followed this outburst.
+
+ "I hear," said Sam, anxious to get some definite information as to the
+ warriors of the town, "I hear that several Slowburghers are going to
+ the war."
+
+ "Yes," said Tucker, while Jackson after his effort settled down into a
+ semi-comatose state, "six of our boys are a-going. There's Davy Black,
+ he drives the fastest horse in these parts, and Tom Slade. Where is
+ Tom? He's generally here. They'll miss him here at the hotel, and Jim
+ Thomson who used to be bartender over at Bloodgood's, and the two
+ Thatchers--they're cousins--that makes five."
+
+ "The village ought to be glad they are going to represent her at the
+ front," said Sam.
+
+ "From all I can hear," said the commercial man, "I think they are."
+
+ "Naturally," cried Sam, "it will reflect great glory on the place. You
+ ought to be proud of them."
+
+ "It'll help the insurance business here," said a young man who had not
+ yet spoken.
+
+ "How is that?" asked Sam. "I don't exactly see."
+
+ "Well, it's this way. You see I'm in the insurance business and I can't
+ write a policy on a barn in this township, there's been so many burned;
+ and while I don't want to say nothing against anybody, we think maybe
+ they won't burn so much when the Thatchers clear out."
+
+ "Nothin' ain't ever been proved against 'em," said Tucker.
+
+ "That's true," said the young man, "but perhaps there might have been
+ if they'd stayed. They say that Squire Jones was going to have Josh
+ Thatcher arrested next week for his barn, but he's agreed to let up if
+ he'd go to the Cubapines. Maybe that isn't true, but they say so."
+
+ "I venture to say that it is a mistake," said Sam, who had been much
+ pained by the conversation. "Young men who are so patriotic in the hour
+ of need must be men of high character."
+
+ "Maybe they are and maybe they aren't," replied the insurance agent,
+ "but old Mrs. Crane told me she was going to buy chickens again next
+ week for her chicken-yard. There was so many stolen last year that she
+ gave up keeping them, but next week she's beginning again, and next
+ week the Thatchers are going away. It's a coincidence, anyhow."
+
+ "Oh, boys will be boys," said Reddy. "When they get a good pension
+ they'll be just as respectable as you or me. Here comes Tom Slade now,
+ and Josh Thatcher, too."
+
+ The door had opened, and through the smoke Sam descried two young men,
+ one a slight wiry fellow, the other a large, broad-shouldered,
+ fair-haired man with a dull expression of the eye.
+
+ "Who says 'drinks all around'?" cried the former. "Everybody's blowing
+ us off now."
+
+ "Here," said Jackson, waking up, "I'll do it, hanged if I don't. You
+ fellows are a-goin' to civilize the Cubapinos, and you deserve all the
+ liquor you can carry."
+
+ He got up and approached the bar and the crowd followed him, and soon
+ every one was supplied with some kind of beverage.
+
+ "Here's to Thatcher and Slade! May they represent Slowburgh honorably
+ in the Cubapines and show 'em what Slowburghers are like," said
+ Jackson, elevating his iced cocktail.
+
+ The health was heartily drunk.
+
+ "And here is to that distinguished officer, Captain Jinks. Long may he
+ wave!" cried old Reddy.
+
+ "Speech, speech!" exclaimed the convivial crowd.
+
+ "Gentlemen," responded Sam, "I am a soldier and not an orator, but I am
+ proud to have my name coupled with those of your honored fellow
+ townsmen. It is a sign of the greatness of our country that men of just
+ the same character are in all quarters of this mighty republic
+ answering their country's call. Soon we shall have the very pick of our
+ youth collected on the shores of these ungrateful islanders who have
+ turned against their best friends, and these misguided people will see
+ for themselves the fruits of our civilization as we see it, in the
+ persons of our soldiers. Permit me in responding to your flattering
+ toast to propose the names of Mr. Reddy and Mr. Tucker as
+ representatives of an older generation of patriots whose example we are
+ happy to have before us for our guidance."
+
+ This, Sam's first speech, was received with great applause, and then
+ Josh Thatcher proposed three cheers for Captain Jinks, which were
+ given with a will. The only perverse spirit was that of the commercial
+ traveler, who had sat in the corner reading an old copy of the
+ Slowburgh _Herald_, and now on hearing the cheers, took a candle and
+ went upstairs to bed.
+
+ "That man's no good," said Reddy with a shake of his head. While the
+ whole company were expressing their concurrence with this sentiment,
+ Sam bade them good-night and took his leave.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VI
+
+ Off for the Cubapines
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+
+ By the next morning's mail Sam's commission arrived, and with it orders
+ to report at once at the city of St. Kisco, whence a transport was
+ about to sail on a date which gave Sam hardly time to catch it. He must
+ hurry at once to town and get his new uniforms for which he had been
+ fitted the week before, and then proceed by the fastest trains on the
+ long journey to the distant port without even paying his parents a
+ farewell visit. He found Cleary busily engaged in making his final
+ arrangements, and persuaded him to cut them short and travel with him.
+ Sam had hardly time to take breath from the moment of his departure
+ from Slowburgh to the evening on which he and Cleary at last sat down
+ in their sleeping-car. His friend heaved a deep sigh.
+
+ "Well, here we are actually off and I haven't got anything to do for a
+ change. This is what I call comfort."
+
+ "Yes," said Sam, "but I wish we were in the Cubapines. This inaction is
+ terrible while so much is at stake. It's a consolation to know that I
+ am going to help to save the country, but it is tantalizing to wait so
+ long. Then in your own way you're going to help the country too," he
+ added, thinking that he might seem to Cleary to be monopolizing the
+ honors.
+
+ "I'll help it by helping you," laughed Cleary. "I've got another
+ contract for you. You see the magazines are worth working. They handle
+ the news after the newspapers are through with it, and they don't
+ interfere with each other. So I got permission to tackle them from
+ _The Lyre_, and I saw the editor of _Scribblers' Magazine_ yesterday
+ and it's a go, if things come out as I expect."
+
+ "What do you mean?" asked Sam.
+
+ "Why, you are to write articles for them, a regular series, and the
+ price is to be fixed on a sliding scale according to your celebrity at
+ the time of each publication. It won't be less than a hundred dollars a
+ page, and may run up to a thousand. It wouldn't be fair to fix the
+ price ahead. If the articles run say six months, the last article might
+ be worth ten times as much as the first."
+
+ "Yes, it might be better written," said Sam.
+
+ "Oh, I don't mean that. But your name might be more of an ad. by
+ that time."
+
+ "I've never written anything to print in my life," said Sam, "and I'm
+ not sure I can."
+
+ "That doesn't make any difference. I'll write them for you. You might
+ be too modest anyhow. I can't think of a good name for the series. It
+ ought to be 'The Autobiography of a Hero,' or 'A Modern Washington in
+ the Cubapines,' or something like that. What do you think?"
+
+ "I'm sure I don't know," said Sam. "I must leave that to you. They
+ sound to me rather too flattering, but if you are sure that is the way
+ those things are always done, I won't make any objection. You might ask
+ Mr. Jonas. Where is he?"
+
+ "He's going on next week. He's the greatest fellow I ever saw.
+ Everything he touches turns to gold. He's got his grip on everything in
+ sight on those blessed islands already. He's scarcely started, and he
+ could sell out his interests there for a cold million to-day. It's
+ going to be a big company to grab everything. He's called it the
+ 'Benevolent Assimilation Company, Limited'; rather a good name, I
+ think, tho perhaps 'Unlimited' would be nearer the truth."
+
+ "Yes," said Sam. "It shows our true purposes. I hope the Cubapinos will
+ rejoice when they hear the name."
+
+ "Perhaps they won't. There's no counting on those people. I'm sick of
+ them before I've seen them. I'm just going to tell what a lot of
+ skins they are when I begin writing for _The Lyre_. By the way, did you
+ have your photographs taken at Slowburgh?"
+
+ [Illustration: A BLOOD BROTHERHOOD
+ "A BIG COMPANY TO GRAB EVERYTHING ... THE 'BENEVOLENT ASSIMILATION
+ COMPANY, LIMITED'"]
+
+ "No," said Sam, "I forgot all about it, but I can write home about the
+ old ones, and I've got one in cadet uniform taken at East Point."
+
+ "Well, we mustn't forget to have you taken at St. Kisco, and we can
+ mail the photos to _The Lyre_, but you must be careful not to overlook
+ a thing like that again. The people will want to know what the hero who
+ saved the country looked like."
+
+ "Even if I don't do anything very wonderful," said Sam, "and I hope I
+ shall, I shall be taking part in a great work, and doing my share of
+ civilizing and Christianizing a barbarous country. They have no
+ conception of our civilized and refined manners, of the sway of law and
+ order, of all our civilized customs, the result of centuries of
+ improvement and effort."
+
+ Cleary picked up a newspaper to read.
+
+ "What's that other newspaper lying there?" asked Sam.
+
+ "That's _The Evening Star_; do you want it?" and he handed it to him.
+
+ "Good Lord! what's that frightful picture?" said Cleary, as Sam opened
+ the paper. "Oh, I see; it's that lynching yesterday. Why, it's from a
+ snap-shot; that's what I call enterprise! There's the darkey tied to
+ the stake, and the flames are just up to his waist. My! how he squirms.
+ It's fearful, isn't it? And look at the crowd! There are small boys
+ bringing wood, and women and girls looking on, and, upon my word, a
+ baby in arms, too! I know that square very well. I've often been there.
+ That's the First Presbyterian Church there behind the stake. Rather a
+ handsome building," and Cleary turned back to his own paper, while Sam
+ settled down in his corner to read how the leading citizens gathered
+ bones and charred flesh as mementoes and took them home to their
+ children. No one could have guessed what he was reading from his
+ expression, for his face spoke of nothing but a guileless conscience
+ and a contented heart.
+
+ One day at St. Kisco gave just time enough for the photographs, and
+ most of the day was devoted to them. Sam was taken in twenty poses--in
+ the act of leading his troops in a breach, giving the order to fire,
+ charging bayonets himself with a musket supposed to have been taken
+ from a dead foe, standing with his arms folded and his cap pulled over
+ his eyes in the trenches, and waving his cap on a bastion in the moment
+ of triumph. Cleary lay down so that his friend might be pictured with
+ his foot upon his prostrate form. The photographer was one who made a
+ specialty of such work, and was connected with a cinematograph company.
+
+ "If you have good luck, sir, and become famous," he said, "as your
+ friend thinks you will, we'll fight your battles over again over there
+ in the vacant lot; and then we'll work these in, and you'll soon be in
+ every variety show in the country."
+
+ "But I may be mounted on horseback," said Sam.
+
+ "That's so," said Cleary. "Can't you get a horse somewhere and take him
+ on that?"
+
+ "We never do that, sir. Here's a saddle. Just sit on it across this
+ chair, and when the time comes we'll work it in all right. We'll have a
+ real horse over in the lot." And thus Sam was taken straddling a chair.
+
+ They left orders to send copies of the photographs to Homeville,
+ Slowburgh, and to Miss Hunter who was still at East Point, and the
+ remainder to _The Lyre_. That very evening they boarded the transport
+ and at daybreak sailed away over the great ocean. The ship was filled
+ by various drafts for different regiments and men-of-war. Sam's
+ regiment was already at the seat of war, but there were several
+ captains and lieutenants assigned to it on board, as well as thirty or
+ forty men. Sam felt entirely comfortable again for the first time since
+ his resignation at East Point. He was in his element, the military
+ world, once more. Everything was ruled by drum, fife, and bugle. He
+ found the same feeling of intense patriotism again, which civilians can
+ not quite attain to, however they may make the attempt. The relations
+ between some of the officers seemed to Sam somewhat strange. The
+ highest naval officer on board, a captain, was not on speaking terms
+ with the highest army officer, a brigadier-general of volunteers. This
+ breach apparently set the fashion, for all the way down, through both
+ arms of the service, there were jealousies and quarrels. There was one
+ great subject of dispute, the respective merits of the two admirals who
+ had overcome the Castalian fleet at Havilla. Some ascribed the victory
+ to the one and some to the other, but to take one side was to put an
+ end to all friendships on the other.
+
+ "See here, Sam," said Cleary, not long after they had been out of sight
+ of land, "who are you for, Admiral Hercules or Admiral Slewey? We can't
+ keep on the fence, that's evident, and if we get down on different
+ sides we can't be friends, and that might upset all our plans, not to
+ speak of the Benevolent Assimilation Trust."
+
+ "The fact is," said Sam, "that I don't know anything about it. They're
+ both admirals, and they both must be right."
+
+ "Nobody knows anything about it, but we must make up our minds all the
+ same. My idea is that Hercules is going to come out ahead; and as long
+ as one seems as good as the other in other respects, I move that we go
+ for Hercules."
+
+ "Very well," said Sam, "if you say so. He was in command, anyway, and
+ more likely to be right."
+
+ So Sam and Cleary allied themselves with the Hercules party, which was
+ in the majority. They became quite intimate with the naval officers who
+ belonged to this faction, and saw more of them than of the army men.
+ Sam was much interested in learning about the profession which kept
+ alive at sea the same traditions which the army preserved on land. For
+ the first few days of the voyage the rolling of the ship made him feel
+ a little sick, and he concealed his failings as well as he could and
+ kept to himself; but he proved to be on the whole a good sailor. He was
+ particularly pleased to learn that on a man-of-war the captain takes
+ his meals alone, and that only on invitation can an inferior officer
+ sit down at table with him. This appealed to him as an admirable way of
+ maintaining discipline and respect. The fact that all the naval men he
+ met had their arms and bodies more or less tattooed also aroused his
+ admiration. He inquired of the common soldiers if they ever indulged in
+ the same artistic luxury, and found out to his delight that a few of
+ them did.
+
+ "It's strange," he remarked to Cleary, "that tattooing is universal in
+ the navy and comparatively rare in the army. I rather think the habit
+ must have been common to both services, and somehow we have nearly lost
+ it. It's a fine thing. It marks a man with noble symbols and mottoes,
+ and commits him to an honorable life, indelibly I may say."
+
+ "It's a little like branding a mule," said Cleary.
+
+ "Yes," said Sam; "the brand shows who owns the mule, and the tattooing
+ shows a man belongs to his country."
+
+ "And if he's shipwrecked and hasn't any picture-books or newspapers
+ with him, he can find all he wants on his own skin," said Cleary.
+
+ "Joke as you please, I think it's a patriotic custom."
+
+ "Why don't you get tattooed then?" asked Cleary.
+
+ "Do you think there's anybody on board can do it?" cried Sam
+ enthusiastically.
+
+ "Of course. Any of those blue-jackets can tell you whom to go to."
+
+ Sam was off before Cleary had finished his sentence. Sure enough, he
+ found a boatswain who was renowned as an artist, and without further
+ parley he delivered himself into his hands. Cleary was consulted on the
+ choice of designs, and the result was pronounced by all the
+ connoisseurs on board--and there were many--to be a masterpiece. On his
+ chest was a huge spread-eagle with a bunch of arrows, bayonets, and
+ lightning-flashes in his claws. Cannon belched forth on each side, and
+ the whole was flanked by a sailor on one side and a soldier on the
+ other. His arms were tattooed with various small designs of crossed
+ swords, flags, mottoes, the title of his regiment, and other such
+ devices. The boatswain now thought that his task was complete, but Sam
+ insisted on having his back decorated as well, altho this was rather
+ unusual. The general stock of subjects had been exhausted, and Cleary
+ suggested that a representation of Sam himself, striking off the
+ fetters of a Cubapino, would be most appropriate. After discussing a
+ number of other suggestions offered by various friends, this one was
+ finally adopted and successfully carried out. The operation was not
+ altogether painless and produced a good deal of irritation of the skin,
+ but it served to pass Sam's time and allay his impatience to be in the
+ field, and Cleary became so much interested that he consented to allow
+ the artist to tattoo a few modest designs of cannon and crossed
+ bayonets on his own arms. Sam's comparatively high rank among officers
+ who were, many of them, his juniors in rank but his seniors in years,
+ might have made his position at first a difficult one had it not been
+ for his entire single-mindedness and loyalty to his country. If the
+ powers that be had made him a captain, it was right that he should be a
+ captain. He obeyed implicitly in taking his seat near the head of the
+ table, as he would have obeyed if he had been ordered to the foot, and
+ he expected others to accept what came from above as he did.
+
+ One afternoon a report sprang up that land was in sight, and soon every
+ eye was strained in one direction. Sam's eyesight was particularly
+ good, and he was one of the first to detect the white gleam of a
+ lighthouse. Soon the coast-line was distinct, and it was learned that
+ they would arrive on the next day. By daybreak Sam was on deck,
+ studying as well as he could this new land of heroism and adventure.
+ Cleary joined him later, and the two friends watched the strange
+ tropical shore with its palm-groves and occasional villages, and a
+ range of mountains beyond. A bay opened before them, and the ship
+ turned in, passing near an old fortification.
+
+ "This is just where our fleet went in," said Cleary, examining a
+ folding map which he held in his hand. "They passed along there single
+ file," and he pointed out the passage.
+
+ "Wasn't it glorious! Just think of sailing straight on, no matter how
+ many torpedoes there were!" exclaimed Sam.
+
+ "They knew blamed well there weren't any torpedoes," answered Cleary.
+
+ "How could they have known? They hadn't ever been here before? There
+ might perfectly well have been a lot of them directly under them."
+
+ "Yes," said Cleary, "they might have grown up from the bottom of the
+ sea. All sorts of queer things grow here. There might have been a sort
+ of coral torpedoes."
+
+ "Cleary, you're getting more and more cynical every day. I wish you'd
+ be more reasonable. What's the matter with you?"
+
+ "It must be the newspaper business. And then you see I don't wear a
+ uniform either. That makes a lot of difference."
+
+ In another hour they passed the scene of the great naval battle. They
+ could just distinguish the hulks of the wrecks well in shore.
+
+ "And there's Havilla!" cried Cleary.
+
+ And Havilla it was. They entered the great Oriental port with its
+ crowded shipping. Small native boats were darting about between
+ merchantmen and men-of-war. The low native houses, the fine buildings
+ of the Castalian city, the palms, the Eastern costumes--all made a
+ scene not to be forgotten. An officer of the 200th Volunteer Infantry
+ came on board before the steamer had come to her moorings, with orders
+ for Captain Jinks to report at once at their headquarters in one of the
+ public buildings of the city. A lieutenant was left in charge of the
+ 200th's detail, and Sam hastened ashore in a native boat and Cleary
+ went with him. They had no difficulty in finding their way, and Sam was
+ soon reporting to his chief, Colonel Booth, an elderly captain of the
+ regular army, who had been placed at the head of this volunteer
+ regiment. The colonel received him rather gruffly, and turned him over
+ to one of his captains, telling him they would be quartered together.
+ The colonel was inclined to pay no attention to Cleary, but when the
+ latter mentioned the Benevolent Assimilation Company, Limited, he
+ suddenly changed his tone and expressed great delight at meeting him.
+ Sam and Cleary went off together with the captain, whose name was
+ Foster, to visit the lodgings assigned by the colonel. They were in a
+ building near by, which had been used as barracks by the Castalian
+ army. A number of rooms had been fitted up for the use of officers, and
+ Sam and Foster were to occupy one of these, an arrangement which
+ promised to be most comfortable. Five companies of their regiment were
+ quartered in the same building.
+
+ Cleary asked Foster's advice as to lodgings for himself, and Foster
+ took him off with him to find a place, while Sam was left to unpack his
+ luggage which had just arrived from the ship. They agreed to meet again
+ in the same room at nine o'clock in the evening.
+
+ It was somewhat after the hour fixed that the three men came together.
+ Foster brought out a bottle of whisky from a cupboard and put it on
+ the table by the water-jug, and then offered cigars. Sam had never
+ smoked before, but he felt that a soldier ought to smoke, and he
+ accepted the weed, and soon they were all seated, smoking and drinking,
+ and engaged in a lively conversation. Foster had been in the Cubapines
+ since the arrival of the first troops, and it was a treat for both of
+ his interlocutors to hear all the news at first hand from a participant
+ in the events.
+
+ "How were things when you got here?" asked Cleary.
+
+ "Well, it was like this," answered Foster. "Nothing had happened then
+ except the destruction of the fleet. Our fleet commanded the water of
+ course, and the niggers had closed up round the city on land. The
+ Castalians didn't have anything but the city, and when we came we
+ wanted to take the city."
+
+ "Was Gomaldo in command of the Cubapino army then?" asked Sam.
+
+ "Yes, he has been from the beginning. He's a bad lot."
+
+ "How is that?" asked Cleary.
+
+ "Why, he has interfered with us all along as much as he could, just as
+ if we didn't own the place."
+
+ "That's just what I thought," said Cleary. "The copperheads at home say
+ we treated him as an ally, but of course that's rubbish."
+
+ "Of course," said Foster, "we never treated him as an ally. We only
+ brought him here and made use of him, supplying him with some arms and
+ letting him take charge of some of our prisoners. We couldn't tell him
+ that we intended to keep the islands, because we were using him and
+ couldn't get on without him. He's an ignorant fellow and hasn't the
+ first idea of the behavior of an officer and a gentleman."
+
+ "Well, how did you take Havilla?" asked Sam.
+
+ "Oh, it was this way. The Castalians couldn't hold out because these
+ monkeys had the place so tight that they couldn't get any provisions
+ in. So they sent secret word to us that they would let us in on a
+ certain day if we would keep the natives out. We agreed to this, of
+ course. Then the Castalian general said that we must have some kind of
+ a battle or he would be afraid to go home, and we cooked up a nice
+ little battle. When the men got into it, however, it turned out to be
+ quite a skirmish, and a number were killed on both sides. Then they
+ surrendered and we went in and put a guard at the gates, and wouldn't
+ let the niggers in. You wouldn't believe it, but they actually kicked
+ at it. They're an unreasonable, sulky lot of beggars."
+
+ "Then what happened after that?" asked Sam.
+
+ "Oh, after that we sent the Castalians home and the Cubapinos moved
+ back their lines a little, and we agreed to a sort of neutral zone and
+ a line beyond which we weren't to go."
+
+ "What was it that started the fighting between us and them?" said Sam.
+
+ "It's a little mixed up. I was at the theater that night, and in the
+ middle of the play we heard firing, and all of us rushed off and found
+ everything in motion, and it grew into a regular fight. We made them
+ move back, and before long the firing ceased. I tried to find out the
+ next day how it began. The fact is, the day before, General Notice had
+ ordered the 68th to move forward about half a mile, and they did so.
+ The Cubapinos objected and insisted on crossing the new picket-line.
+ That evening an officer of theirs walked across it and was shot by the
+ sentinel. That started it."
+
+ "Was the regiment moved across the line fixed on their side of the
+ neutral zone?" said Cleary.
+
+ "Oh, yes. But that was all right. Don't we own the whole place? And the
+ regiment was only obeying orders."
+
+ "I wonder why the general gave the orders?" asked Cleary, musing as he
+ looked into the smoke which he was puffing forth.
+
+ "They say it was because he had what he called 'overmastering political
+ reasons.' That is, there was the army bill up in Congress and it had to
+ go through, and he was given the tip that some fighting would help it,
+ and he took the hint. It was good statesmanship and generalship, too.
+ All subordinate things must bend to the great general interests of the
+ country. It was a good move, for it settled the business. Gomaldo sent
+ in the next day and tried to patch up a truce, but Notice wouldn't see
+ his messengers. He told them they must surrender unconditionally. It
+ was fine, soldierly conduct. He's a brick."
+
+ "What has he gone home for?" asked Sam.
+
+ "Why, he'd conquered them. Why shouldn't he go home? They're giving him
+ a grand reception at home, and I'm glad to see it."
+
+ "But he says that he has pacified the islands and brought the war to a
+ close!"
+
+ "So he did, in the military sense. He couldn't tell that the scamps
+ wouldn't submit at once. It wasn't his fault that they showed such
+ unreasonable bitterness and obstinacy."
+
+ "How much territory do we hold now?" said Sam.
+
+ "We've got the city and a strip along the bay where the fleet is; about
+ five miles back, I should say. But it's hardly safe to wander off far
+ at night."
+
+ "What's going to happen next?" asked Cleary. "I want to send home some
+ news to _The Lyre_ as soon as I can, and I want my friend Jinks here to
+ have a chance to distinguish himself--and you too," he added hastily.
+
+ "We'll probably get to work by next week, the way things look now.
+ General Laughter is rather slow, but he means business. Gomaldo is
+ getting a big army together, and we may have to take the offensive to
+ get ahead of him. Now I suppose we ought to turn in. How would you like
+ to take a look at Havilla to-morrow and see the place where the naval
+ battle was? We can get off duty in the afternoon. All right, let's meet
+ at regimental headquarters at three."
+
+ Cleary bade them good-night, and Sam, who was beginning to feel
+ uncomfortable effects from his cigar, was quite ready to go to bed.
+
+ Sam's morning was occupied in familiarizing himself with the regimental
+ routine in barracks. The building enclosed a large court which was
+ used for drills and guard-mounting parade, and he did not have occasion
+ to leave it until he went to join his friends at headquarters. Promptly
+ at three o'clock the three men sallied forth. Sam was struck with the
+ magnificence of the principal buildings, including the palace and the
+ cathedral.
+
+ "It's a fine city, isn't it?" he said.
+
+ "Yes, and the women are not bad-looking," said Cleary.
+
+ "The people don't quite look like savages," said Sam.
+
+ "You can't judge of them by these," said Foster. "Wait till you meet
+ some negritos in the country."
+
+ "How large a part of the population are they?" said Sam.
+
+ "About one-fortieth, I think, but where principle is involved you can't
+ go by numbers."
+
+ "Of course not," was Sam's reply. "What building is that," he added,
+ "with our flag over it and the nicely dressed young women in the
+ windows?"
+
+ "That?" said Foster, laughing; "oh, that's the Young Ladies' Home. We
+ have to license the place. It's the only way to keep the army in
+ condition. Why, we've got about fifty per cent infected now."
+
+ "Really?" cried Sam. "How our poor fellows are called upon to suffer
+ for these ungrateful Cubapinos! Still they can feel that they are
+ suffering for their country, too. That's a consolation."
+
+ "There's more consolation than that," said Foster, "for we're spreading
+ the thing like wildfire among the natives. We'll come out ahead."
+
+ "I wish, tho, that they wouldn't fly Old Gory over the house,"
+ said Sam.
+
+ "There was some talk of taking it down, but you see it's the policy of
+ the Administration never to haul down the flag when it has once been
+ raised. It presents rather a problem, you see."
+
+ "It may wear out in time," said Sam, "altho it looks painfully new.
+ What will they do then?"
+
+ "I confess I don't know," said Foster. "They'll cross the bridge when
+ they reach it."
+
+ "A good many of the shop signs are in English already," remarked Sam.
+ "That's a good beginning."
+
+ "Yes," said Cleary. "But they seem to be almost all saloons, that's
+ queer."
+
+ "So they are," said Sam.
+
+ "There are some pretty good ones, too," said Foster. "Just stop in here
+ for a moment and take a drink."
+
+ They entered a drinking-place and found a bar planned on the familiar
+ lines of home.
+
+ "Look at this list of our drinks," said Foster proudly. "Count 'em;
+ there are eighty-two."
+
+ Sam examined the list, which was printed and framed and hanging on the
+ wall, and they each took a glass of beer, standing. There were about a
+ dozen men in the place, most of them soldiers.
+
+ "Do they do a big business in these places?" asked Sam.
+
+ "You'll think so when you see the drunken soldiers in the streets in
+ the evening," answered Foster. "We're planting our institutions here,
+ I tell you."
+
+ "Not only saloons," said Sam. "There's the post-office, for instance."
+
+ "They had a post-office before," said Cleary.
+
+ "But ours is surely better," rejoined Sam.
+
+ "It's better than it was," said Foster, "now that they've put the new
+ postmaster in jail. They say he's bagged $75,000."
+
+ "It's a good example of the way we treat embezzlers," cried Sam. "It
+ ought to be a lesson to these Cubapinos. He'll be sent home to be
+ tried. They ought to do that with every one caught robbing the mails in
+ any way."
+
+ "I'm afraid if they did the force would be pretty well crippled," said
+ Foster.
+
+ "Then there's the custom house," said Sam. "They must be delighted to
+ get rid of those Castalian swindlers."
+
+ "A merchant here told me," said Foster, "that they have to pay just as
+ often now, but that they have to pay bigger sums."
+
+ "Of course," cried Cleary, "you wouldn't expect our people to bother
+ with the little bribes the Castalians were after. We live on a larger
+ scale. It will do these natives good to open their eyes to a real
+ nation. I'm sorry any of them steal, but if they do, let 'em take a lot
+ and be done with it."
+
+ "We must remember that these people are only civilians," said Sam.
+ "What can we expect of them?"
+
+ "Our commissary and quartermaster departments aren't much better, tho,"
+ said Foster. "Somebody's getting rich, to judge from the prices we pay
+ and the stuff we get. The meat stinks, and the boots are made with glue
+ instead of stitches and nails."
+
+ "Then they must have been appointed from civil life," cried Sam.
+
+ "Come, Sam," said Cleary, "I'm a civilian now, and I'm not going to
+ have you crow over us. How about Captain Peters, who was the pet of
+ Whoppington and cleaned out the Deer Harbor fund?"
+
+ Sam walked on in silence.
+
+ "See here," said Foster, "I'm tired of going on foot. Let's take a cab.
+ Here, you fellow!"
+
+ A two-wheeled wagon with an awning, drawn by a small, shaggy horse,
+ drew up before them.
+
+ "There's a gentleman in it," said Sam. "We must wait for another."
+
+ "Nonsense!" cried Foster in a loud voice. "You evidently are a new
+ arrival. It's only one of those monkeys. Here you, sir, get out of
+ that!"
+
+ The native expostulated a little, shrugged his shoulders, and did as he
+ was told, and the three men got in.
+
+ "I'm afraid he didn't like it," said Sam.
+
+ "Didn't like it? What of it?" said Foster. "Whatever we do in uniform
+ is official business, and we've got to impress these fellows with our
+ power and make them respect us."
+
+ They drove now through some narrow streets, past various native cafes
+ half open to the air, where the _habitues_ were beginning to collect,
+ through a picturesque gate in the old city wall, and out on the
+ Boulevard, which was now filled with people driving and walking. It was
+ a gay scene, and reminded Cleary of some of the cities of the
+ Mediterranean which he had visited.
+
+ "They're not quite as much like Apaches as I expected," said Sam, and
+ neither of his friends ventured to respond.
+
+ "We haven't got time to go out to where the ships are sunk," said
+ Foster, "but if we drive up that hill and get out and walk up a little
+ farther we can see them in the distance. I've got my glasses with me."
+
+ In a few minutes they were at this point of vantage in a sort of
+ unfrequented public park, and the three men took turns in looking at
+ the distant wrecks through the captain's field-glass.
+
+ "It was a great victory, wasn't it?" said Sam.
+
+ "Well, perhaps it was," answered Foster; "but the fact is, that those
+ old boats could hardly float and their guns couldn't reach our ships.
+ We just took our time and blew them up and set them on fire, and the
+ crews were roasted or drowned, that was all there was of it. I don't
+ think much of naval men anyway, to tell the truth. They don't compare
+ with the army. They're always running their ships aground if there's
+ any ground to run into."
+
+ "Anyhow, if it had been a strong fleet we'd have wiped it out just the
+ same, wouldn't we?" said Sam.
+
+ "Undoubtedly," said Foster. "It's a pity, tho, that the fight didn't
+ test our naval armaments better. It didn't prove anything. If we'd only
+ used our torpedo-boats, and they'd got out their torpedo-boat
+ destroyers, and then we'd had some torpedo-boat-destroyer destroyers,
+ and----"
+
+ "Yes," interrupted Cleary, "it is a pity."
+
+ "But it wasn't Admiral Hercules's fault," said Sam. "His glory ought to
+ be just as great."
+
+ "Hercules! Hercules!" shouted Foster. "What had Hercules to do with it?
+ He's a first-class fraud. It was Slewey who won the battle. You don't
+ mean to tell me that you are Hercules men?"
+
+ Sam and Cleary tried in vain to explain their position, but Foster
+ would not listen to them. The breach evidently was irreparable. He
+ magnanimously turned over the cab to them, and went back to the city in
+ another vehicle.
+
+ "Well, this is strange," said Sam. "I liked everything about Captain
+ Foster, but I don't understand this."
+
+ "Oh, you will tho, old man," said Cleary. "I've found out this morning
+ that it's the same thing all through the army and navy here. They're
+ hardly any of them on speaking terms. If it isn't one thing it's
+ another. It's the Whoppington fashion, that's all. The general of the
+ army won't speak to the adjutant-general there, and they're always
+ smuggling bills into Congress to retire each other, and that spirit
+ runs all the way down through both services. I'm a civilian now, and I
+ can see with a little perspective. I don't know why military people are
+ always squabbling like the women in an old ladies' home. No other
+ professions do; it's queer. It's getting to be better to lose a battle
+ than to win it, for then you don't have to fight for a year or two to
+ find out who won it."
+
+ Sam entered a feeble protest against Cleary's criticisms, and the two
+ relapsed into silence.
+
+ "Who did win that naval victory anyhow?" said Sam at last.
+
+ "That's just what I'd like to know," responded Cleary. "One of the
+ admirals admits he wasn't there, and, if we are to believe the naval
+ people, the other one spent most of his time dodging around the
+ smokestack. But I think they're a little too hard on him; I can't
+ imagine why. I hear they're going to establish a permanent court at
+ Whoppington to determine who wins victories in future. It's not a bad
+ idea. My own view is that that battle won itself, and I shouldn't be
+ surprised if that was the way with most battles. It would be fun to run
+ a war without admirals and generals and see how it would come out. I
+ don't believe there'd be much difference. At any rate it looks so, if
+ what the navy says is true, and one of the admirals was away and the
+ other playing tag on the forward deck of the _Philadelphia_. Rum name
+ for a battle-ship, the _Brotherly Love_, isn't it?"
+
+ To this Sam made no answer.
+
+ On arriving at the barracks he succeeded in having a separate room
+ assigned to him, and thenceforth he and Foster were strangers.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VII
+
+ The Battle of San Diego
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+
+ During the next few days there was much activity in the army. It was
+ clear that there was an expedition in preparation. All sorts of rumors
+ were floating about, but it was impossible to verify any of them. Some
+ said that Gomaldo was advancing with a large army; others, that he had
+ surrendered and that the army was about to take peaceable possession
+ of the islands. Meanwhile Sam's position in the 200th Infantry was most
+ unpleasant. Foster was a popular man in the regiment, and he had set
+ all the officers against him. It was unfortunately a Slewey regiment,
+ and it was too late for Sam to change sides--a thing which he was quite
+ ready to do. He made up his mind never to mention the two admirals
+ again, and regretted that he had named them once too often. He
+ complained to Cleary.
+
+ "I'm afraid," he said, "that there's no chance of my doing anything.
+ The colonel will see to it that I am out of the way if there's anything
+ to do. I might as well have stayed at East Point."
+
+ "Brace up, old man! I've got an idea," said Cleary. "I'll fix you all
+ right. Just you wait till to-morrow or the day after."
+
+ The next day in the afternoon Sam received an order to report at once
+ at the headquarters of General Laughter. He hastened to obey, and was
+ ushered into the presence of that distinguished officer in the palace.
+ It was an impressive sight that met his eyes. The general was believed
+ to weigh some three hundred pounds, but he looked as if he weighed
+ nearer five hundred. He was dressed in a white duck suit with brass
+ buttons, the jacket unbuttoned in front and showing his underclothes.
+ He was suffering a good deal from the heat, and fanning himself
+ incessantly. Several members of his staff were busied talking with
+ visitors or writing at desks, but the chief was doing nothing. He was
+ seated in a superb arm-chair with his back to a pier-glass.
+
+ "Ah! captain," he said. "I'm glad to see you. Have a whisky and soda?
+ I've assigned you to duty on my staff. Report here again to-morrow at
+ ten and have your things moved over to the palace. Major Stroud will
+ show you your quarters, captain!"
+
+ Major Stroud advanced and shook hands with Sam. He was every inch a
+ soldier in appearance, but old enough to be a retired field-marshal.
+ The three indulged in whiskies and soda, and Sam took his leave after
+ a brief formal conversation. He found Cleary waiting for him in the
+ street.
+
+ "How on earth did you do it?" cried Sam.
+
+ "It's the B. A. C. L.," said Cleary.
+
+ "The what!"
+
+ "The Benevolent Assimilation Company, Limited. What do you suppose?
+ With _The Daily Lyre_ thrown in too."
+
+ "Oh! thank you, thank you, my dear, dear friend," ejaculated Sam, with
+ tears in his eyes. "I was beginning to think that my whole life was a
+ failure, and here I am just in the very best place in the world. I
+ won't disappoint you, I won't disappoint you!"
+
+ In the few days at the barracks of the 200th Infantry, Sam had learned
+ something of regimental work, and now he applied himself assiduously to
+ the study of the business of the headquarters of a general in command
+ in the field, for the army was practically in the field. At first it
+ all seemed to him to be a maze quite without a plan, and he hoped that
+ in time he would begin to see the outline of a system. But the more he
+ observed the less system he saw. Everything that could be postponed was
+ postponed. Responsibility was shifted from one staff officer to
+ another. No one was held accountable for anything, and general
+ confusion seemed to reign. The place was besieged with contractors and
+ agents, and the staff was nearly worried to death. The general was
+ always very busy--fanning himself--and the days went on.
+
+ One morning a fellow member of the staff, a young lieutenant whom he
+ scarcely knew, called Sam aside and asked him for a half-hour's
+ conference. They went off together into a deserted room, and the
+ lieutenant began the conversation in a whisper.
+
+ "See here, Captain," said he, "we're looking for a patriotic fellow who
+ cares more for his country than his own reputation. We understand that
+ you're just the man."
+
+ "I hope so," said Sam, delighted at the prospect of an opportunity to
+ distinguish himself.
+
+ "It's a rather delicate matter," continued the lieutenant, "and I must
+ say it's rather a compliment to you to be selected for the job. The
+ fact is, that Captain Jones is in trouble. He's about $3,000 short in
+ his accounts."
+
+ "How did that happen?" asked Sam.
+
+ "Oh, that's not the point. I don't see that it makes any difference.
+ But we've got to get him out of the scrape. The honor of the army is
+ at stake. Civilians don't understand us. They don't appreciate our
+ standards of honor. And if this thing gets out they'll charge us with
+ all kinds of things. We've got to raise $3,000. That's all there is
+ of it."
+
+ "Good heavens! how can we?" cried Sam. "I've hardly got anything left
+ of my pay, but I can give, say $25, on the next pay-day."
+
+ "We're not going to pass the hat around. That would be beneath the
+ dignity of the army. What we want you to do is this--and, indeed, we
+ have settled it that you should do it. You are to go to-morrow
+ afternoon to Banks & Company, the army contractors, and have a
+ confidential talk with Banks. Tell him you must have $3,000 at once.
+ Here's a letter of introduction to him. He will see that you represent
+ the people that run things here. Tell him that his contracts will
+ probably be preferred to Short & Co.'s, and tell him that for the
+ future we shan't inspect his things as closely as we have in the past.
+ You needn't go into particulars. He will understand. It's an ordinary
+ business matter."
+
+ "I don't quite like the idea," said Sam, ruminating. "Why don't you go
+ yourself?"
+
+ "My dear Captain, I'm only a lieutenant. It requires a man of higher
+ rank to do such an important piece of work. You're a new man on the
+ staff, and we wanted to pay you an honor and give you a chance to show
+ your patriotism. You will be saving the reputation and character of
+ the army."
+
+ "Oh, thank you!" exclaimed Sam. "Are you sure that it's always done in
+ just this way?"
+
+ "Always. It's an ordinary matter of business arrangement, as I've
+ already told you."
+
+ "Then it must be all right, I suppose," said Sam.
+
+ "But it's not only that. It's a noble act to protect the character of a
+ brother officer."
+
+ "So it is, so it is," said Sam. "I'll do it. I'll call and see him
+ about it to-morrow afternoon."
+
+ "Hello!" shouted another officer, coming into the room. "Have you seen
+ the orders? There's to be a conference of brigade and regimental
+ commanders here to-night, and all staff officers are invited to attend.
+ That means business."
+
+ Sam was overjoyed at the news, and the three men hastened to the
+ headquarters' room to discuss it with their fellow officers.
+
+ Sam was present at the conference as a matter of course, and he watched
+ the proceedings with the greatest interest. A map was stretched out on
+ a magnificent gilt table in the middle of the room in which Sam had
+ first seen the general, and most of the officers bent over it studying
+ it. The general sat back in his arm-chair with his fan and asked
+ everybody's advice, and no one appeared to have any advice to give.
+
+ "The fact is this, gentlemen," he said at last, "we've got to do
+ something, and the question is, what to do. Burton," said he to his
+ assistant adjutant-general, "show them the plan that we've worked
+ out."
+
+ Burton was one of the officers who were poring over the map, and he
+ began to explain a general advance in the direction of the enemy. He
+ pointed out the position which they were now supposed to occupy, some
+ ten miles away.
+
+ "We ought to move out our lines to-morrow," he explained, "within, say,
+ three or four miles of theirs. The regiments will keep the same order
+ that they're in here at Havilla. We can't make the final arrangements
+ until we get there. We may stay there a day or two to entrench
+ ourselves, and then move on them at daybreak some day within a week."
+
+ "That's the plan, gentlemen," said the general. "What do you think of
+ it?" and he began to question all the general and field officers
+ present beginning with the youngest, and none of them had any
+ suggestion to offer.
+
+ "Then it's understood that we start for this line here to-morrow
+ morning at seven," said Burton.
+
+ They all assented.
+
+ "Now, boys, let's have some whisky," said the general, and the
+ conference resolved itself into a committee of the whole.
+
+ Early in the morning the troops began to move forward. Sam, who acted
+ as aide-de-camp, was sent out from headquarters once or twice to urge
+ the various colonels to make haste, but there seemed to be no special
+ orders as to the details of the movement. The regiments went as best
+ they could and selected their own roads, finally choosing the positions
+ that seemed most desirable to their commanders, who took care not to
+ leave too great an interval between regiments. The men were set to work
+ at once at putting up the tents and making entrenchments. It was some
+ time after midday when the general and his staff finally left the
+ headquarters in the city. Sam came downstairs with Major Stroud to
+ mount his horse, and was surprised to see a landau with two horses
+ drawn up at the door.
+
+ "Who's that for?" he cried.
+
+ "For the general," answered Major Stroud quietly.
+
+ "For the general! Why on earth doesn't he ride a horse?"
+
+ "There isn't a horse in the place that can carry him. He tried one when
+ he first came here. He mounted it on a step-ladder, and the beast came
+ down on his knees on the stone pavement and had to be shot. He hasn't
+ tried it since."
+
+ After waiting on the street for a long time Sam had the privilege of
+ seeing the general emerge from the palace and enter his carriage. He
+ was perspiring and fanning as usual, but carried no whisky and soda.
+ The staff officers, of whom there were a dozen or more, mounted and
+ followed the carriage. Sam rode next to Stroud. There was much
+ confusion in the roads which they traveled--wagons laden with tents and
+ provisions and hospital stores, camp-followers of all descriptions, and
+ some belated soldiers besides. The general, however, had the right of
+ way, and they proceeded with reasonable speed. They passed through
+ native villages, rows of one-and two-story thatched houses on each
+ side, with wooden palisades in front of them, well shaded by low but
+ spreading palms. They passed large sugar refineries, built by the
+ Castalians, and churches and convents. They passed rice-fields, some
+ covered with water and others more or less dry, which sturdy peasants
+ were busy harrowing with buffaloes. On the road they saw many
+ two-wheeled carts drawn by single buffaloes, the man standing in the
+ cart as he drove. At last they came to a halt on rising ground at the
+ edge of a piece of woodland, and Colonel Burton, the adjutant-general,
+ rode up beside the general's carriage and dismounted, and the two began
+ to study the map again. After a long discussion the procession moved on
+ again and finally stopped at the crest of a ridge, where the general
+ alighted and soon selected a place for his tent. An hour had passed
+ before the tents and baggage arrived, but notwithstanding the delay the
+ tents were pitched and supper ready by sundown, and Sam found himself
+ actually in the field on the eve of a battle. The eve, however, was
+ somewhat prolonged. Several days passed, and Sam was kept pretty busy
+ in riding to the various brigade and regimental headquarters and
+ finding out how things were progressing: what was the state of the
+ trenches, and what news there was from the enemy. Scouting parties were
+ sent out, but their reports were kept secret, and Sam was left in the
+ dark. There was a native village about half a mile to the rear, and the
+ inhabitants were all friendly. Sam stopped there occasionally for a
+ drink of water, and became acquainted with the keeper of the cafe, who
+ was particularly amicable and fond of conversation. Cleary was on the
+ lookout for accommodations in the neighborhood, and Sam introduced him
+ to this native, Senor Garcia, who provided him with a room. One evening
+ Sam was sitting with Cleary in the cafe when Garcia, as was his custom,
+ joined them, and they began to talk in the Castalian language.
+
+ "We are glad you people are coming to rule our islands," said Garcia;
+ "that is, those of us who know your history, because we know that you
+ are a great people and love freedom."
+
+ "I am pleased to hear it," said Sam. "Cleary, I was sure that all the
+ sensible natives would feel that way."
+
+ "You believe in liberty, equality, fraternity?"
+
+ "Of course we do," said Cleary.
+
+ "Yes," said Sam, "if you understand those words properly. Now liberty
+ doesn't interfere with obedience. Our whole army here is built up on
+ the idea of obedience. We've all got liberty, of course, but----"
+
+ "Liberty to do what?" asked Garcia innocently.
+
+ "Why, liberty to--well, to--yes, liberty to do as we're ordered,"
+ said Sam.
+
+ "Ah! I see," said Garcia. "And then you have equality."
+
+ "Yes," said Sam, "in a general way we have. But that doesn't prevent
+ people from differing in rank. Now there's the general, he's my
+ superior, and I'm the superior of the lieutenants, and we're all
+ superior to the privates. We have regular schools at home to teach us
+ not to misunderstand the kind of equality that we believe in. There's
+ one at East Point for the army. This gentleman and I were educated
+ there. We weren't allowed even to look at our superiors. There's
+ another institution like it for the navy. And then every man-of-war and
+ every army garrison is a sort of college to spread these ideas about
+ rank. A captain of a ship can't even let his officers dine with him too
+ often. It's a fine system and it prevents us from making any mistakes
+ about what equality means."
+
+ "And then fraternity?" asked Garcia.
+
+ "Oh, that's just the same," said Cleary. "At East Point we got a blow
+ in the jaw if we showed the wrong kind of fraternity to our betters."
+
+ "It's a wonderful system," said Garcia. "But I have heard some of your
+ people explain liberty, equality, fraternity a little differently."
+
+ "They must have been civilians," said Sam. "The army and navy represent
+ all that is best in our country, and the people at large do not
+ understand the army and navy. Luckily for you, the islands will be in
+ charge of the army. There won't be any mistake about the kind of
+ liberty and equality we give you."
+
+ "I am so grateful," said Garcia, rolling up his eyes.
+
+ "Yes, Cleary," said Sam. "The people at home don't understand us.
+ Did you see that there's a bill in Congress to allow men in the ranks,
+ mere non-commissioned officers, to apply for commissions? If they pass
+ it, it will be the end of the army. Just think of a sergeant becoming
+ one of us! Oh, I forgot, you aren't an officer, but you must know how
+ I feel!"
+
+ Cleary expressed his sympathy, and Sam bade him and his host
+ good-night. On his way back through a path in the jungle he thought he
+ heard a light step behind him, but when he looked back he could see
+ nothing. When he arrived at the headquarters' tent he found all the
+ higher officers of the army there, and Stroud whispered to him that
+ they had heard that Gomaldo would take the offensive the next morning,
+ and that consequently a general advance was ordered for daybreak in
+ order that they might forestall him. The general was rather taken by
+ surprise and his final plans were not ready, but it was arranged that
+ at four o'clock each regiment should advance, and that orders
+ containing further details would be sent to them by six o'clock at the
+ latest. Burton remained in the general's tent to perfect the orders,
+ and Sam went to the tent which he occupied with Major Stroud to enjoy a
+ few hours' sleep.
+
+ "I'm afraid we're not quite ready," said Sam.
+
+ "No army ever is," replied Stroud laconically.
+
+ "I wish the general were a little livelier and quicker," said Sam,
+ blushing at his own blasphemy.
+
+ "And thinner?" said Stroud, smiling, as he twisted his white mustache
+ and smoothed his imperial. "Oh, he'll do very well. He's a good solid
+ point to rally round and fall back on, and then we always know where to
+ find him, for he can't get away very far if he tries."
+
+ At half-past three in the morning the officers of the staff were
+ called by a native servant and began to make their preparations. They
+ breakfasted as best they could on coffee without sugar or cream, and
+ some stale bread, with an egg apiece, and whisky. Sam felt
+ unaccountably sleepy, and he thought that all the rest looked sleepy
+ too. It was five o'clock before Burton had the orders ready for the
+ various subordinate commanders, telling each of them in which direction
+ to advance. The plan had been mapped out the night before, but the
+ orders had to be copied and corrected. At last he came out and
+ distributed them to Stroud, Sam, and several other officers--two orders
+ to each, yawning painfully as he handed them out.
+
+ "I don't think I slept a wink last night," he said.
+
+ The two commands to which Sam's orders were directed were stationed on
+ the extreme right of the army. He made a rough tracing of that part of
+ the map and set out at once on a wiry little native pony. For some
+ distance he followed the high-road, but then was obliged to turn into
+ a branch road which led through the woods, and which soon became a mere
+ wood-path. Before long he heard firing in front of him, and soon he
+ recognized the sound of whistling bullets above his head. He found
+ himself ducking his head involuntarily, and almost for the first time
+ in his life he was conscious of being afraid. This was a surprise to
+ him, as his thoughts during the night whenever he had been awake had
+ been full of pleasant anticipations.
+
+ The path suddenly came out into an open rolling country, and Sam pulled
+ up his horse, dismounted, and hiding behind some underbrush, took a
+ look at the situation. There was a Gatling-gun, worked by a young
+ officer and five men, a few hundred yards to the right at the edge of
+ the woods. Beyond to the front he could see a line of troops firing at
+ the enemy from behind a wall. Of the Cubapinos he could see nothing but
+ the smoke of their guns and muskets here and there. Shells were falling
+ in another part of the field, but nowhere near him. Bullets were
+ flying thick through the air, and he heard them hissing constantly. As
+ he looked he saw one of the Gatling crew fall over, doubled up in a
+ heap. Sam moved along in the wood nearer to this gun, so that he might
+ ask where he could find the brigade commander. As he approached he
+ heard the lieutenant say:
+
+ "Damn those sharp-shooters. They've got our range now. With this damned
+ smokeless powder they can pick us all off. Clark, bring some of that
+ artificial smoke stuff here."
+
+ The soldier obeyed, and in a few moments a dense smoke rose above them,
+ covering the whole neighborhood.
+
+ "What a wonderful thing these inventions are!" thought Sam, as he tied
+ his horse to a tree and advanced crouching toward the battery. The
+ lieutenant pointed out to him the position of the brigadier-general,
+ some distance back on the right under cover of the jungle, and told him
+ of a path that would take him there. Sam was not slow to follow his
+ directions, for just then a shell exploded close by. He soon found the
+ general surrounded by his staff on a partially wooded hill, from
+ which, however, they could command the field with their glasses.
+ Bullets were flying about them, and an occasional shell sailed over
+ their heads, but the general seemed perfectly at home. He took the
+ orders, opened them and read them.
+
+ "That's strange," said he. "Last night I understood that I was to make
+ for that pass between the hills there on the left, and now I'm ordered
+ to take the first turning to the right. I don't understand it. Do you
+ know anything about it?"
+
+ "No, sir."
+
+ "Well, he must have changed his mind. Or else it was a bluff to keep
+ his plans from leaking out. Tell the general that I will carry out his
+ orders at once."
+
+ Sam inquired of the members of the staff where he would be likely to
+ find the 43d Volunteers, to whose colonel his other orders were
+ directed, but they had no information, except that in the morning that
+ regiment had been stationed farther over on the right. Sam started out
+ again, guiding himself as best he could by a compass which he had in
+ his pocket. He selected the paths which seemed most promising, but the
+ jungle between was impenetrable on horseback. The firing on the extreme
+ right seemed to be farther in the rear, and he made his way in that
+ direction. Again he came out at the edge of the woods, and to his
+ surprise saw a battalion of the enemy at a short distance from him. He
+ turned his horse, stuck his spurs into him, and went back along the
+ path to the rear at a full run, while a shower of bullets fell around
+ him. He still kept on working to the right in the direction of the
+ firing which he heard in front of him. At last in a hollow of the
+ jungle he came upon a Red Cross station, one of those advance temporary
+ relief posts where the wounded who are too much injured to be taken at
+ once to the rear are treated. Twenty or thirty men were lying in a row,
+ some of them on their coats, others on the bare ground. Two surgeons
+ were doing what they could in the line of first aid to the injured,
+ binding up arms and legs, dressing wounds, and trying to stop the flow
+ of blood from arteries. Two soldiers were lifting a wounded man on a
+ stretcher so that he might be carried to the rear, and he was groaning
+ with agony. Every one of the patients was blotched in one place or
+ another with blood, and some of them were lying in pools of the crimson
+ fluid. Sam felt a little sick at his stomach. Two men came in with
+ another stretcher, bringing a wounded man from the front. The man gave
+ a convulsive start as they set him down.
+
+ "A bullet's just hit him in the head," said one of the men. "I'm glad
+ it wasn't me."
+
+ One of the doctors looked at the wounded man.
+
+ "He's dead," he said. "Damn you, what do you mean by bringing dead men
+ here?"
+
+ The two bearers took up their load again and dropped it out of sight in
+ the bushes. Sam did not like to interrupt the doctors, who were
+ overtasked, so he dismounted and tried to find a wounded man well
+ enough to answer his questions. One man at the end of the row looked
+ less pale than the rest, and he asked him where he could find the 43d.
+
+ "That's my regiment, sir," he replied, as a twig, cut off by a bullet,
+ fell on his face. "You'd better lie down here, sir; you'll be shot if
+ you don't. A lot of the wounded have been hit here again."
+
+ Sam sat down by his side.
+
+ "Our regiment is over that way," he said, pointing in the direction of
+ the firing. "I don't know where the colonel is. We haven't seen him for
+ hours. The lieutenant-colonel is down with fever. I think the major's
+ in command. You ought to find him at the front. We've been falling
+ back, and the firing sounds nearer than it did. I'm afraid the enemy
+ will catch us here."
+
+ Sam did not wait to hear anything further, but, leaving his horse tied
+ to a tree, he ran toward the front. He found many soldiers skulking
+ along the path, and they directed him to the major. He discovered him
+ sitting on the ground behind a stone wall.
+
+ "Here, major, are your orders. I understand you're in command."
+
+ "Not much," said the major. "The colonel's in command. You'd better
+ find him."
+
+ "Where is he?"
+
+ "I'm sure I don't know. I haven't seen him since six o'clock."
+
+ "But this is your regiment, isn't it?"
+
+ "Well, yes. It's part of it."
+
+ Just then a young captain came running up from the front, and cried out
+ to his major:
+
+ "Major, we're having a hard time of it there. Won't you come up and
+ take charge? I'm afraid they'll force us back."
+
+ "No," said the major, "I won't. I'm going back there to that last
+ village. It's a much better place to defend. Besides I'm not feeling
+ well. You fellows can stay here if you like. I shan't order the
+ regiment back, but I'll go back and get ready for them there. We ought
+ to have trenches there, you know," and he got up and walked rapidly off
+ down the road. The captain turned to Sam.
+
+ "I beg your pardon, captain," said he, "but what are we to do? Our
+ officers have given out, and we're a new regiment and haven't any
+ experience. Won't you take command?"
+
+ Sam was by no means satisfied in his mind that he would behave much
+ better than the major, but here was an opportunity that he could not
+ afford to lose.
+
+ "I'll see what I can do," said he. "Let's see what the orders are."
+
+ He opened the document and saw that it was a direction to keep on to
+ the front until they arrived before the town of San Diego, which they
+ were to assault and capture.
+
+ "Show me where your men are," said Sam. "Who have you got there?"
+
+ "We've got our own regiment, the 43d, and six or eight companies of the
+ 72d--I don't know where they came from; and then there's a battery, and
+ perhaps some others."
+
+ They hastened along the road together, urging the stragglers to join
+ them, which many of them did. The way became more and more encumbered
+ with men, and the bullets came thicker. Sam was thoroughly scared. He
+ could feel his legs waver at the knee, and it seemed as if a giant
+ hand had grasped him by the spine. They passed several musicians of
+ the band.
+
+ "Start up a tune!" cried Sam. "Play something and follow us." At the
+ same time he instinctively thrust his hand into his breast pocket and
+ felt for his traveling Lares and Penates, namely, his tin soldier, his
+ photographs of East Point, one of Marian, and her last letter.
+ Meanwhile the band began to play and the bass-drummer wielded his huge
+ drumstick with all his might. Sam began to feel happier, and so did the
+ men about him. One of the musicians suddenly fell, struck dead by a
+ bullet, and just then a shell burst over them and two or three men went
+ down. With one accord the soldiers began to curse and swear in the most
+ frightful manner and to insist on speedy vengeance. Sam was surprised
+ to find himself enjoying the oaths. They just expressed his feelings,
+ and he hurried on to the edge of the woods. In front of them they saw a
+ line of their own men lying on the ground behind stones and logs,
+ shooting at the enemy, whose line could be distinguished hardly more
+ than a third of a mile away.
+
+ "They're nearer than they were," whispered the captain. "We must push
+ them back or they'll have us. The men on the firing line are getting
+ scared."
+
+ "We must scare them behind more than the enemy does in front," said
+ Sam, drawing his revolver. "Here you, sir, get back into your place."
+
+ A man in the ranks, who was beginning to creep back, saw the revolver
+ and dropped back in his position with an oath.
+
+ "Forward!" cried Sam, now thoroughly in the spirit of the occasion.
+ "Come up to the front, all of you, and extend our line there to the
+ right. Lie down and take careful aim with every shot."
+
+ The men did as they were told, and Sam took up his position behind the
+ line with the captain, both of them standing in a perfect gale of
+ bullets, while all the rest were lying down.
+
+ "Lie down," said Sam to the captain. "You've no business to risk your
+ life like that."
+
+ "How about yours, sir?" said the captain, as he obeyed.
+
+ "I'll take care of myself, if you'll be good enough to let me,"
+ answered Sam.
+
+ The presence of a staff officer gave new courage to the men, and their
+ marksmanship began to have effect on the enemy, who were seen to be
+ gradually falling back. Sam took this opportunity to move his line
+ forward, and he sent a lieutenant to direct the battery to cover his
+ men when they should charge on the enemy's line. He moved his line
+ forward in this way successively three or four times, and the troops
+ were now thoroughly encouraged, and some of them even asked to be
+ allowed to charge. Sam, however, postponed this final act as long as he
+ could. It was not until he saw the captain whom he had met in the woods
+ mangled and instantly killed by a piece of shell that he became so
+ angry that he could restrain himself no longer. He gave the order to
+ fix bayonets, and with a yell the men rose from their lairs and rushed
+ over the intervening ground to the enemy's position. The Cubapinos did
+ not wait for them, but turned and ran precipitously. Sam and his men
+ followed them for at least a mile, when they made a stand again.
+
+ "They're in the trenches now that they were in this morning," explained
+ a lieutenant.
+
+ Here the same tactics were renewed, and in another half-hour Sam
+ ordered his men to charge again. This time the enemy waited longer, and
+ many of the attacking party fell, but before they reached the trenches
+ the Cubapinos took flight, and Sam saw his soldiers bayonet the last
+ two or three of them in the back. There were a good many dead in the
+ trenches, all of them shot through the head. It was a proud moment for
+ Sam when he stood on the edge of the trench and planted Old Gory there
+ while the men cheered. A wounded Cubapino lay just before him, and one
+ of the soldiers kicked him in the head and killed him. Sam noticed it,
+ and was a little startled to find that it seemed all right to him.
+
+ "I've half a mind to kick the next wounded man I see," he thought. "It
+ must be rather good sport"; but he did not do it.
+
+ The rest of the fight was in the nature of a procession. They pursued
+ the flying Cubapinos as fast as they could, but were unable to come up
+ with them. In a native village through which they passed, Sam asked an
+ old man, who had been too weak to get away, how far off San Diego was,
+ and learned that it was five miles away to the left. He could not
+ understand this, but still he kept on in that direction. As they left
+ the village it burst into flames, for the last soldiers had set it on
+ fire. Sam thought of the old man perishing in his hut, and it seemed to
+ him a fine thing and quite natural. On their way they came across other
+ bodies of troops who joined them, and it so happened that no one came
+ forward of superior rank to Sam, and consequently he retained the
+ command. Before they came in sight of San Diego he had quite a brigade
+ under him. He halted them in front of the town and sent out a scouting
+ party. There was no sound of firing now except in the distance. In an
+ hour the scouting party came back and reported that the place had been
+ vacated by the enemy, who for some reason had been seized by a panic.
+ Sam ordered the advance to be resumed, and late in the afternoon found
+ himself in possession of San Diego. He began to take measures at once
+ to fortify the place, when the brigadier-general whom he had seen in
+ the morning marched in with his brigade and took over the command from
+ him, congratulating him on his success, which was already the talk of
+ the army. Sam turned over the command to him with much grace and
+ dignity, and, borrowing a horse, set off for the old headquarters which
+ he had left in the morning, for he learned that, altho the enemy were
+ completely defeated and scattered, still the general would not move his
+ headquarters forward to the front till the following day.
+
+ The general received him with great cordiality.
+
+ "Everything turned out just as I planned it," he said, "but, Captain,
+ you helped us out at a critical point there on the right. I shall
+ mention you in despatches. You may depend on being promoted and given a
+ good post. You ought to have a regiment at least."
+
+ Sam was taking his supper when Cleary came in, hot and grimy.
+
+ "Well, you're a great fellow," he said, "to get away from me the way
+ you did this morning. But didn't I tell you, you were the stuff? Why,
+ you won the battle. Do you know that you turned their left flank?"
+
+ "To tell the truth, I didn't know it," said Sam.
+
+ "Well, you did."
+
+ "But the general planned everything," said Sam.
+
+ "Yes," said Cleary, "but I'll tell you more about that. I'm doing some
+ detective work, and I'll have something to tell you in a day or two.
+ But I wish I'd been with you. I had my kodak all ready. However, they
+ can make up the pictures at home. How's this for headlines?" and he
+ took some notes from his pocket. "'Great Victory at San Diego. Captain
+ Jinks Turns Defeat into Victory. Hailed as Hero Jinks by the Army.
+ General Laughter's Plans Carried Out through the Young Hero's
+ Co-operation.' What do you think of that? We'll put the part about the
+ general in small caps, because he's not quite solid with the trust. I'm
+ not going to write up anybody but you and the Mounted Mustangs; those
+ are my orders."
+
+ "How did the Mustangs make out?" asked Sam. "They were way off on the
+ left, and I haven't heard anything about them."
+
+ "They did very decently," said Cleary, "considering they were never
+ under fire before. They kept up pretty well with the regulars, and
+ fortunately they had a regular regiment on each side. They really
+ did well."
+
+ "Did they make any fine cavalry charges?" inquired Sam.
+
+ "Cavalry charges! Bless your heart, they didn't have any horses, and
+ it's lucky they didn't. They had their hands full without having to
+ manage any horses!"
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VIII
+
+ Among the Moritos
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+
+ On the following day headquarters were moved into San Diego. Sam was
+ lodged in the town hall with the general, and Cleary got rooms close
+ by. There were rumors of renewed activity on the part of the Cubapinos,
+ but it was thought that their resistance for the future would be of a
+ guerrilla nature. There was, however, one savage tribe to the north
+ which had terrorized a large district of country, and the general
+ decided that it must be subdued. Sam heard of this plan, but did not
+ know whether he would be sent on the expedition or not, and urged
+ Cleary to use his influence so that he might be one of the party.
+
+ "I'll manage it for you, old man," said Cleary, two or three days after
+ the battle. "I've got the general in a tight place, and all I've got to
+ do is to let him know it and he'll do whatever I want."
+
+ "What do you mean?"
+
+ "Why, he had about as much to do with the San Diego fight as the man in
+ the moon."
+
+ "What?"
+
+ "Well, I'll tell you the story. I've run down every clue and here it
+ is. You see somehow Colonel Burton got the orders mixed up that morning
+ and addressed every one of them to the wrong general."
+
+ "Is it possible?" exclaimed Sam. "That explains why they couldn't
+ understand the orders there in the Third Brigade, and why I took all
+ day to find San Diego. I wonder if it's true. Why on earth didn't
+ Gomaldo win then? It must have been a close call."
+
+ "It's plain enough why he didn't win," said Cleary. "That chap Garcia
+ was one of his spies, and a clever one too. He got all he could out of
+ you and me, but that wasn't much. Then he had the native servant of the
+ general in his pay. As soon as you left on the night before the battle
+ he cleared out too, and he got a statement from the native servant of
+ all the general intended to do. He got the news to Gomaldo by midnight,
+ and before sunrise the Cubapino forces were ready to meet each of our
+ columns when they advanced. They had ambushes prepared for each of
+ them. If the orders had gone out straight we'd have been cleaned out,
+ that's my opinion. But you see, they all went wrong and the columns
+ advanced along different roads, and poor Gomaldo's plans all went to
+ pot. I believe he had Garcia hanged for deceiving him. You haven't seen
+ the general's servant since the battle, have you?"
+
+ "Now that you speak of it, I don't think I have," said Sam. "But he's
+ a great general all the same, don't you think so?"
+
+ "Of course," answered Cleary.
+
+ "I wonder if all battles are won like that?" said Sam.
+
+ "I half think they are," said his friend. "And then the generals smile
+ and say, 'I told you so.'"
+
+ "Cleary," said Sam, "I want you to answer me one question honestly."
+
+ "Out with it."
+
+ "Did I have much to do with winning that battle or not?"
+
+ "To tell the honest truth, Sam, between me and you, I don't know
+ whether you did or not. But _The Lyre_ will say that you did, and that
+ will settle it for history."
+
+ Sam sighed and made no other reply.
+
+ The expedition against the Moritos started out a week later. It
+ consisted of two regiments, one of colored men under a certain Colonel
+ James, the other of white volunteers, with a brigadier-general in
+ command. Sam was assigned to the command of the volunteer regiment
+ with the temporary rank of major, its colonel having been wounded at
+ the battle of San Diego. For a whole day they marched northward
+ unmolested, and encamped at night in a valley in the mountains with a
+ small native village as headquarters. There had been little incident
+ during the day. They had burned several villages and driven off a good
+ many cattle for meat. Sam was surprised to see how handsome the
+ furniture was in the little thatched cottages of the people, perched as
+ they were on posts several feet high. It was a feast day, and the whole
+ population had been in the streets in their best clothes. The soldiers
+ snatched the jewels of the women and chased the men away, and then
+ looted the houses, destroying what they could not take, and finally
+ setting them on fire.
+
+ "It's better so," said Sam to his adjutant. "Make war as bad as
+ possible and people will keep the peace. We are the real peacemakers."
+
+ He heard shouts and cries as he passed through the villages, and had
+ reason to think that the soldiers were not contented with mere
+ looting, but he did not inquire. He took his supper with the general at
+ his headquarters. Colonel James and Cleary ate with them, for Cleary
+ was still true to his friend's fortunes and determined to follow him
+ everywhere. After an evening of smoking and chatting, Sam, Cleary, and
+ Colonel James bade the general good-night and started for their
+ quarters, which lay in the same direction. It was a gorgeous moonlight
+ night, such a night as only the tropics can produce, and they sauntered
+ slowly along the mountain road, enjoying the scene.
+
+ "There is a question that I have been wanting to ask you, Colonel,"
+ said Sam to Colonel James as they walked on together. "What do you
+ think of darkies as soldiers? I have never seen much of them, and as
+ you have a negro regiment, you must know all about it."
+
+ "Well, the truth is, Major," responded the colonel, "I wouldn't have
+ my opinion get out for a good deal, but I'll tell you in confidence.
+ They make much better soldiers than white men, that's the long and
+ short of it."
+
+ "How can you explain that? It's most surprising!" cried Sam.
+
+ "Well, they're more impressible, for one thing. You can work them up
+ into any kind of passion you want to. Then they're more submissive to
+ discipline; they're used to being ordered about and kicked and cuffed,
+ and they don't mind it. Besides, they're accustomed from their low
+ social position to be subordinate to superiors, and rather expect it
+ than not. They are all poor, too, and used to poor food and ragged
+ clothes and no comforts, and of course they don't complain of what they
+ get from us."
+
+ "You mean," said Cleary, "that the lower a man is in the scale of
+ society the better soldier he makes."
+
+ "Well," answered the colonel, "I hadn't ever put it just in that light,
+ but that's about the size of it. These darkies are great hands at
+ carrying concealed weapons, too. If it isn't a razor it's something
+ else, and if there's a row going on they will get mixed up in it, but
+ they're none the worse as soldiers for that."
+
+ "Let's go up to that point there and take the moonlight view before we
+ turn in," suggested Cleary.
+
+ The others agreed, and they began to climb a path leading up to the
+ right. It was much more of a climb than they had expected, and when
+ they had become quite blown they sat down to recover their breath.
+
+ "I think we'd better go back," said Colonel James. "We may lose our
+ way, and it isn't safe here. The Moritos are known to be thick in these
+ mountains, and they might find us."
+
+ "Oh, let's go a little farther," said Cleary, and they set out to
+ climb again.
+
+ "The path seems to stop here," said Sam, who was in the lead. "This
+ must be the top, but I don't see any place for a view. Perhaps we'd
+ better go back."
+
+ Cleary did not repeat his objection, and they began to retrace their
+ steps. For some time they went on in silence.
+
+ "The path begins to go up-hill here," said Cleary, who now led. "I
+ don't understand this. We didn't go down-hill at all."
+
+ "I think we did for a short distance," answered Sam.
+
+ They went on, still ascending.
+
+ "There doesn't seem to be any path here," said Cleary. "Do you see it?"
+
+ His companions were obliged to admit that they did not.
+
+ "We'd better call for help," said Sam, and the three men began to shout
+ at the top of their voices, but there was no reply. An hour must have
+ elapsed while they were engaged in calling, and their voices became
+ husky, but all in vain.
+
+ "Hist!" said Cleary at last. "I think I hear some one coming. I heard
+ the branches move. They have sent out for us, thank fortune! I didn't
+ like the idea of sleeping out here and making the acquaintance of
+ snakes and catching fevers."
+
+ The words, were hardly out of his mouth when three shadowy figures
+ sprang out of the bushes and grasped each of the three men from
+ behind, holding their elbows back so that they could not use their
+ arms, and in a moment a veritable swarm of long-haired, half-clad
+ Moritos were upon them, pinioning them and emptying their pockets and
+ belts. It was quite useless to make any resistance, the attack had been
+ too sudden and unexpected. Cleary cried out once, but they made him
+ understand that, if he did it again, they would stab him with one of
+ their long knives. When the captives were securely bound, the captors
+ began to discuss the situation in their own language, which was the
+ only language they understood. There was evidently some difference of
+ opinion, but after a few minutes they came to some kind of an
+ agreement. The legs of the prisoners were unbound, and they were made
+ to march through the jungle, each one with two guards behind him, who
+ pricked him with their lances if he did not move fast enough. Their
+ only other arms seemed to be bows and arrows. The march was a very
+ weary one, and through a wild, mountainous country which would have
+ been impassable for men who did not know it thoroughly. Occasionally
+ they seemed to be following obscure paths, but as often there was no
+ sign of a track, and the thick, tropical vegetation made progress
+ difficult. For an hour or two they climbed up the half-dry bed of a
+ mountain torrent, and more than once they were ankle-deep in swampy
+ ground. The Moritos passed through the jungle with the agility and
+ noiselessness of cats, but the three white men floundered along as best
+ they could. Their captors uttered never a word and would not allow them
+ to speak.
+
+ The sun was just rising over a wilderness of mountains when they came
+ to a small clearing in the woods, apparently upon a plateau near the
+ top of a mountain. In this clearing there were a number of isolated
+ trees, in each one of which, at about twenty feet above the ground,
+ was a native hut, looking like a huge bird's nest. A small crowd of
+ natives, including women and children, ran toward them shouting, and
+ now for the first time the men of the returning party began to talk
+ too. Some of them tied the legs of their prisoners again and sat them
+ down on the ground, while the others rehearsed the history of their
+ exploit. It was a curious scene to witness. The men as well as the
+ women wore their long, coarse hair loose to the waist. Some of the
+ men had feathers stuck in their hair, and all of them were grotesquely
+ tattooed.
+
+ "I wonder if they're cannibals?" said Cleary, for there seemed to be an
+ opportunity now for conversation.
+
+ "I don't think there are any in this part of the country," said Colonel
+ James. "Here comes our breakfast anyway."
+
+ All the inhabitants of the village had been inspecting the captives
+ with great interest, especially the women and children. Two women now
+ came running from the group of tree-houses with platters of meat, and
+ the crowd opened to let them approach.
+
+ "Don't ask what it is," said Cleary, as he gulped down his rations.
+
+ "I can't eat it!" cried Sam.
+
+ "Oh, you must, or you'll offend them," said Colonel James.
+
+ And they completed their repast with wry faces. When they had finished,
+ one of the warriors, whom they had noticed before on account of his
+ comparative height and the magnificence of his decorations, came up to
+ them and addressed them, to their great surprise, in Castalian. He
+ explained to them that he was the famous savage chief, Carlos, who as
+ head of the Moritos ruled the entire region, and that they were
+ prisoners of war; that he had learned Castalian as a boy from a
+ missionary in the mountains when the land was at peace; and that a
+ palaver would be held on the following day, to which the heads of the
+ neighboring villages would be invited, to determine what to do with
+ them. He showed special interest in Sam's red hair and mustache, and
+ smoothed them and pulled them, asking him if they had been dyed. When
+ he was informed that they were not, he was filled with admiration and
+ called up his favorites to examine this wonder of nature. Sam had
+ noticed that from the moment of his arrival he had been the object of
+ admiration of the women, and this fact was now accounted for.
+
+ The three prisoners had no reason to complain of their treatment during
+ the day. A guard was set upon them, but the ropes by which they were
+ tied were loosened, and they were allowed from time to time to walk
+ about. Most of the morning they passed in much-needed sleep. In the
+ afternoon Carlos visited them again with some of his men, and set to
+ work to satisfy his curiosity as to their country, translating their
+ answers to his friends. His Castalian was very bad, but so was that of
+ his captives; yet they succeeded in making themselves understood
+ without difficulty.
+
+ "Do you have houses as high as those?" he asked, pointing to the human
+ nests in the trees.
+
+ "Yes, indeed," said Cleary. "Near my home there is a house nearly a
+ quarter of a mile long and twice as high as that tree, and nine hundred
+ people live in it."
+
+ There were murmurs of astonishment as this information was translated.
+
+ "What is that great house for?" asked the chief.
+
+ "It's a lunatic asylum."
+
+ "What is that?"
+
+ "A house for lunatics to live in."
+
+ "But what is a lunatic?"
+
+ Cleary tried in vain to explain what a lunatic was. The Moritos had
+ never seen one.
+
+ "We have plenty of such houses at home," said Sam, "and we have had to
+ double their size in ten years to hold the lunatics; they are splendid
+ buildings. There was one not very far from the college where my friend
+ and I were educated. But some of our prisons are even larger than our
+ lunatic asylums."
+
+ "What is a prison," asked Carlos.
+
+ "Oh," said Sam, "don't you understand that either? It's a house in
+ which we lock up criminals--I mean men who kill us or rob us."
+
+ "Oh, I see," replied Carlos. "You mean your enemies whom you take
+ prisoner in battle."
+
+ "No, I don't. I mean our own fellow citizens who murder and steal."
+
+ "Do you mean that you sometimes kill each other and steal from each
+ other, your own tribe?"
+
+ "Yes," said Sam. "Of course people who do so are bad men, but there are
+ some such among us."
+
+ A great discussion arose among the natives after hearing this.
+
+ "What do they say?" asked Colonel James in Castalian.
+
+ "They say," said the chief, "that they can not believe this, as they
+ have never heard of members of the same tribe hurting each other."
+
+ "We do all we can to prevent it," said Sam. "In our cities we have
+ policemen to keep order; that is, we have soldiers stationed in the
+ streets to frighten the bad men."
+
+ "Do you have soldiers in the streets of your towns to keep you from
+ killing each other!" exclaimed the chief, in astonishment. "Who ever
+ heard of such a thing? I do not understand it," and, altho Sam repeated
+ the information in every conceivable way permitted by his limited
+ vocabulary, he was unable successfully to convey the idea.
+
+ "It is strange how uncivilized they are," he said to his friends.
+
+ "Do you live on bananas in your country?" asked Carlos.
+
+ "No; we eat them sometimes, but we live on grain and meat," said Sam.
+
+ "You must have to work very hard to get it."
+
+ "Yes, we do, sometimes twelve hours a day."
+
+ "How frightful! And is there enough for all to eat?"
+
+ "Not always."
+
+ "And are your people happy when they work so hard and are sometimes
+ hungry?"
+
+ "Not always," said Sam. "Sometimes people are so unhappy that they
+ commit suicide."
+
+ "What?"
+
+ "I mean they kill themselves."
+
+ There was now another heated discussion.
+
+ "What do they say?" asked Colonel James.
+
+ "They say that they did not know it was possible for people to kill
+ themselves. I did not know it either. It is very strange."
+
+ "What limited intelligences they have!" exclaimed Sam.
+
+ "They say," continued Carlos, in a somewhat embarrassed manner, "that
+ if you are condemned to death, they wish one of you would kill himself,
+ so that they can see how it is done."
+
+ "There's a chance for you, Sam," said Cleary, but Sam did not seem to
+ see the joke.
+
+ "I am very sorry," said Carlos, seating himself nearer to Sam, "I am
+ very sorry that we may have to kill you, for I like you; but what can
+ we do? It is a rule of our tribe to kill prisoners of war."
+
+ "I really don't see what they can do, if that is the case," said Sam in
+ English. "If that is their law, and they have always done it, of course
+ from their point of view it is their military duty. I don't see any way
+ out of it. Do you?"
+
+ "It wouldn't break my heart if they failed to do their duty in this
+ case," said Cleary. "For heaven's sake, don't tell him what you think.
+ Let's keep him feeling agreeable by our conversation. He's fallen in
+ love with you, Sam. Perhaps he'll give you to one of his daughters and
+ she may marry you or eat you, whichever she pleases."
+
+ "I wish you wouldn't joke about these things," said Sam. "It's a
+ serious piece of business. There's no glory in being tomahawked here in
+ the mountains."
+
+ "And I haven't got my kodak with me either," said Cleary.
+
+ "What made you come into my country?" asked Carlos. "Did you not know
+ how powerful I am? And what have I ever done against you?"
+
+ "We came because we were ordered to," said Sam.
+
+ "And do you do what you are ordered to, whether you approve of it or
+ not?"
+
+ "Of course we do."
+
+ "That is very strange," said Carlos. "We never obey anybody unless we
+ want to and think he is doing the right thing. I tell my men here what
+ I want to do, and if they agree to it they obey me, but if they don't I
+ give it up. But you do things that you think are wrong and foolish
+ because you are ordered to. It is very strange!"
+
+ "We are military men," said Sam. "It requires centuries of civilization
+ to understand us."
+
+ "How do you kill your prisoners?" asked Carlos.
+
+ "We don't kill them," answered Sam.
+
+ "I don't know about that, Sam," said Cleary in English. "We didn't take
+ many prisoners at San Diego."
+
+ "That's a fact," answered Sam, in the same language. "We didn't take
+ many. I never thought of that."
+
+ "Don't tell him, tho," added Cleary.
+
+ "But when you soldiers have to execute an enemy for any reason, how do
+ you do it?"
+
+ "We shoot them with rifles," said Sam.
+
+ "Is that all?"
+
+ "No; we make them dig their graves first," interposed Cleary. "That's a
+ hint to him," he whispered. "It's better than the stew pot."
+
+ "Dig their graves first!" exclaimed the chief, and he turned to his men
+ and explained the matter to them. They were evidently delighted.
+
+ "What are they saying?" asked James again.
+
+ "They say that that is a grand idea, and that they will adopt it. They
+ think civilization is a great thing, and they want to be civilized,"
+ said Carlos.
+
+ "There, I knew they weren't cannibals!" said the colonel.
+
+ There was silence for several minutes, and Carlos smoothed Sam's locks
+ with his hand.
+
+ "We must entertain him," said Cleary. "Say something, Sam, or he'll get
+ down on us."
+
+ "Say something yourself," said Sam, who was thoroughly vexed at his
+ friend's ill-timed flippancy.
+
+ "Does your tribe live in these mountains and nowhere else?" asked
+ Cleary.
+
+ "Oh, no. We have brothers everywhere. They are in all the islands, and
+ all over the world."
+
+ "You tell them by your language, I suppose."
+
+ "No, some of them do not speak our language. That makes no difference.
+ We tell our brothers in other ways."
+
+ "How?" said Cleary.
+
+ "There are four marks of the true Morito," said the chief. "Their young
+ men are initiated by torture. That is one mark. Then their chief men
+ wear feathers on their heads. That is the second. And the third mark is
+ that they are tattooed, as I am," and he pointed to the strange figures
+ on his naked chest; "and the fourth is that they all use the sacred
+ tom-tom when they dance."
+
+ "Sam," said Cleary, "have you got those East Point photographs in your
+ pocket?"
+
+ "Yes," said Sam, thrusting his hand into his bosom.
+
+ Cleary rolled over to Carlos as well as his ropes would allow, threw
+ his arms about his neck, and cried out in Castalian, "Oh, my
+ brother, my long-lost brother!"
+
+ [Illustration: TWO OF A KIND
+ "THERE ARE FOUR MARKS"]
+
+ There was a general commotion. The savages drew their knives, and for a
+ moment there seemed to be danger for the prisoners.
+
+ "What on earth are you trying to do, Mr. Cleary?" exclaimed Colonel
+ James. "It seems to me that your pleasantries are in very doubtful
+ taste while our lives are in the balance."
+
+ Cleary made no answer, but went on crying, "Oh, my brothers, my
+ long-lost brothers!"
+
+ "What do you mean?" ejaculated Carlos, in a rage. "I will give you one
+ minute in which to explain, and then your head will fall."
+
+ "We are your brothers. We are Moritos. We are your people from a
+ distant island, and you never knew it!"
+
+ "Is this true?" asked the chief, looking at Sam and the colonel.
+
+ "Swear to it," whispered Cleary.
+
+ "We swear that it is true," replied the two officers.
+
+ "Then prove it, or you shall all three die to-night. I am not to be
+ trifled with. Proceed."
+
+ "Senor," said Cleary, "you have said that you recognize Morito young
+ men by the fact that they have passed through the torture. We have
+ passed through the torture. My friend will show you the pictures taken
+ of both of us when we were about to be burned at the stake, and also
+ one of himself passing through the ordeal of water. Sam, show him the
+ photos."
+
+ Sam took the two pictures from his pocket and handed them to Cleary,
+ who held them in his hand while Carlos peered over his shoulder.
+
+ "You see here," he said, "that we are tied to the stake. You may
+ recognize our features. You see the expression of pain on our faces.
+ These men standing around are our elder brothers who initiated us. It
+ was done by night in a sacred grove where our ancestors have indulged
+ in these rites for many ages. That wall is part of a ruin of a temple
+ to the god of war."
+
+ Carlos evidently was impressed. He took the dim print, with its fitful
+ lantern-light effects, and studied it, comparing the faces with those
+ of his prisoners. Then he showed it to his followers, and they all
+ spoke together.
+
+ "They say," said their chief at last, "that they believe you speak the
+ truth. But how do we know that the old man was initiated too?"
+
+ "He is an old man," said Cleary. "He had a picture like this in his
+ pocket when he was young. We all carry them with us as long as they
+ hold together. But they will wear out. You may see that this one is
+ wearing out already."
+
+ "That is true," assented the chief. "But your picture proves against
+ you as well as for you. You have no feathers in your heads there, and
+ you are wearing none now," and he proudly straightened up those on his
+ head.
+
+ "In our country we have not many feathers as you have here," answered
+ Cleary. "The birds do not come often to that land, it is so cold. Only
+ our greatest men wear feathers. When we reach home and grow old and
+ wise and valiant, perhaps we shall all have feathers. This old warrior
+ of ours has feathers at home, but he does not carry them on journeys.
+ My young friend and I are yet too young. We have a picture of our old
+ friend here with his feathers."
+
+ "Good heavens!" exclaimed Sam. "What are you driving at. We'll be worse
+ off than ever now."
+
+ "Just you let me manage this affair," said Cleary. "Give me that photo
+ of the dress-parade at East Point that you showed me last week."
+
+ Sam did as he was told. It represented the dress-parade at sunset, the
+ companies drawn up in line at parade-rest and the band in full blast
+ going through its evolutions in the foreground, with a peculiarly
+ magnificent drum-major in bear-skin hat and plumes at the head,
+ swinging a gorgeous baton.
+
+ Cleary exhibited it to Carlos.
+
+ "There is our elderly friend," said he, indicating the drum-major. "He
+ is leading the national war-dance of our people. There is the tom-tom,"
+ he added triumphantly, pointing at the bass-drum, which was
+ fortunately presented in full relief.
+
+ Carlos was taken aback, and he made a guttural exclamation of surprise.
+
+ "Do you dress like that when you are at home?" he asked of Colonel
+ James.
+
+ "I do," replied the colonel majestically.
+
+ "Then I bow down before you," said the chief, kneeling down and
+ touching the ground with his forehead three times. "But," he added, as
+ he rose to his feet, "you have not yet proved that we are brothers.
+ Where are your tattoo-marks? Look at mine!"
+
+ "Sam, strip," whispered Cleary, and Sam tore off his coat and shirt,
+ displaying the masterpieces of the artistic boatswain. A cry of
+ admiration went up from the assembled savages. Carlos rushed at
+ him, threw his arms about his neck, and rubbed his nose violently
+ against his.
+
+ "For heaven's sake, save me, Cleary!" cried Sam. "My nose will be worse
+ than Saunder's, and Marian is prejudiced against damaged noses."
+
+ Cleary thought it best not to interfere, and finally the chief grew
+ tired of this exercise. He hardly paid any attention while Cleary
+ showed the modest tattoo-marks on his arms, and Colonel James exhibited
+ equally insignificant symbols on his, for he, too, had been tattooed in
+ his youth. He was too much engrossed in Sam's red hair and his
+ variegated cuticle.
+
+ "Here is the picture of the water-ordeal which you forgot to look at,"
+ said Cleary, as he collected the photographs. "This is my friend again
+ with his head in the water and his legs stretched out in supplication
+ to the god of the temple."
+
+ Carlos looked at it in ecstasy.
+
+ "Oh, my brothers!" he cried. "To think that I should not have known
+ you! You torture each other just as we do. You are tattooed just as we
+ are! You have bigger feathers and bigger dances and bigger tom-toms.
+ You are bigger savages than we are! Come, let us feast together."
+
+ The repast was soon prepared in the center of the clearing. The
+ prisoners, now unbound, washed and happy, were seated in the place of
+ honor on each side of the chief. A huge pot of miscellaneous food was
+ set down in the midst, and they all began to eat with their fingers,
+ the chief picking out the tid-bits for his guests and putting them in
+ their mouths. They were so much delighted with the results of the day's
+ work that they ate heartily and asked no questions. When the meal was
+ over, Cleary turned to the chief and thanked him in a little oration,
+ which was received with great favor.
+
+ "We have found our brothers," he said in conclusion, "and you have
+ found yours. You believe us now when we say that we have come to bless
+ you and not to injure you. We will not take your land. We will
+ generously give you part of it for yourselves. You see how we all love
+ you, the aged warrior and the red-headed chief as well as I. Why will
+ you not come with us when we set out on our journey to our great chief,
+ or why, at any rate, will you not send your chiefs with us, to tell
+ him that you have received us all as brothers and that we shall always
+ be friends and allies?"
+
+ Carlos translated this speech sentence by sentence. Cleary was a good
+ speaker, and they were impressed by his style as well as by his
+ argument. They palavered together for some time; then Carlos arose
+ and addressed his guests, but particularly Sam, whom he considered
+ as the leader.
+
+ "Brothers," he said, "we are indeed brothers by the torture, tattoo,
+ tom-tom, and top-feather. We did not know who you were, we did not
+ understand you. We wished to be left in peace. We did not want to have
+ the Castalians come here and rob us. We did not want their beads and
+ their brandy. We wanted to be let alone. But you are our brothers. You
+ are greater savages than we are. Why should we not go with you? The
+ chiefs of our other villages are coming to-morrow at sunrise. I will
+ conduct you back to your great chief with them, and we shall all
+ rejoice together."
+
+ It was now nearly dark. Carlos apologized for not having accommodation
+ for his guests in his tree-hut, but provided comfortable blankets on
+ the ground and had a fire built for them in a secluded place near the
+ village. The three men were soon sleeping peacefully, and they did not
+ awake until the sun had already risen.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER IX
+
+ On Duty at Havilla
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+
+ When they woke they heard the noise of voices in the village and
+ hastened thither. The chiefs had already arrived and were exchanging
+ greetings with Carlos and the other residents. Breakfast was prepared
+ by the women on the same ground where they had dined, and by eight
+ o'clock the expedition started, composed of some thirty warriors,
+ several of whom were laden with presents in the shape of baskets and
+ native cloth. When they neared the headquarters of the little invading
+ army, the three white men went ahead and informed the sentinels that it
+ was a peaceful embassy which followed them.
+
+ "You must leave me to tell the story of our exploit," Cleary had said,
+ and his friends were so well satisfied with his record as a talker that
+ they assented.
+
+ "General," said Cleary, as they entered his hut in the village, "we are
+ bringing in all the chiefs of the Moritos. They are ready to lay down
+ their arms and accept any terms. We have sworn friendship to them."
+
+ "How on earth have you managed it?" said the general.
+
+ "It is chiefly due to Captain Jinks, or, I should say, Major Jinks.
+ They were about to kill us when, by the sheer force of his glance
+ and his powers of speech, he actually cowed them, and they submitted
+ to him."
+
+ "I have heard of taming wild beasts that way," said the general, "but
+ I never quite believed it."
+
+ When the chiefs arrived they embraced every soldier they saw and showed
+ every sign of joy. The general ordered a feast to be spread for them
+ and addressed them in English. They did not understand a word of this
+ harangue, but seemed much affected. When they heard that the great
+ general of all was at San Diego, only a day's march away, they insisted
+ on going thither, and the next day the brigade marched back again,
+ leaving a small garrison behind. The army at San Diego could hardly
+ believe its eyes when at sundown the expedition returned, having fully
+ accomplished its object without firing a shot and accompanied by a band
+ of Moritos. When Cleary's version of the exploit became known, Sam was
+ openly acclaimed as a hero and the favorite of the army. General
+ Laughter complimented him again, and again mentioned him in despatches.
+ A week later his promotion to be major of volunteers, for meritorious
+ conduct in the field of San Diego, was announced by cable, and again
+ after a few days he was made a colonel. Sam's cup was full.
+
+ "Sam," said Cleary one day, "I believe in your luck. You'll be
+ President some of these days. All the time we were up in the mountains
+ I knew it would come out all right because we had you along."
+
+ Meanwhile the chiefs had tendered their presents to General Laughter
+ and had drunk plentiful libations of whisky and soda with him. They
+ spent a week of festivity in the town and then returned, having agreed
+ to all that was asked of them by their "brothers."
+
+ The rainy season now set in, and operations in the field became
+ difficult. Furthermore, the general had decided that the war was at an
+ end, and officially it was so considered. Some troops were left at San
+ Diego, but the headquarters were removed again to Havilla, and Sam went
+ back with the staff. He found himself received as a great man. His two
+ exploits had made him the most famous officer in the army, even more so
+ than the general in command. Soon after his return to the city one of
+ the civil commissioners, who had been sent out by the Administration,
+ gave a large dinner in his honor at the palace. The chief officers and
+ civil officials were among the guests, as well as two or three native
+ merchants who had remained loyal to the invading army for financial and
+ commercial reasons and had not joined the rebels, who composed
+ nine-tenths of the population. These merchants were generally known in
+ the army as the "patriots," and were treated with much consideration by
+ the civil commissioners.
+
+ After dinner the host proposed a toast to Sam and accompanied it with a
+ patriotic speech which thrilled the hearts of his audience. He pointed
+ to the national flag which was festooned upon the wall.
+
+ "Look at Old Gory!" he cried. "What does she stand for? For the rights
+ of the oppressed all over the earth, for freedom and equal rights,
+ for----"
+
+ There was a sound of boisterous laughter in the next room. A young
+ officer ran forward and whispered to the orator, "Be careful; some of
+ those captured rebel officers are shut up in there, and perhaps they
+ can overhear you. Be careful what you say. Some of them speak English."
+ The commissioner hemmed and hawed and tried to recover himself.
+
+ "What does the dear old flag stand for?" he repeated. "For
+ liber--No--for-r-r----Well, 'pon my word, what does she stand for?"
+
+ "For the army and navy," whispered a neighbor.
+
+ "Yes," he thundered. "Yes, the flag stands for the army and navy, for
+ our officers and men, for our men-of-war and artillery, for our cavalry
+ and infantry, that's what she stands for!"
+
+ This was received with great applause, and the speaker smiled with
+ satisfaction. Then gradually his expression became sad.
+
+ "I am sorry to say," he said,--"I am ashamed as a citizen of our great
+ land to be obliged to admit, that there are at home a few
+ craven-hearted, mean-spirited men--shall I call them men? No, nor even
+ women--there are creatures, I say, who disapprove of our glorious
+ deeds, who spurn the flag and the noble principles for which it stands
+ and to which I have alluded, who say that we have no business to take
+ away land which belongs to other people, and that we have not the right
+ to slaughter rebels and traitors in our midst. I appeal to the
+ patriotic Cubapinos at this board, if we are not introducing a higher
+ and nobler civilization into these islands."
+
+ The native gentlemen bowed assent.
+
+ "Have we not given them a better language than their own? Have we not
+ established our enlightened institutions? For instance, let me cite the
+ custom house. We have the collector here with us--and the post-office.
+ The postmaster is----"
+
+ "Sh-sh-sh!" whispered the prompter again. "He's in jail."
+
+ "I mean the assistant postmaster is also with us. And there are our
+ other institutions, the----"
+
+ "There's going to be a prize-fight to-night," cried a young lieutenant
+ who had taken too much wine, at the foot of the table. "Dandy Sullivan
+ against Joe Corker."
+
+ This interruption was too much for the commissioner, who was quite
+ unable to resume the thread of his remarks for several moments. The
+ guests in the mean time moved uneasily in their seats, for most of them
+ were anxious to be off to see the fight.
+
+ "Those who carp against us at home," continued the speaker, trying in
+ vain to find some graceful way of coming to a close, "those who
+ dishonor the flag are the men who pretend to be filled with humanity
+ and to desire the welfare of mankind. They pretend to object to
+ bloodshed. They are mere sentimentalists. They are not practical men.
+ They do not understand our destiny, nor the Constitution, nor progress,
+ nor civilization, nor glory, nor honor, nor the dear old flag, God
+ bless her. They are sentimentalists. They have no sense of humor."
+
+ Here the audience applauded loudly, altho the speaker had not intended
+ to have them applaud just there. It occurred to him that he might just
+ as well stop at this point, and he sat down, not altogether satisfied,
+ however, with his peroration and vexed to think that he had forgotten
+ Sam altogether. The party broke up without delay, and Sam walked off
+ with Cleary, who had been present, to see the prize-fight.
+
+ "The commissioner isn't much of a talker, is he?" said Cleary. "That
+ was a bad break about the postmaster. I hear they've arrested Captain
+ Jones for embezzlement too."
+
+ "Good heavens!" cried Sam, "what an outrage!" And he told Cleary of his
+ narrow escape from complicity in the matter, and how the military
+ operations had prevented him from calling on the contractors.
+ "Civilians don't understand these things," he added. "They oughtn't to
+ send them out here. They don't understand things."
+
+ "No. They haven't been brought up on tabasco sauce. What can you expect
+ of them?"
+
+ They soon arrived at the Alhambra Theater at which the fight was to
+ take place, and found it in progress. A large crowd was collected,
+ consisting of soldiers and natives in equal proportions. The last round
+ was just finishing, and Joe Corker was in the act of knocking his
+ opponent out. The audience was shouting with glee and excitement, the
+ cheers being mixed with hisses and cries of "Fake, fake!"
+
+ "I know Corker," said Cleary. "Come, I'll introduce you."
+
+ They pushed forward through the crowd, and were soon in a room behind
+ the stage, where Corker was being rubbed and washed down by his
+ assistants. Sam looked at the great man and felt rather small and
+ insignificant. "Here's a kind of civilian who is not inferior to army
+ men," he thought. "Perhaps he is even superior." He would not have said
+ this aloud, but he thought it.
+
+ "How de do, Joe?" said Cleary, shaking hands. "That was a great fight.
+ You knocked him out clean. Here's my friend, Colonel Jinks, the hero of
+ San Diego and the pacifier of the Moritos."
+
+ Corker nodded condescendingly.
+
+ "We enjoyed the fight very much," said Sam, not altogether at his ease.
+ "It reminded me of my own experience at East Point."
+
+ "It was a good fight," said Corker, "and a damned fair one too. I'd
+ like to punch the heads of those fellers who cried 'fake.' It was as
+ fair as fair could be, and Dandy and me was as evenly matched as two
+ peas. I always believe in takin' a feller of your size, and I did."
+
+ "That wasn't the way at East Point," said Cleary. "They didn't take
+ fellows of their size there."
+
+ "That's against our rules anyway," said Corker.
+
+ "It must be a civilian rule," said Sam, beginning to feel his
+ superiority again. "The military rule as we were taught it at East
+ Point was to take a smaller man if you could, and you see, the army
+ does just the same thing. We tackled Castalia and then the Cubapines,
+ and they weren't of our size. We don't fight the powerful countries."
+
+ "That's queer," said Corker, drinking a lemonade.
+
+ "It's perfectly right," said Sam. "When a man's in the right, and of
+ course we always are, if he fights a man of his size or one bigger than
+ he is, he gives the wrong a chance of winning, and that is clearly
+ immoral. If he takes a weaker man he makes the truth sure of success.
+ And it's just the same way with nations."
+
+ Corker did not seem to be much interested by this disquisition, and
+ Cleary dragged his friend away after they had respectfully bade the
+ pugilist good-night. A crowd of soldiers was waiting outside to see
+ Corker get into his carriage. They paid no attention whatever to Sam
+ and Cleary.
+
+ "When it comes to real glory a prize-fighter beats a colonel all
+ hollow," said Cleary, and they parted for the night.
+
+ Sam was retained on the general staff and assigned to the important
+ post of censor of the press. His duties were most engrossing, for not
+ only were the proofs of all the local newspapers submitted to him, but
+ also all other printed matter. One day a large number of handbills
+ were confiscated at a printer's and brought in for his inspection. He
+ was very busy and asked his native private secretary to look them over
+ for him. In a half-hour he came to him with a translation of the
+ document.
+
+ "What does it say?" cried Sam. "I have no time to read it through."
+
+ "It says that governments are made to preserve liberty, and that they
+ get their only authority from the free will of the people who are ruled
+ by them," answered the clerk.
+
+ "That's clearly seditious," said Sam. "There must be some plot at
+ the bottom of it. Have the whole edition burned and have the printer
+ locked up."
+
+ A few days later a newspaper was brought to him announcing that the
+ Moritos had massacred the garrison stationed among them, that the whole
+ province of San Diego was in revolt, and that the regiment there would
+ probably have to fall back on Havilla. Sam was much scandalized, and
+ sent at once for the native editor.
+
+ "What does this mean?" said he.
+
+ "Pardon, my colonel," said the little man apologetically, "this is a
+ newspaper and this is news. I am sure it is true."
+
+ "That is the civilian conception of news," said Sam, with disdain.
+ "Officially this is not true. We have instructions, as you have often
+ been told, not to allow anything to be printed that can injure the
+ Administration at Whoppington. Any one can see how this would injure
+ it, and news that can injure it is, from the military point of view,
+ untrue. General Notice is making a tour of the country at home,
+ receiving ovations everywhere on account of the complete subjugation of
+ the islands. What effect will such news have upon his reception? Is it
+ a proper way to treat a general who has deserved well of his country?"
+
+ "But," interposed the editor, "don't the people know that you are
+ continually sending out more troops?"
+
+ "The people do not mind a little thing like that," said Sam. "When an
+ officer and a gentleman says the war is over, they believe it, and
+ they show their gratitude by voting money to send new regiments. Your
+ action in printing this stuff is most disloyal. I will send one of my
+ assistants around to your office with you to see that this edition is
+ destroyed, and if you repeat the offense you will be deported."
+
+ The unfortunate man retired, shrugging his shoulders. As he went out
+ Cleary came running in with a copy of the paper.
+
+ "Oh! you've got a copy of that, have you?" said Sam. "It's an outrage
+ to print such things, isn't it?"
+
+ "I'm afraid it's true," said Cleary.
+
+ "What difference does that make?" exclaimed Sam. "It's the business of
+ an army to conquer a country. We've done it twice, and we can do it as
+ often as we like again."
+
+ "Hear, hear!" cried Cleary. "You're becoming more and more of a soldier
+ as you get promoted. You have the true military instinct, I see. Of
+ course it makes no difference who holds the country, but I'm a little
+ disappointed in the Moritos. As for San Diego, Colonel Booth of your
+ old regiment is in command, and I half think he didn't back up the
+ Morito garrison out of jealousy toward you. He wanted to have the
+ Morito country go back, so as to belittle our exploit. But we'll get
+ even with him. I've seen the cable-censor, and not a word about it will
+ go home. I have just sent a despatch saying that the whole island is
+ entirely in our hands and that the natives are swearing allegiance by
+ thousands."
+
+ "That's right," said Sam. "It's really a kindness to the people at
+ home, for if they think it's true it makes them just as happy as if it
+ were true, and I think it's positively cruel to worry them
+ unnecessarily."
+
+ "To be sure," said Cleary. "And if it does get out, we'll throw all the
+ blame on the Secretary of War and his embalmed beef. They say he's
+ writing a book to show that a diet of mummies is the best for fighting
+ men--and so the quarrels go on. By the way, I just stopped a piece of
+ news that might have interested you. Do you know that you have
+ suppressed the Declaration of Independence?"
+
+ "Nonsense. I haven't seen a copy of it in two years."
+
+ "Well, here's a despatch that I got away from the cable-office just in
+ time. It would have gone in another ten minutes. Here it is."
+
+ Sam took the paper and read an account of the printing by a native
+ committee of fifty thousand copies of the Declaration in Castalian, and
+ its immediate suppression by Colonel Jinks, the censor.
+
+ "It's a downright lie," cried Sam. "I'll call my native secretary and
+ inquire into this," and he rang his bell.
+
+ "See here, what does this mean?" he asked the clerk who hurried in.
+
+ The man thought a minute.
+
+ "I do not know the Declaration of Independence," he said, "but perhaps
+ that paper I translated for you the other day had something to do with
+ it. I have not a copy here."
+
+ "Were they burned?"
+
+ "Not yet, sir. They were seized, and are in our depot."
+
+ "Come," said Sam to Cleary, "let's go over there and look at it. It's a
+ half-mile walk and it will do me good."
+
+ "How are things at San Diego?" asked Sam, as they walked along
+ together. "You've been out there, haven't you?"
+
+ "Yes. We'll have to come in. The Cubapinos have got a force together at
+ a town farther down the river and are threatening us there. We got
+ pretty near them and mined under a convent they were in, and blew up a
+ lot of them, but it didn't do them much harm, for a lot of recruits
+ came in just afterward from the mountains. That convent was born to be
+ blown up, it seems, for some Castalian anarchists had a plot to blow it
+ up some years ago, and came near doing it, too. We made use of their
+ tunnels, which the monks were too lazy to have filled up. The anarchist
+ plot was found out, and they garroted a dozen of them."
+
+ "What inhuman brutes those anarchists are!" cried Sam. "Think of their
+ trying to blow up a whole houseful of people! I wish we could take
+ some one of the smaller islands and put all the anarchists of the world
+ there and let them live out their precious theories. Just think what a
+ hell it would be! What infernal engines of hatred and destruction they
+ would construct, if they were left to themselves--machines charged with
+ dynamite and bristling with all sorts of explosive contrivances!"
+
+ "Something like a battle-ship," suggested Cleary.
+
+ "Don't talk nonsense!" exclaimed Sam. "Only Castalian fiends would try
+ to destroy law and order and upset the peaceable course of society in
+ such a way. Do you suppose that any of our people at home would do such
+ a thing?"
+
+ "None, outside of the artillery," answered Cleary. "Well, at any rate,
+ our blowing up of the convent didn't do much good. There was some talk
+ of putting poison in the river to dispose of them, but of course we
+ couldn't do that."
+
+ "Of course not," said Sam. "That would be barbarous and against all
+ military precedents. The rules of war don't allow it."
+
+ "They're rather queer, those rules," answered his friend. "I should
+ like my enemies to take notice that I prefer being poisoned to being
+ blown up with bombshells. In some respects they don't pay much
+ attention to the rules, either. They don't take prisoners much
+ nowadays. Most of my despatches now read, 'fifty natives killed,' but
+ they say nothing of wounded or prisoners."
+
+ "We're fighting savages, we must remember that," said Sam.
+
+ "Then we've got a way of trying our pistols and rifles on natives
+ working in the fields; it's rather novel, to say the least. I saw one
+ man in the 73d try his new revolver on a native rowing a boat on the
+ river, and over the fellow toppled and the boat drifted down-stream.
+ The men all applauded, and even the officers laughed."
+
+ "Boys will be boys," said Sam, smiling. "They're good shots, at
+ any rate."
+
+ "They are that. There were some darkies plowing up there just this
+ side of San Diego, and some of our fellows picked them off as neatly
+ as you please. It must have been eight hundred yards if it was a foot.
+ But somehow I don't quite like it."
+
+ "War is war," said Sam, using a phrase which presumably has a rational
+ meaning, as it is so often employed by reasonable people. "It doesn't
+ pay to be squeamish. The squeamish men don't make good soldiers. I've
+ seen enough to learn that. They hesitate to obey orders, if they don't
+ like them."
+
+ As he said this they passed a small crowd of boys in the street. They
+ were trying to make two dogs fight, but the dogs refused to do so, and
+ the boys were beating them and urging them on.
+
+ "What stupid brutes they are," said Sam. "They're badly trained."
+
+ "They haven't had a military education," responded Cleary. "But I
+ almost forgot to ask you, have you seen the papers from home this
+ morning? They're all full of you and your greatness. Here are two or
+ three," and he took them from his pocket.
+
+ Sam opened them and gazed at them entranced. There was page upon page
+ of his exploits, portraits of all kinds, biographies, anecdotes,
+ interviews, headlines, everything that his wildest dreams had imagined,
+ only grander and more glorious. There was nothing to be seen but the
+ words "Captain Jinks" from one end of the papers to the other.
+
+ "They've even got a song about you," said Cleary. "Here it is:
+
+ "'I'm Captain Jinks of the horse-marines.
+ I feed my horse on corn and beans.
+ Of course it's quite beyond my means,
+ Tho a captain in the army!'"
+
+ "I don't altogether like it," said Sam. "What are the horse-marines? I
+ don't believe there are any."
+
+ "Oh, that doesn't make any difference. It seems it's an old song that
+ was all the go long before our time, and your name has revived it. It
+ will advertise you splendidly. The whole thing is a grand piece of
+ work for _The Lyre_. Jonas has been congratulating me on it. He'd come
+ and tell you so, but he doesn't want to be seen with you. You've
+ censured out everything I've asked you to for him, and he doesn't want
+ people to know about his pull. That's the reason why he's never called
+ on you. But he says it's the best newspaper job he ever heard of. I
+ tell you we're a great combination, you and I. Perhaps I'll write a
+ book and call it, 'With Jinks at Havilla.' Rather an original title,
+ isn't it? But I'm afraid that all this talk at home will not make you
+ very popular with the officers here, who knew you when you were only a
+ captain. What would you say to being transferred to Porsslania? They
+ want new men for our army there, and I've half a mind to go too for a
+ change and act as the _Lyre's_ correspondent there. They'll do anything
+ I ask them now."
+
+ "I'd like it very much," said Sam. "I'm tired of this literary
+ business. But here we are. This is our depot."
+
+ The two men entered the long low building in which confiscated
+ property was stored. A soldier who was acting as watchman showed them
+ where the circulars were piled. Cleary took one and glanced over it.
+
+ [Illustration: CONSENT OF THE GOVERNED
+ "WHAT BUSINESS HAVE THESE PEOPLE TO TALK ABOUT EQUAL RIGHTS?"]
+
+ "As sure as fate, it's the Declaration of Independence!" he laughed.
+
+ Sam took up a copy and looked at it too.
+
+ "I believe it is," he said. "I didn't half look at it the other day.
+ I'm ever so much obliged to you for telling me and stopping the
+ telegram. But between you and me, the circular ought to be suppressed
+ anyway. What business have these people to talk about equal rights and
+ the consent of the governed? The men who wrote the
+ Declaration--Jeffries and the rest--were mere civilians and these ideas
+ are purely civilian. Come, let's have them burned at once," and he
+ called up two or three soldiers, and in a few minutes the circulars
+ formed a mass of glowing ashes in the courtyard.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER X
+
+ A Great Military Exploit
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+
+ One day while Sam was still waiting for Cleary to carry out his
+ designs, his secretary told him that a sergeant wished to see him, and
+ Sam directed him to show him into his office. The man was a rather
+ sinister-looking individual, and his speech betrayed his Anglian
+ origin.
+
+ "Colonel," said he, after the door was closed and they were alone, "I'm
+ only a sergeant promoted from the ranks, but I'm not just an ordinary
+ common soldier. I know a thing or two, and I've got a plan and I
+ thought perhaps you would be glad to 'ear of it. I 'ave the 'abit of
+ observing things, and most soldiers don't. Why, bless me, you can march
+ them into a country and out again, and with their eyes front, they
+ don't see a bloomin' thing. They're trained to see nothin'. They're
+ good for nothin' but to do as they're bid. I used to be in the army in
+ the old country, and once at Baldershot I saw Lord Bullsley come along
+ on horseback and stop two soldiers carryin' a soup-pail.
+
+ "'Give me a taste of that,' says he, and one of them runs off and gets
+ a ladle and gives him a taste. He spits it out and makes a face and
+ shouts:
+
+ "'Good heavens! man, you don't call that stuff soup, do you?'
+
+ "'No, sir,' says the man. 'It's dish-water that we was a-hemptyin'.'
+ That's the soldier all over again. He 'adn't sense enough to tell him
+ beforehand."
+
+ "I don't see, sergeant, what that has to do with me," said Sam curtly.
+
+ "Well, sir, perhaps it hasn't. But I only wanted to say that I ain't
+ that kind of a man. I sees and thinks for myself. Now I 'ear that
+ they've got a letter captured from Gomaldo askin' General Baluna for
+ reenforcements, and that they've got some letters from Baluna too, and
+ know his handwritin'. I only wanted to say that I used to be a
+ writin'-master and that I can copy any writin' goin' or any signature
+ either, so you can't tell them apart. Now why couldn't we forge an
+ answer from Baluna to Gomaldo and send the first reenforcements
+ ourselves? He wants a 'undred men at a time. And then we could capture
+ Gomaldo as easy as can be. We could find him in the mountains. I know a
+ lot of these natives 'ere who would go with us if we paid them well."
+
+ "We should have to dress them up in the native uniform," said Sam. "I
+ don't know whether that would be quite honorable."
+
+ The sergeant smiled knowingly, but said nothing.
+
+ "Do you think we could get native officers to do such a thing?" Sam
+ asked.
+
+ "Oh, yes! Plenty of them. I know one or two. At first they wouldn't
+ like it. But give them money enough and commissions in our army, and
+ they'd do it."
+
+ "How different they are from us!" mused Sam. "Nobody in our army,
+ officer or man, could ever be approached in that way."
+
+ "It seems to me I've read somewhere of one of our principal
+ generals--Maledict Donald, wasn't it?"
+
+ Sam thought best not to hear this.
+
+ "But we would have to send some of our own officers on such an
+ expedition," he said. "We couldn't disguise them as natives."
+
+ "That wouldn't be necessary. They can go as if they were prisoners--you
+ and two or three others you could pick out. I'd like to go too. And
+ then I'd expect good pay if the thing went through, and a commission as
+ lieutenant."
+
+ "There'd be no trouble about that," answered Sam. "I'll think it over,
+ and perhaps consult the general about it and let you know by
+ to-morrow."
+
+ "Very good, sir. I'm Sergeant Keene of the 5th Company, 39th Infantry."
+
+ As the sergeant went out Cleary came in, and Sam laid the matter before
+ him.
+
+ "I know that fellow by sight," said Cleary. "They say he's served
+ several terms for forgery and counterfeiting. I don't like his looks.
+ That's a great scheme tho, if it does seem a little like
+ bunco-steering. It's all right in war perhaps."
+
+ "Yes," said Sam. "We have a higher standard of honor than civilians.
+ I'll go and see the general about it now."
+
+ After some consultation the general approved the plan and authorized
+ Sam to carry it out. The latter set Keene to work at once at forging a
+ letter from Baluna acknowledging receipt of the orders for
+ reenforcements and informing Gomaldo that he was sending him the first
+ company of one hundred troops. Meanwhile he selected three officers of
+ the Regular Army to accompany him besides Keene, and through the
+ latter approached three native officers who had been captured at San
+ Diego. One of these was a close confidential friend of Gomaldo's, but
+ Keene succeeded after much persuasion in winning them all over. It was
+ an easier task to make up a company of native privates, who readily
+ followed their officers when a small payment on account had been given
+ to each man.
+
+ "I don't quite like the job," Sam confessed to Cleary, "but the general
+ says it's all right and so it must be."
+
+ At last the expedition started out. All the natives were dressed in the
+ native uniform, and the five white men were clad as privates in the
+ invading army and held as prisoners. After passing the outposts near
+ San Diego they turned toward the south in the direction of the
+ mountains where Gomaldo's captured letter had been dated. They were
+ received with rejoicings in each native village as soon as they showed
+ the forged letter of Baluna and exhibited their white prisoners. The
+ villagers showed much interest in the latter, but treated them kindly,
+ expressing their pity for them and offering them food. They had no
+ difficulty in obtaining exact directions as to Gomaldo's situation, but
+ found that it lay in the midst of an uninhabited district where it was
+ impossible to obtain supplies, the village where he had established his
+ headquarters being the only one within many miles. They scraped
+ together what food they could in the shape of rice, Indian corn, and
+ dried beef, and set out on the last stage of their journey. There had
+ been heavy rains recently, and the mountain paths were almost
+ impassable. There were swift rivers to cross, precipices to climb, and
+ jungles to penetrate. The heat was intense, and the men began to suffer
+ from it. The advance was very slow, and soon the provisions gave out.
+ It began to seem probable that the whole expedition would perish in the
+ mountains. Sam called a council of war, and, at Keene's suggestion,
+ picked out the two most vigorous privates, who went ahead bearing the
+ alleged Baluna letter and another from Gomaldo's renegade friend, who
+ was nominally in command, asking for speedy succor. The two
+ ambassadors were well schooled in what they should say, and were
+ promised a large sum of money if they succeeded.
+
+ For two long days the party waited entirely without food, and they were
+ just beginning to despair, when the two men returned with a dozen
+ carriers sent by Gomaldo bringing an ample supply of bread and meat. He
+ also delivered a letter in which the native general congratulated his
+ friend on his success in leading the reenforcements and in capturing
+ the prisoners, and gave express instructions that the latter should be
+ treated with all consideration. The carriers were commanded by a native
+ lieutenant, who insisted that the prisoners should share equally with
+ the native troops, and saw to it personally that Sam and his friends
+ were served. His kindness cut Sam to the heart. After a few hours'
+ delay the expedition set out again, and on the following day it reached
+ the mountain village where Gomaldo had established himself.
+
+ Gomaldo's body-guard, composed of fifty troops neatly dressed in white
+ uniforms, were drawn up to receive them, and the whole population
+ greeted them with joy. Gomaldo himself stood on the veranda of his
+ house, and, after saluting the expedition, invited the native officers
+ who were to betray him in to dinner. At this moment Keene whispered to
+ Sam and the latter signaled to the native officer, Gomaldo's
+ treacherous friend who was in charge of him, and this man gave an order
+ in a low voice, whereupon the whole expedition discharged their rifles,
+ and half-a-dozen of the body-guard fell to the ground. In the mean time
+ two of the native officers threw their arms round Gomaldo and took him
+ prisoner, and his partizans were seized with a panic. Sam took command
+ of his men, who outnumbered the loyal natives, and in a few minutes he
+ had unchallenged control of the post without losing a single man,
+ killed or wounded. Gomaldo was intensely excited and upbraided Sam
+ bitterly when taken before him, but upon being promised good treatment
+ he became more tractable. Sam gave orders that the villagers should
+ bury the dead, among whom he regretted to see the body of the native
+ lieutenant who had brought him food when they were starving; and then,
+ after a rest of several hours, the expedition set out on the return
+ journey, Gomaldo and his men accompanying it as prisoners.
+
+ The news of the capture preceded the party, and when, after a march of
+ several days, they arrived at Havilla, Sam was received as a conquering
+ hero by the army. Cleary took the first opportunity to grasp his hand.
+
+ "Is it really a great and noble act?" Sam whispered. "I suppose it is,
+ for everybody says so, but somehow it has left a bad taste in my mouth,
+ and I can't bear the sight of that fellow Keene."
+
+ "Never mind," said Cleary. "You won't have to see him long. We're going
+ to Porsslania in a fortnight, you and I, and you'll have a chance to
+ turn the world upside down there."
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XI
+
+ A Dinner Party at Gin-Sin
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+
+ During the past months great events had taken place in the ancient
+ empire of Porsslania. Many years earlier the various churches had sent
+ missionaries to that benighted land to reclaim its inhabitants from
+ barbarism and heathenism. These emissaries were not received with the
+ enthusiastic gratitude which they deserved, and some of the Porsslanese
+ had the impudence to assert that they were a civilized people when
+ their new teachers had been naked savages. They proved their barbarism,
+ however, by indulging in the most unreasonable prejudices against a
+ foreign religion, and when cornered in argument they would say to the
+ missionaries, "How would you like us to convert your people to our
+ religion?" an answer so illogical that it demonstrates either their bad
+ faith or the low development of their intellects. The missionaries of
+ some of the sects, by the help of their governments, gradually obtained
+ a good deal of land and at the same time a certain degree of civil
+ jurisdiction. The foreign governments, wishing to bless the natives
+ with temporal as well as celestial advantages, followed up the
+ missionary pioneers with traders in cheap goods, rum, opium, and
+ fire-arms, and finally endeavored to introduce their own machinery and
+ factory system, which had already at home raised all the laboring
+ classes to affluence, put an end to poverty, and realized the dream of
+ the prophets of old. The Porsslanese resolutely resisted all these
+ benevolent enterprises and doggedly expressed their preference for
+ their ancient customs. In order to overcome this unreasonable
+ opposition and assure the welfare of the people, the various Powers
+ from time to time seized the great ports of the Empire. The fertile
+ diplomacy of the courts found sufficient grounds for this. Most
+ frequently the pretext was an attack upon a missionary or even a case
+ of cold-blooded murder, and it became a proverb among the Porsslanese
+ that it takes a province to bury a missionary. Finally, all the harbors
+ of the Empire were in the hands of foreigners, who used this
+ advantageous position to confer blessings thick and fast upon the
+ reluctant population, who richly deserved, as a punishment, to be left
+ to themselves. At last a revolutionary party sprang up among this
+ deluded people, claiming that their own Government was showing too much
+ favor to foreign religions and foreign machines. The Government did not
+ put down this revolt. Some said that it did not have the power and that
+ the provinces were practically independent of the central authority.
+ Others whispered that the Imperial Court secretly favored the rebels.
+ However this may be, the Fencers, as the rebels were called from their
+ skill with the native sword, succeeded without much difficulty in
+ getting possession of the imperial city and imprisoning the foreign
+ embassies and legations in the enclosure of the Anglian Embassy. The
+ Imperial Court meanwhile fled to a distant city and left the entire
+ control of the situation in the hands of the Fencers. The peril of the
+ legations was extreme. They were cut off completely from the coast,
+ which was many miles distant, and the foreign newspaper correspondents
+ amused themselves by sending detailed accounts of the manner in which
+ they had been tortured and murdered. The principal men among the
+ Porsslanese assured the Powers that the legations were safe, but they
+ were not believed. A great expedition was organized in which all the
+ great Powers took a part. The forts near the sea were stormed and
+ taken. The intermediate city of Gin-Sin was besieged and finally fell,
+ and the forces advanced to the gates of the Capital. Before long they
+ succeeded in taking possession of the great city. The Fencers fled in
+ confusion, and at least two-thirds of the population fled with them,
+ fearing the vengeance of the foreigners. The legations were saved,
+ after one ambassador had been shot by an assassin. The city was divided
+ into districts, each of which was turned over to the safe-keeping of
+ one of the foreign armies, and the object of the expedition had been
+ accomplished. In the mean time many foreign residents, including many
+ missionaries in various parts of the Empire, had been murdered, the
+ inhabitants not recognizing the obvious fact that they and their
+ countrymen were their best friends.
+
+ Affairs had reached this position when orders came to Havilla for
+ Colonel Jinks to proceed to join the army in Porsslania, where he would
+ be placed in command of a regiment. His fidus Achates, Cleary, had also
+ received permission from his journal to accompany him, and the two set
+ sail on a transport which carried details of troops. It is true that
+ these troops could ill be spared from the Cubapines, as the country
+ was still in the hands of the natives with the exception of here and
+ there a strip of the seacoast, and there was much illness among the
+ troops, many being down with fever and worse diseases. But it was
+ necessary for the Government to make as good a showing in Porsslania as
+ the other Powers, and the reenforcements had to go.
+
+ It was on a hot summer day that Sam and Cleary looked over the rail of
+ the transport as they watched the troops come on board. It was a
+ remarkable scene, for a crowd of native women were on the shore,
+ weeping and arguing with the men and preventing them from getting into
+ the boats.
+
+ "Who on earth are they?" asked Sam.
+
+ "It's a pretty mean practical joke," said Cleary. "That regiment has
+ been up in the interior, and they've all had wives up there. They buy
+ them for five dollars apiece. And the Governor of the province there, a
+ friendly native, has sent more than a hundred of the women down here,
+ to get rid of them, I suppose, and now the poor things want to come
+ along with their young men. Some of them have got babies, do you see?"
+
+ After a long and noisy delay the captain of the transport, assisted by
+ the officers of the regiment in question, persuaded the women to stay
+ behind, giving a few coppers to each and making the most reckless and
+ unabashed promises of return. The steamer then weighed anchor and was
+ soon passing the sunken Castalian fleet.
+
+ "The Court at Whoppington has just allowed prize-money to the officers
+ and men for sinking those ships," said Cleary. "They didn't get as much
+ as they wanted, but it's a good round sum."
+
+ "I'm glad they will get some remuneration for their hard work,"
+ said Sam.
+
+ "Do you see that native sloop over there?" said Cleary. "She's a pirate
+ boat we caught down in the archipelago. She had sunk a merchant vessel
+ loaded with opium or something of the kind, very valuable. They'd got
+ her in shallow water and had killed some of the crew, and the rest
+ swam ashore, and they were dividing up the swag when they were caught.
+ They would have had I don't know how many dollars apiece. They were
+ all hanged."
+
+ "Serves them right," said Sam. "We must put down piracy. Good-by,
+ Havilla," he added, waving his hat toward the capital. "It makes me
+ feel happy to think that I have actually ended the war by capturing
+ Gomaldo."
+
+ "Not much!" cried Cleary. "Didn't you hear the news this morning? The
+ Cubapinos are twice as active as ever. They're rising everywhere."
+
+ Not many days later, and after an uneventful voyage, the transport
+ sailed into the mouth of the Hai-Po River and came to anchor off the
+ ruins of the Porsslanese forts. Colonel Jinks had orders to proceed at
+ once to Gin-Sin, and he left with Cleary on a river steamer. They were
+ much struck by the utter desolation of the country. There were no signs
+ of life, but here and there the smoking ruins of a town showed where
+ human beings had been. They noticed something floating in the water
+ with a swarm of flies hovering over it.
+
+ "Good heavens! it's a corpse," said Cleary. "It's a native. That's a
+ handsome silk jacket, and it doesn't look like a soldier's either. Look
+ at that vulture. It's sweeping down on it."
+
+ The vulture circled round in the air, coming close to the body, but did
+ not touch it.
+
+ "It has had enough to eat already," said an Anglian passenger who was
+ standing near them. "Did you ever see such a fat bird? You'll see
+ plenty of bodies before long. Do you observe those vultures ahead
+ there? You'll find floating bodies wherever they are."
+
+ "I suppose they are the bodies of soldiers," said Sam.
+
+ "No, indeed, not all of them by any means. These Porsslanese must be
+ stamped out like vipers. I'm thankful to say most of the armies are
+ doing their duty. They don't give any quarter to native soldiers, and
+ they despatch the wounded too. That's the only way to treat them, and
+ they don't feel pain the way we do. In fact, they rather like it. The
+ Tutonians are setting a good example; they shoot their prisoners. I saw
+ them shoot about seventy. They tied them together four by four by their
+ pigtails and then shot them. It's best, tho, to avoid taking prisoners;
+ that's what most of them do."
+
+ "But you say these bodies are not all soldiers," said Cleary.
+
+ "No, of course not. You see the Mosconians kill any natives they
+ please. Then those who are out at night are killed as a matter of
+ course, and those who won't work for the soldiers naturally have to be
+ put out of the way. It's the only way to enforce discipline. Look at
+ these bodies now."
+
+ Corpses were now coming down the river one after another. Each had its
+ attendant swarm of flies, and vultures soared in flocks in the air. The
+ river was yellow with mud, and the air oppressively hot and heavy. Now
+ and then a whiff of putrid air was blown across the deck. The three men
+ watched the bodies drifting past, brainless skulls, eyeless sockets,
+ floating along many of them as if they were swimming on their backs.
+ "It is really a fine example of the power of civilization," said the
+ stranger. "I don't approve of everything that has been done, by any
+ means. Some of the armies have treated women rather badly, but no
+ English-speaking soldiers have done that. In fact, your army has hardly
+ been up to the average in effectiveness. You and the Japs have been
+ culpably lenient, if you will permit me to say so."
+
+ "We are only just starting out on our career as a military nation,"
+ said Sam. "You must not expect too much of us at first. We'll soon get
+ our hand in. As for the Japs, why they're heathen. They can hardly be
+ expected to behave like Christians. But we were afraid that the war was
+ over and that we should find nothing to do."
+
+ "The war over! What an absurdity! I have lived in Porsslania for over
+ thirty years and I ought to know something about it by now. There's an
+ army of at least forty thousand Fencers over there to the northwest
+ and another twenty-five thousand in the northeast. The Tutonians are
+ the only people who understand it. Their first regiments have just
+ arrived, and they are going to do something. They say the Emperor is
+ coming himself, and he will put an end to this state of affairs. He is
+ not a man to stand rebellion. All we can say is that we have made a
+ good beginning. We have laid the whole province waste, and it will be a
+ long time before they forget it."
+
+ The journey was hot and tedious; the desolated shore, the corpses and
+ vultures, and an occasional junk with square-rigged sails and high poop
+ were the only things upon which to fix the eye. When at last our
+ travelers arrived at the city of Gin-Sin, Sam learned that his regiment
+ had proceeded to the Capital and was in camp there, and it would be
+ impossible for him to leave until the following day. He stopped with
+ Cleary at the principal hotel. The city was in a semi-ruined condition,
+ but life was already beginning to assume its ordinary course. The
+ narrow streets, hung with banners and lanterns and cabalistic signs,
+ were full of people. Barbers and scribes were plying their trades in
+ the open air, and war was not always in sight. Sam's reputation had
+ preceded him, and he had scarcely gone to his room when he received an
+ invitation from a leading Anglian merchant to dine with him that
+ evening. Cleary was anxious to go too, and it so happened that he had
+ letters of introduction to the gentleman in question. He made his call
+ at once and was duly invited.
+
+ There were a dozen or more guests at dinner, all of them men. Indeed,
+ there were few white women left at Gin-Sin. With the exception of Sam
+ and Cleary all the guests were Anglians. There was the consul-general,
+ a little man with a gray beard, a tall, bald-headed, gray-mustached
+ major-general in command of the Anglian forces at Gin-Sin, two
+ distinguished missionaries of many years' experience, several junior
+ officers of the army, and a merchant or two. When dinner was announced
+ they all went in, each taking precedence according to his station. Sam
+ knew nothing of such matters, and was loath to advance until his host
+ forced him to. He found a card with his name on it at the second cover
+ on the right from his host. On his right was the card of a young
+ captain. The place on his left and immediately on the right of the host
+ bore no card, and the consul-general and the major-general both made
+ for it. The former got there first, but the military man, who was twice
+ his size, came into violent collision with him, pushed him away and
+ captured the seat, while the consul-general was obliged to retreat and
+ take the seat on the left of his host. The whole party pretended very
+ hard to have noticed nothing unusual.
+
+ "Rather odd performance, eh?" whispered the captain to Sam. "You see
+ how it is. Old Folsom says he takes precedence because he represents
+ the Crown, but the general says that's all rot, for the consul's only a
+ commercial agent and a K.C.Q.X. Now the general is a G.C.Q.X., and he
+ says that gives him precedence. Nobody can settle it, and so they have
+ to fight it out every time they meet."
+
+ "I see," said Sam. "I don't know anything about such things, but I
+ should think that the general was clearly in the right. He could hardly
+ afford to let the army be overridden."
+
+ "Quite so," said the captain. "I don't suppose you know these people,"
+ he added.
+
+ "Not one of them, except my friend, Mr. Cleary. We only arrived
+ to-day."
+
+ "The general is a good deal of a fellow," said the captain. "I was with
+ him in Egypt and afterward in South Africa."
+
+ "Were you, indeed?" cried Sam. "Do tell me all about those wars. They
+ were such great affairs."
+
+ "Yes, they were. Not much like this business here. Nothing could stop
+ us in the Sudan, and when we dug up the Mahdi and threw his body away
+ there was nothing left of the rebellion. I believe the best way to
+ settle things here would be to dig up somebody--Confusus, for instance.
+ If there's anything of that kind to be done our army could do it in
+ style."
+
+ "It must be a very effective means of subjugating people," said Sam.
+
+ "Yes, and would you believe it? the natives objected to it. They asked
+ us what we would think of it if they dug up our Queen. Just think of
+ it! The impudent niggers! As if there was any similarity in the two
+ cases."
+
+ "Outrageous," said Sam.
+
+ "And even at home and in Parliament, when our general was sitting in
+ the gallery hearing them discuss how much money they would give him,
+ some of the members protested against our digging the old fraud up. It
+ was a handsome thing for the general to go there and face them down."
+
+ "It showed great tact, and I may say--delicacy," said Sam.
+
+ "Yes, indeed," said the captain. "That's his strong point."
+
+ "But I suppose that the war in South Africa was even greater," said
+ Sam.
+
+ "Rather. Why we captured four thousand of those Boers with only forty
+ thousand men. No wonder all Anglia went wild over it. Lord Bobbets went
+ home and they gave him everything they could think of in the way of
+ honors. It was a fitting tribute."
+
+ "The war is quite over there now, isn't it?" asked Sam.
+
+ "Yes," answered the captain, somewhat drily. "And so is yours in the
+ Cubapines, I understand."
+
+ "Yes," said Sam. "I think the Cubapine war and the South African war
+ are about equally over."
+
+ "Do you see that lieutenant there between your friend and the parson?"
+
+ "Yes."
+
+ "He got the Victorious Cross in South Africa. He saved a sergeant's
+ life under fire. You see his cross?"
+
+ "How interesting!" said Sam. "He must be a hero."
+
+ "That chap with the mustache at the bottom of the table really did more
+ once. He saved three men from drowning in a shipwreck in the Yellow
+ Sea. He's got a medal for it."
+
+ [Illustration: WINNERS OF THE CROSS
+ "HE GOT THE VICTORIOUS CROSS IN SOUTH AFRICA"]
+
+ "Why doesn't he wear it, too?" asked Sam.
+
+ "Civilians never do," said the captain. "It would look rather odd,
+ wouldn't it, for him to wear a life-saving medal? You may be sure he
+ keeps it locked up somewhere and never talks about it."
+
+ "It is strange that civilians should be so far behind military men in
+ using their opportunities," said Sam.
+
+ "That old fellow with the long beard is Cope, the inventor of the Cope
+ gun. He's a wonder. He was out here in the employ of the Porsslanese
+ Government. Most of their artillery was designed by him. What a useful
+ man he has been to his country! First he invented a projectile that
+ could go through any steel plate then known, and all the navies had to
+ build new steel-clad ships on a new principle that he had invented to
+ prevent his projectiles from piercing them. Then what does he do, but
+ invent a new projectile that could go through that, and they had to
+ order new guns for it and build new ships to withstand it. He's done
+ that four times. And he's got a rifle now that will penetrate almost
+ anything. If you put two hundred Porsslanese of the same height in a
+ row it would go through all their heads at five hundred yards. I hope
+ they'll try the experiment before this affair is over."
+
+ The major-general had by this time exhausted all possible subjects of
+ conversation with his host and sat silent, and Sam felt obliged to turn
+ his attention to him, and was soon engaged in relating his experience
+ in the Cubapines. Meanwhile Cleary had been conversing with the brave
+ young lieutenant at his side and the reverend gentlemen beyond him.
+ They had been discussing the slaughter of the Porsslanese, the
+ lieutenant sitting back from the table while his neighbors talked
+ across him.
+
+ "I confess," said the Rev. Mr. Parker, "that I am not quite satisfied
+ with our position here. This wholesale killing of non-combatants is
+ revolting to me. Surely it can not be Christian."
+
+ "I have had some doubts about it too," said the young man. "I don't
+ mind hitting a man that hits back. I didn't object to the pig-sticking
+ in South Africa, and I believe that man-hunting is the best of all
+ sports; but this killing of people who don't resist, and even smile in
+ a sickly way while you do it and almost thank you--it really does go
+ against me."
+
+ "Yes," said Cleary, "perhaps there is something in that."
+
+ "Oh, my dear young friend!" cried the clergyman, turning toward the
+ lieutenant, "you don't know what joy it gives me to hear you say that.
+ I have spoken in this way again and again, and you are the first man I
+ have met who agrees with me. Won't you let your fellow officers know
+ what you think? It will come with so much more force from a military
+ man, and one of your standing as a V.C. Won't you now tell this company
+ that you think we are going too far?"
+
+ "Really, Doctor," said the young man, blushing, "really, I think you
+ exaggerate my importance. It wouldn't do any good. Perhaps I have said
+ a little more to you than I really meant. This champagne has gone to my
+ head a little."
+
+ "Just repeat what you said to us. I will get the attention of the
+ table."
+
+ "No, Doctor, for God's sake don't!" cried the lieutenant, laying his
+ right hand on the missionary's arm while he toyed with his cross with
+ the other. "To tell you the truth, I haven't the courage to say it.
+ They would think I was crazy. I would be put in Coventry. I have no
+ business to make suggestions when a general's present."
+
+ Mr. Parker sighed and did not return to the subject.
+
+ After dinner Sam was introduced to Canon Gleed, another missionary, who
+ seemed to be on very good terms with himself, and stood rubbing his
+ hands with a benignant smile.
+
+ "These are great days, Colonel Jinks," he said. "Great days, indeed,
+ for foreign missions. What would St. John have said on the island of
+ Patmos if he could have cabled for half-a-dozen armies and
+ half-a-dozen fleets, and got them too? He would have made short work of
+ his jailers. As he looks down upon us to-night, how his soul must
+ rejoice! The Master told us to go into all nations, and we are going to
+ go if it takes a million troops to send us and keep us there. You are
+ going on to the Capital to-morrow? You will meet a true saint of the
+ Lord there, your own fellow countryman, the Rev. Dr. Amen. He is a true
+ member of the Church Militant. Give him my regards when you see him."
+
+ "I see there is another clergyman here," said Sam, looking at Mr.
+ Parker.
+
+ "Yes, and I must say I am surprised to see him. Let me warn you,
+ Colonel. He is, I fear, altogether heterodox. I don't know what kind of
+ Christianity he teaches, but he has actually kept on good terms with
+ the Porsslanese near his mission throughout all these events. He is
+ disloyal to our flag, there can be no question of it, and he openly
+ criticizes the actions of our governments. He should not be received in
+ society. He ought to be sent home--but, hist! some one is going to
+ sing."
+
+ It was the young lieutenant who had seated himself at the piano and was
+ clearing his throat as he ran his hands over the keys. Then he began to
+ sing in a rather feeble voice:
+
+ "Let the Frenchy sip his cognac in his caffy,
+ Let the Cossack gulp his kvass and usquebaugh;
+ Let the Prussian grenadier
+ Swill his dinkle-doonkle beer,
+ And the Yankee suck his cocktail through a straw,
+ Through a straw,
+ And the Yankee suck his cocktail through a straw.
+
+ "Let the Ghoorka drink his pugaree and pukka,
+ Let the Hollander imbibe old schnapps galore.
+ Tommy Atkins is the chap
+ Who has broached a better tap,
+ For he takes his 'arf-and-'arf in blood and gore.
+ Blood and gore,
+ For he takes his 'arf-and-'arf in blood and gore.
+
+ "When at 'ome he may content himself with whisky,
+ But if once he lands upon a foreign shore--
+ On the Nile or Irrawady--
+ He forgets his native toddy,
+ And he takes his 'arf-and-'arf in blood and gore.
+ Blood and gore,
+ And he takes his 'arf-and-'arf in blood and gore.
+
+ "He's a connoisseur of every foreign vintage,
+ From the claret of the fat and juicy Boer
+ To the thicker nigger brand
+ That he spills upon the sand,
+ When he draws his 'arf-and-'arf in blood and gore.
+ Blood and gore,
+ When he draws his 'arf-and-'arf in blood and gore."
+
+ "Fine, isn't it!" exclaimed Sam's neighbor, the captain, who was
+ standing by him, as they all joined in hearty applause. "I tell you
+ Bludyard Stripling ought to be our poet laureate. He's the laureate of
+ the Empire, at any rate. Why, a song like that binds a nation together.
+ You haven't any poet like that, have you?"
+
+ "No-o," answered Sam, thinking in shame of Shortfellow, Slowell, and
+ Pittier. "I'm afraid all our poets are old women and don't understand
+ us soldiers."
+
+ "Stripling understands everything," said the captain. "He never makes a
+ mistake. He is a universal genius."
+
+ "I don't think we ever drink cocktails with a straw," ventured Sam.
+
+ "Oh, yes, you must. He never makes a mistake. You may be sure that,
+ before he wrote that, he drank each one of those drinks, one after
+ another."
+
+ "Quite likely," whispered Cleary to Sam, as he came up on the other
+ side.
+
+ "I wish I could hear it sung in Lunnon," said the captain. "A chorus of
+ duchesses are singing it at one of the biggest music-halls every
+ evening, and then they pass round their coronets, lined with velvet,
+ you know, and take up a collection of I don't know how many thousand
+ pounds for the wounded in South Africa. It stirs my blood every time I
+ hear it sung."
+
+ The party broke up at a late hour, and Sam and Cleary walked back
+ together to the hotel.
+
+ "Interesting, wasn't it?" said Cleary.
+
+ "Yes," said Sam.
+
+ "Canon is a good title for that parson, isn't it? He's a fighter. They
+ ought to promote him. 'Bombshell Gleed' would sound better than 'Canon
+ Gleed,'" said Cleary.
+
+ "'M," said Sam.
+
+ "And that old general looked rather queer in that red and gilt
+ bob-tailed Eton jacket," said Cleary.
+
+ "Yes, rather."
+
+ "Convenient for spanking, I suppose."
+
+ "The captain next to me told me a lot about Bobbets," said Sam. "Wasn't
+ he nearly kidnaped in South Africa?"
+
+ "Yes; that comes of sending generals away from home who only weigh
+ ninety-five pounds. We hadn't any such trouble with Laughter. They'd
+ have had to kidnap him with a derrick."
+
+ "I never thought of that," said Sam. "Perhaps that's the real reason
+ they selected him. I shouldn't wonder."
+
+ "Of course it was," responded Cleary.
+
+ "What sort of a chap was the one with the V.C. next to you?" asked Sam.
+
+ "A fine fellow," said Cleary. "But it does seem queer, when you think
+ of it, to wear a cross like that, that says 'I'm a hero,' just as plain
+ as the beggar's placard says, 'I am blind.'"
+
+ "I don't see why," said Sam.
+
+ "On the whole I think that a placard would be better," said Cleary.
+ "Everybody would be sure to understand it. 'I performed such and such
+ an heroic action on such and such a day, signed John Smith.' Print it
+ in big letters and then stand around graciously so that people could
+ read it through when they wanted to. I'll get the idea patented when I
+ get home."
+
+ "It's a pity we don't give more attention to decorations at home," said
+ Sam. "But I don't quite like the placard idea."
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XII
+
+ The Great White Temple
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+
+ On the following morning the two friends started on their journey up
+ the river toward the Imperial City. They went on a barge filled with
+ soldiers, some of them their own troops who had arrived earlier the
+ same morning. The barge was drawn by ropes pulled by natives, who
+ walked and ran along the banks of the river. It was a day of
+ ever-increasing horrors. All the desolation which they had remarked the
+ day previous was reproduced and accentuated, and as they were so much
+ nearer to the bank, and occasionally took walks on shore, they saw it
+ all more clearly. Sam was much interested in the foreign troops. Their
+ uniforms looked strange and uncouth.
+
+ "What funny pill-boxes those are that those Anglian soldiers have stuck
+ to the side of their heads," he said, pointing to two men at Gin-Sin
+ before they set sail.
+
+ "Yes," answered Cleary. "They'll put on their helmets when the sun gets
+ higher. They do look queer, tho. Perhaps they think our fellows look
+ queer too."
+
+ "I never thought of that," said Sam. "Perhaps they do," and he looked
+ at his fellow-countrymen who were preparing to embark, endeavoring to
+ judge of their appearance as if he had never seen them before. He
+ scrutinized carefully their slouch hats creased in four quarters, their
+ loose, dark-blue jackets, generally unbuttoned, and their easy-going
+ movements.
+
+ "Perhaps they do look queer," he said at last. "I never thought of
+ that."
+
+ The river was more full of corpses than ever, and there were many to be
+ seen on the shore, all of them of natives. Children were playing and
+ bathing in the shallows, oblivious of the dead around them. Dogs
+ prowled about, sleek and contented, and usually sniffing only at the
+ cadavers, for their appetites were already sated. At one place they saw
+ a father and son lying hand in hand where they had been shot while
+ imploring mercy. A dog was quietly eating the leg of the boy. The
+ natives who pulled the boat along with great difficulty under the hot
+ sun were drawn from all classes, some of them coolies accustomed to
+ hard work, others evidently of the leisure classes who could hardly
+ keep up with the rest. Soldiers were acting as task-masters, and they
+ whipped the men who did not pull with sufficient strength. Now and then
+ a man would try to escape by running, but such deserters were
+ invariably brought down by a bullet in the back. More than once one of
+ the men would fall as they waded along, and be swept off by the
+ current. None of them seemed to know how to swim, but no one paid any
+ attention to their fate. Parties were sent out to bring in other
+ natives to take the place of those who gave out. One of the men thus
+ brought in was paralyzed on one side and carried a crutch. The soldiers
+ made sport of him, snatched the crutch from him, and made him pull as
+ best he could with the rest. Sam, Cleary, and an Anglian officer who
+ had served through the whole war took a long walk together back from
+ the river during the halt at noon. They entered a deserted house, with
+ gables and a tiled roof, which by chance had not been burned. The house
+ had been looted, and such of its contents as were too large to carry
+ away were lying broken to bits about the floor. A nasty smell came from
+ an inner room, and they looked in and saw the whole family--father,
+ mother, and three daughters--lying dead in a row on the floor. A
+ bloody knife was in the hand of the man.
+
+ "They probably committed suicide when they saw the soldiers coming,"
+ said the Anglian, whose name was Major Brown. "They often do that, and
+ they do quite right. When they don't, the soldiers, and even the
+ officers sometimes, do what they will with the women and then bayonet
+ them afterward. Our people draw the line at that, and so do yours."
+
+ "We certainly conduct war most humanely," said Sam.
+
+ They heard a groan from another room, and opening the door saw an old
+ woman lying in a pool of blood, quite unconscious.
+
+ "I'll put her out of her misery," said the major, and he drew his
+ revolver and shot her through the head.
+
+ The journey was a very slow one and occupied three days, altho the
+ natives were kept at work as long as they could stand it, on one day
+ actually tugging at the ropes for twenty-one hours. At last, however,
+ the Imperial City was reached, and our two travelers disembarked and,
+ taking a donkey-cart, gave directions to carry them to the quarter
+ assigned to their own army. Here as everywhere desolation reigned. A
+ string of laden camels showed, however, that trade was beginning to
+ reassert itself. They drove past miles of burned houses, through the
+ massive city walls and beyond, until they saw the welcome signs of a
+ camp over which Old Gory waved supreme. Sam was received with much
+ cordiality by the commandant, General Taffy, and assigned to the
+ command of the 27th Volunteer Infantry. The general was a man well
+ known throughout the army for his courage and ability, but
+ notwithstanding this Sam took a strong prejudice against him, for he
+ seemed to be half-hearted in his work and to disapprove of the
+ prevailing policy of pacification by fire and sword. Sam ascribed this
+ feebleness to the fact that he had been originally appointed to the
+ army from civil life, and that he had not enjoyed the benefits of an
+ East Point education.
+
+ As soon as Sam was installed in his new quarters, in the colonel's
+ tent of his regiment, he started out with Cleary to see the great city
+ and examine the scene of the late siege. They found the Jap quarter the
+ most populous. The inhabitants who had fled had returned, and the
+ streets were taking on their normal aspect. Near the boundary of this
+ district they saw a house with a placard in the Jap language, and asked
+ an Anglian soldier who was passing what it meant.
+
+ "That's one of the Jap placards to show that the natives who live there
+ are good people who have given no offense," said he.
+
+ "Let's go in and pay them a call," said Cleary.
+
+ They entered, and passing into a back room found a woman nursing a man
+ who had evidently been recently shot in the side. She shrank from them
+ with terror as they entered, and made no answer to their request for
+ information. As they passed out they met a young native coming in, and
+ they asked him what it meant.
+
+ "Some Frank soldiers shot him because he could not give them money. It
+ had all been stolen already," said the lad in pigeon English.
+
+ "But the placard says they are loyal people," said Cleary.
+
+ "What difference does that make to them?" was the reply.
+
+ Farther on in a lonely part of the town they heard cries issuing from
+ the upper window of a house. They were the cries of women, mingled with
+ oaths of men in the Frank language. Suddenly two women jumped out of
+ the window, one after the other, and fell in a bruised mass in the
+ street. Sam and Cleary approached them and saw that they had received a
+ mortal hurt. They were ladies, handsomely dressed. The first impulse of
+ Sam and Cleary was to take charge of them, but seeing two natives
+ approach, they called their attention to the case and walked away.
+
+ "I suppose it's best not to get mixed up with the affairs of the other
+ armies," said Sam.
+
+ The quarter assigned to the Tutonians they were surprised to find quite
+ deserted by the inhabitants.
+
+ "I tell you, those Tutonians know their business," said Sam. "They
+ won't stand any fooling. Just see how they have established peace! We
+ have a lot to learn from them."
+
+ They saw a crowd collected in one place.
+
+ "What is it?" asked Sam of a soldier.
+
+ "They're going to shoot thirty of these damned coolies for jostling
+ soldiers in the street," he answered.
+
+ Sam regretted that they had no time to wait and see the execution.
+
+ As they reentered their own quarter they saw a number of carts loaded
+ down with all sorts of valuable household effects driven along. They
+ asked one of the native drivers what they were doing, and he replied in
+ pigeon English that they were collecting loot for the Rev. Dr. Amen.
+ Farther on some of their own soldiers were conducting an auction of
+ handsome vases and carved ornaments. Sam watched the sale for a few
+ minutes, and bought in one or two beautiful objects for a song for
+ Marian.
+
+ "Where did they get all this stuff?" he asked of a lieutenant.
+
+ "Oh, anywhere. Some of it from the houses of foreign residents even.
+ But we don't understand the game as well as old Amen. He's a corker.
+ He's grabbed the house of one of his old native enemies here, an
+ awfully rich chap, and sold him out, and now he's got his converts
+ cleaning out a whole ward. He's collected a big fine for every convert
+ killed and so much extra for every dollar stolen, and he's going to use
+ it all for the propagation of the Gospel. He's as good as a Tutonian,
+ he is."
+
+ "I'm glad we have such a man to represent our faith," said Sam.
+
+ "He's pretty hard on General Taffy, tho," said the lieutenant. "He says
+ we ought to have the Tutonian mailed fist. Taffy is much too soft, he
+ thinks."
+
+ Sam bit his lips. He could not criticize his superior officer before a
+ subaltern, but he was tempted to.
+
+ On reaching headquarters Sam found that he was to take charge of a
+ punitive expedition in the North, whose chief object was to be the
+ destruction of native temples, for the purpose of giving the
+ inhabitants a lesson. He was to have command of his own regiment, two
+ companies of cavalry, and a field-battery. They were to set out in two
+ days. He spent the intermediate time in completing the preparations,
+ which had been well under way before his arrival, and in studying the
+ map. No one knew how much opposition he might expect.
+
+ It was early in the morning on a hot summer day that the expedition
+ left the Capital. Sam was mounted on a fine bay stallion, and felt that
+ he was entirely in his element.
+
+ "What camp is that over there on the left?" he asked his orderly.
+
+ "That's the Anglian camp, sir."
+
+ "Are you sure. I can't see their colors. They must have moved their
+ camp."
+
+ "Yes, sir, I'm sure. I passed near there last night and I saw
+ half-a-dozen of the men blacking their officers' boots and singing,
+ 'Britons, Britons, never will be slaves!' It must be a tough job too,
+ sir, for everybody's boots are covered with blood. The gutters are
+ running with it."
+
+ "I wish we had them with us to-day," said Sam. "They have done such a
+ lot of burning in South Africa that they could show us the best way."
+
+ "Yes, sir. But then temple-burning is finer work than burning
+ farmhouses, sir."
+
+ "That is true," said Sam.
+
+ Before night they had visited three deserted towns and burned down the
+ temple in each with its accompanying pagoda. There is something in the
+ hearts of men that responds to great conflagrations, and the whole
+ force soon got into the spirit of it and burned everything they came
+ across. Sam enjoyed himself to the full. His only regret was that there
+ was no enemy to overcome. They camped out at night and continued the
+ same work for several days, all the natives fleeing as soon as they
+ came in sight. At last they reached the famous white temple of Pu-Sing,
+ which was the chief object of religious devotion in the whole
+ province. This was to be absolutely destroyed, notwithstanding its
+ great artistic beauty, and then they were to return to the city in
+ triumph. As they drew near to the building two or three shots were
+ fired from it, and one soldier was wounded in the arm. The usual
+ cursing began, and the men were restive to get at the Porsslanese
+ garrison. Sam ordered the infantry to fire a volley, and then, as the
+ return fire was feeble, he ordered the squadron of cavalry to charge,
+ leading it himself. The natives turned and fled as soon as they saw
+ them coming, and the cavalry, skirting the enclosure of the temple,
+ followed them beyond and cut them down without mercy.
+
+ "Give them hell!" cried Sam. "Exterminate the vermin!" and he swore,
+ quite naturally under the circumstances, like a trooper.
+
+ Some of the natives fell on their knees and begged for quarter, but it
+ was of no use. Every one was killed. They numbered about two hundred in
+ all. When the horsemen returned to the temple they found the infantry
+ already at work at the task of looting it. Everything of value that
+ could be carried was taken out, and the larger statues and vases were
+ broken to pieces. Then the woodwork was cut away and piled up for
+ firewood, and finally the whole pile set on fire. In all this work the
+ leader was a sergeant of infantry who seemed to have a natural talent
+ for it. Sam had noticed him before at the burning of the other temples,
+ but now he showed himself more conspicuously capable. As the work of
+ piling inflammable material against the walls of polished marble,
+ inlaid with ivory, was nearing completion, Sam sent for this man so
+ that he might thank and congratulate him. The soldier came up, his
+ hands black with charcoal and his face smudged as well.
+
+ "You've done well, sergeant," said Sam. "I will mention you to the
+ general when we return."
+
+ "Thank you, sir," said the man, and his voice sounded strangely
+ familiar. Sam peered into his face. He had certainly seen it before.
+
+ "What is your name, sergeant?"
+
+ "Thatcher, sir."
+
+ "Why, of course, you're Thatcher--Josh Thatcher of Slowburgh. Don't you
+ remember that night at the hotel when we had a drink together? Don't
+ you remember Captain Jinks?"
+
+ "Yes, sir, but I didn't know you was he--a colonel, too, sir," said the
+ man, as Sam shook his hand warmly.
+
+ "I'm glad to see that you're doing credit to your town," said Sam.
+
+ "They'll be surprised to hear it at home, sir," said Thatcher. "They
+ was always down on me. They never gave me a chance. Here they all
+ speaks to me like you do, sir. Why, Dr. Amen slapped me on the back and
+ called me a fine fellow when I brought him in a big load of stuff. I
+ got it from houses of people I didn't even know, and he said I was a
+ good fellow. At Slowburgh I took a chicken now and then, and only from
+ somebody who'd done me some mean trick, and they said I was a thief.
+ Once or twice I burned a barn there just for fun, and never anybody's
+ barn that wasn't down on me and rich enough to stand it, and they said
+ I was a criminal. And as for women, if they ever seed me with one, they
+ all said I was dissolute and a disgrace to the place, and here I have
+ ten times more of 'em than I want, and everybody says it's all right,
+ and they made me corporal and sergeant, and the generals talked to me
+ like I was somebody, and I swear as much as I like. I never shot
+ anybody at home. I suppose they'd have strung me up if I had, and here
+ I just pepper any pigtail I like. They called me a criminal at
+ Slowburgh, just think of that! I say that criminals are just soldiers
+ who ain't got a job--who ain't had any chance at all, I says. I wasn't
+ ever judged right, I wasn't."
+
+ There were tears in Thatcher's eyes as he ended this speech.
+
+ "You're a fine chap," said Sam. "I'll tell all about you when you get
+ home. This war has been the making of you. How are the other Slowburgh
+ boys?"
+
+ "They're all right, except my cousin Tom. He's down sick with
+ something. He's run about a little too much. He always was a-sparking.
+ He never knowed how to take care of himself. Jim Thomson was wounded
+ once, but he's all right now. We've all had fever, but that's over too.
+ But the fire's spreading, sir; we'd better get out of this."
+
+ As he spoke a heavy charred beam fell just in front of him, and the end
+ of it came down with its full weight on Sam's leg, snapping the bone in
+ two near the ankle. The foot lay at right angles, and the bone
+ protruded. Several soldiers lifted the log and Thatcher drew Sam out,
+ and they bore him in haste out of the building. He was laid on the
+ ground quite unconscious, at some distance from the temple, while the
+ flames roared and leaped toward heaven, wrapping the graceful, lofty
+ nine-story pagoda in their folds. It was in a beautiful garden that he
+ lay, near a pool filled with lotus flowers and at the end of a rustic
+ bridge. The air was heavy with the perfume of lilies. A surgeon was
+ called, and before long he was able to put the foot in place, but only
+ after sawing off a large piece of bone. A cart was obtained, Sam was
+ laid in it, a bottle of whisky was poured down his throat, and the
+ journey to the city began. The patient on coming to himself experienced
+ no pain. The liquor he had taken made him feel supremely happy. He was
+ in an ecstasy of exultation, and would have liked to embrace all
+ mankind. But gradually this feeling wore off and his leg began to pain
+ him, at first slightly, then more and more until it became
+ excruciating. The road was almost impassable, and every jolt caused him
+ agony. For twelve hours he underwent these tortures until he reached
+ the camp in the city, and was at once transferred to a temporary
+ hospital which had been improvised in a public building. Here he lay
+ for many weeks, suffering much, but gradually regaining the use of his
+ leg. He was in charge of a particularly efficient woman doctor from
+ home who had volunteered to serve with the Red Cross Society. Sam felt
+ most grateful to her for her care, but he strongly disapproved of her
+ attitude to things military. She seemed to have a contempt for the
+ whole military establishment, insisted on calling him "young man,"
+ altho he was a colonel, usually addressed lieutenants as "boys," and
+ laughed at uniforms, salutes, and ceremonies of all kinds.
+
+ "Men are the silliest things in the world," she said one day. "Do you
+ suppose women would have a War Department that spent a lot of money on
+ bombshells to blow people up and then a lot more on Red Cross Societies
+ to piece them together again? Why, we would just leave the soldiers at
+ home, and save all the money, and it would be just the same in the
+ end."
+
+ "Not the kind of women I know," said Sam, thinking of Marian.
+
+ "I mean my kind of woman," said the doctor. "Do you think we'd sell
+ guns and rifles to the Porsslanese and teach them how to use them, and
+ then go to work and fight them after having armed them?" And she
+ laughed a merry laugh.
+
+ "And do you think we'd pay men to invent all sorts of infernal machines
+ like the Barnes torpedo, and then have our big ships blown up by them
+ in time of peace. That is what brought on the whole Castalian and
+ Cubapine war. The idea of praising a man like Barnes! He's been a curse
+ to the world."
+
+ "It was really a blessing," said Sam. "It has spread civilization and
+ Christianity all over."
+
+ "Well, that's one way of doing it," said she. "But when there are more
+ women like me we'll take things out of the hands of you silly men and
+ run them ourselves. Now, young man, you've talked enough. Turn over and
+ go to sleep."
+
+ Cleary called on his friend almost every day and kept him informed. He
+ sent home glowing accounts of Sam as the conqueror of the Great White
+ Temple, and described his sufferings for his country with artistic
+ skill. He also began work on the series of articles which Sam was
+ expected to write for _Scribblers' Magazine_. His gossip about the
+ events in the various camps entertained Sam very much, altho he was
+ often irritated as well. In his capacity of correspondent Cleary saw
+ and knew everything.
+
+ "Sam," said he one day, as the invalid was sitting up in an easy-chair
+ at the window--"Sam, it's so long since I was at East Point that I'm
+ becoming more and more of a civilian. You army people begin to amuse
+ me. There's always something funny about you. The Tutonians are the
+ funniest of all. The little red-cheeked officers with their blond
+ mustaches turned up to their eyes are too funny to live. You feel like
+ kissing them and sending them to bed. And the airs they put on! One of
+ their soldiers happened to elbow a lieutenant the other day, and the
+ chap ran him through with his sword, and no one called him to account.
+ The officers jostle and browbeat any civilian who will submit to it,
+ and then try to get him into a duel, but I believe they're a cowardly
+ lot at bottom. No man of real courage would bluster all over the place
+ so."
+
+ "I admire their discipline," said Sam.
+
+ "And then there's the Franks. They're not quite so conceited, but
+ they're awfully touchy. I think the mustaches measure conceit. The
+ Tutonians' stick up straight, the Franks' stick right out at each side
+ waxed to a point, and ours droop downward."
+
+ Sam began to twist his mustache upward, but it would not stay.
+
+ "I was in to see a Frank military trial the other day," said Cleary.
+ "It was the most comical thing. There were three big generals on the
+ court. I mean big in rank. They were about four feet high in size, and
+ they kept looking at their mustaches in hand-glasses and combing their
+ hair with pocket-combs. They were trying one of their lieutenants for
+ having sold some secret military plans to a Tutonian attache. Now the
+ joke of it is that military attaches are appointed just for the purpose
+ of buying secrets, and everybody knows it. They're licensed to do it.
+ And then when they do just what they're licensed for, everybody makes a
+ fuss. Well, the secrets were sold; there wasn't the slightest reason
+ for thinking this lieutenant had sold them, but they had to punish
+ somebody. They say they drew his name from a box. They had three
+ officers to testify against him, and they were the stupidest liars I
+ ever saw. They just blundered from beginning to end, and the president
+ of the court helped them out and told them what to say, and corrected
+ them. The third man said nothing at all except, 'Yes, my general; yes,
+ my general.' Then they called the witnesses for the accused, and two
+ officers stepped forward, when a couple of orderlies grabbed each of
+ them, stuffed a gag into their mouths, and carried them out, while the
+ court looked the other way, and the crowd shouted, 'Long live the
+ army!' The court adjourned on account of the 'contumacy of the
+ witnesses for the defense.' I went in again the next morning, and they
+ announced that both the witnesses had committed suicide. Then the
+ president took a judgment out of his pocket which I had seen him
+ fingering all the first day, and read it off just as it had been
+ written before the trial began, condemning the poor devil to twenty
+ years' imprisonment. I never saw such a farce. Everybody shouted for
+ the army, and the little generals kissed each other and cried, and
+ they had a great time of it. And the president made a speech in which
+ he said that they had saved the army and consequently the country too,
+ and that honor and glory and the fatherland had been redeemed. They've
+ all been promoted and decorated since. They're a queer lot, those Frank
+ officers."
+
+ "We ought not to be too quick in judging foreigners," said Sam. "Their
+ methods may seem strange to us, but we are not competent to criticize
+ them. Let each army judge for itself."
+
+ "As a matter of fact," said Cleary, "every army is down on the others.
+ If you believe what they say about each other they're a pretty bad lot.
+ They all say that the Mosconians are barbarians, and they call the
+ Tutonians thugs. The rest of them call the Franks woman-hunters, and
+ they all call us and the Anglians auctioneers and looters and
+ shopkeepers, and drunkards, and we're known as temple-burners and
+ vandals too."
+
+ "What an outrage!" ejaculated Sam.
+
+ "The Anglians are more like us, but they've got a few old generals and
+ then a lot of small boys, and nothing much between. I should think the
+ generals would feel like school-masters. I told one of their officers
+ that, and he said it was better than having second lieutenants
+ seventy-five years old as we do. We're loving each other a lot just
+ now, the Anglians and us, but one of our naval officers let on to me
+ that they were dying to have a war with them. You see, since South
+ Africa nobody's afraid of them except the Porsslanese, and they don't
+ read the papers. And how the Anglians despise the Franks! Why, we were
+ discussing lying in war at a lunch-party, and one of their generals was
+ there, a rather dense sort of a machine of a man. They had been saying
+ that lying was an essential part of war, and that an officer must be a
+ good liar and able to deceive the enemy well, as well as a good
+ fighter, and the conversation drifted off into the question of lying in
+ general. Somebody asked the general if he would say he was a Tutonian
+ to save his life. 'Of course,' he answered. 'But would you say you
+ were a Frank under the same circumstances?' asked some one else.
+ 'Certainly not,' he said. Everybody roared, but he didn't see any joke,
+ and looked as grave as an owl all the rest of the afternoon. Then the
+ commanders are all so jealous of each other. They are spying on each
+ other and putting sticks in each other's wheels. Officers are queer
+ people. There's only one profession that can compete with them for
+ feline amenities, and that is the actress profession."
+
+ "Cleary," said Sam, "I let you talk this way for old acquaintance's
+ sake, but I wouldn't take it from any one else."
+
+ "Fiddlesticks! You know I'm right. The Anglian officers like to hint at
+ the frauds in our quartermaster's department at Havilla, but I shut
+ them up by asking how much their officers made off the horses they
+ bought for South Africa in Hungary. Then they shut up like a
+ clasp-knife. Officers talk a lot about their 'brother officers,' and
+ you'd think they loved each other a lot, but I find they're all glad
+ so many were killed in South Africa because it gives them a lot of
+ promotion. I tell you the officers of all the armies like to have a
+ good list of dead officers after each battle, if they are only their
+ superiors in rank. I've been picking up all I can among the different
+ soldiers, and learning a lot. I was just talking to a lot of Anglian
+ soldiers now. They were sharpening sabers and bayonets on grindstones.
+ One of the older ones was telling me how they used to flog in the army.
+ They had a regular parade, and the drummers used to lay on the lash,
+ while a doctor watched so that they shouldn't go too far. Sometimes the
+ young subalterns who were in command would faint away at the sight.
+
+ "'But it was so manly, sir,' the fellow said to me. 'The army isn't
+ what it was. But the other armies keep it up still, and we still birch
+ youngsters in the navy so we needn't despair of the world.'"
+
+ "When will the campaign be over?" asked Sam.
+
+ "There's no telling. All the armies are afraid to leave, for fear the
+ ones that are left will get some advantage from the Porsslanese
+ Government. They're a high old lot of allies. It's a queer business.
+ But the missionaries are as queer as any of them. You ought to have
+ heard old Amen last Sunday. How he whooped things up! He took his text
+ from the Gospel of St. Loot, I think! He was trying to stir up Taffy to
+ be more severe. Amen ought to be a soldier. Our minister
+ plenipotentiary isn't a backward chap either. I went through the
+ Imperial palace with him and his party the other day, and they pretty
+ nearly cleaned it out, just for souvenirs, you know. He didn't take
+ anything himself, as far as I could see; but his women, bless my soul,
+ they filled their pockets with jade and ivory and what-not. There were
+ some foreign looters in there at the same time, great swells too, and
+ they just smashed the plate-glass over the cabinets and filled their
+ pockets and their arms too. One old Porsslanese official was standing
+ there, a high mandarin of some sort, and he had an emerald necklace
+ around his neck. Some diplomat or other walked up to him and quietly
+ took it off, and the old man didn't stir, but the tears were rolling
+ down his cheeks."
+
+ "He had no right to complain," said Sam. "We clearly have the right to
+ the contents of a conquered city by the rules of war."
+
+ "Perhaps. But there are some curious war rules. Some of the armies
+ shoot all natives in soldiers' uniforms because they are soldiers, and
+ then they shoot all natives who resist them in civil dress, because
+ they are not soldiers and have no right to fight. I suppose they ought
+ to go about naked. They used to kill their prisoners with the butt-end
+ of their rifles, but that breaks the rifles, and now they generally use
+ the bayonet."
+
+ "Here are some newspapers," said he on another occasion. "You've been
+ made a brigadier for capturing Gomaldo. Isn't that great? But they
+ _will_ call you 'Captain Jinks' at home, no matter what your rank is.
+ The papers say so. The song has made it stick."
+
+ "I'm sorry for that," said Sam. "It would be pleasanter to be called
+ 'General.'"
+
+ "It's all the same," said Cleary. "Wasn't Napoleon called the Little
+ Corporal? It's really more distinguished."
+
+ "Perhaps it is," said Sam contentedly.
+
+ "Some of the papers criticize us a little too," added Cleary. "They say
+ we are acting brutally here and in the Cubapines. Of course only a few
+ say it, but their number is increasing."
+
+ "They make themselves ridiculous," said Sam. "They don't see how
+ ludicrous their suggestions are that we should actually retire and let
+ these countries relapse into barbarism. As that fellow said at Havilla,
+ they have no sense of humor."
+
+ "And yet," retorted Cleary, "our greatest humorists, Mark Swain, Mr.
+ Tooley, and the best cartoonists, and our only really humorous paper,
+ _Knife_, are on that side."
+
+ "But they are only humorists," cried Sam, "mere professional jokers.
+ You can't expect serious sense from them. They are mere buffoons. The
+ serious people here, such as Dr. Amen, are with us to a man."
+
+ "I saw old Amen get caught the other day," said Cleary. "I was
+ interviewing the colonel of the 15th, and in came Amen and began
+ talking about the Porsslanese--what barbarians they were, no religion,
+ no belief, no faith. Why, the idea of self-sacrifice was utterly
+ unknown to them! Just then in came a young officer and said, 'Colonel,
+ the son of that old native we're going to shoot this afternoon for
+ looting, is bothering us and says he wants to be shot instead of his
+ father. What shall we do with him?' Amen said good-day and cleared out.
+ By the way, the colonel of the 15th is in a hole just now. He was shut
+ up in the legations, you know, and all the women there were down on him
+ because he wouldn't make the sentries salute them when the men were
+ dead tired with watching. They are charging him with cowardice.
+ There'll never be an end of this backbiting. It's almost as sickening
+ as the throat-cutting and stabbing. I confess I'm getting sick of it
+ all. When you see a private shoot an old native for not blacking his
+ boots, when the poor fellow was trying to understand him and couldn't,
+ and smiling as best he could, it's rather tough; and I've seen twenty
+ babies if I've seen one lying in the streets with a bayonet hole in
+ them. They have executions every day in one camp or another. I saw one
+ coolie, who had been working fourteen hours at a stretch loading carts,
+ shot down because he hadn't the strength to go on."
+
+ "I'm afraid the heat is telling on you, Cleary," said Sam. "This is all
+ sickly sentimentality. War is war. The trouble with you is that there
+ has been no regular campaign on to occupy your attention. This lying
+ about doing nothing is a bad thing for everybody. Wait till the
+ Tutonian Emperor comes out and we'll have something to do."
+
+ "He won't find any enemy to fight," said Cleary.
+
+ "Trust him for that," replied Sam. "He's every inch a soldier, and
+ he'll find the way to make war, depend upon it. He's a religious man
+ too, and he will back up the missionaries better than we've done."
+
+ "Yes. Amen thinks the world of him. Amen ought to have been a Tutonian
+ soldier. He says the best imagery of religion comes from war. I told
+ him I had an article written about a fight which said that our men
+ 'fought like demons' and 'yelled like fiends,' and I would change it to
+ read that they fought like seraphs and yelled like cherubim, but he
+ didn't think it was funny."
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XIII
+
+ The War-Lord
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+
+ As soon as Sam was well enough to be moved the doctors sent him down to
+ the coast, and Cleary, who had been up and down the river several times
+ in the course of his newspaper work, went with him. Sam still felt
+ feeble, and altho he could walk without a crutch, he now had a decided
+ limp which was sure to be permanent. They arrived at the port a few
+ days before the expected arrival of the Emperor, and the whole place
+ was overflowing with excitement. The Emperor, who had never seen a
+ skirmish, was notwithstanding considered the greatest general of his
+ time, and he was coming now to prove it before the world and
+ incidentally to wreak vengeance upon a people, one of whom had killed
+ his ambassador. The town was profusely decorated, the Tutonian garrison
+ was increased, and Count von Balderdash, the commander-in-chief,
+ himself took command. Six fleets were drawn up in the wide bay to await
+ the coming of the war-lord. It was announced that he would make his
+ entry at night, and that the hour of arrival had been timed for a dark
+ moonless night. This was asserted to be for the better display of
+ fireworks. Finally, one morning the Tutonian fleet of four or five
+ large vessels was sighted in the distance. They steamed slowly up and
+ down in the distance until night fell, and then, as their colored
+ electric lights, outlining the masts and funnels, became distinct in
+ the darkness, they began to approach. Each of the awaiting fleets was
+ distinguished with particular-colored lights, and they had taken their
+ position at a considerable distance from the shore, leaving a passage
+ near the ruined forts for the Emperor. Sam and Cleary found a good
+ lookout on a dismantled bastion, and saw the whole parade. As the
+ leading vessel came near the first fleet the latter saluted with its
+ guns. Suddenly the lights on the advancing ship were extinguished, and
+ a strong flash-light was throw from above upon the forward deck. There
+ in bold relief stood a single figure, brilliantly illuminated by the
+ light. Cleary and Sam turned their field-glasses upon it.
+
+ "By Jove! it's the Emperor," cried Cleary. "He's got on his admiral's
+ uniform, and now he's passing his own fleet that Balderdash brought
+ with him."
+
+ They looked at the striking scene for some minutes, and the crowds on
+ the wharves and shores murmured with surprise.
+
+ "Bless my soul! he has disappeared," said Cleary again.
+
+ Sure enough, he had suddenly passed out of sight, and as suddenly the
+ flash-light went out and the lights on the masts reappeared. In another
+ moment these lights were extinguished, and the flash-light revealed a
+ form standing in the same place in a theatrical attitude with raised
+ sword and uplifted face.
+
+ "I believe it's he again," said Cleary. "He must have a trap-door. He's
+ got on another uniform. I think it's a Frank admiral's uniform. There
+ go the Frank guns. He's passing their fleet."
+
+ "Yes, it is a Frank naval uniform," said a foreign officer near them,
+ as he scrutinized the deck with his glasses.
+
+ Before each of the fleets the same maneuvre was carried out. As their
+ guns fired, the Emperor would disappear for a few moments, and in an
+ incalculably short time he would appear again in the uniform of an
+ admiral of the fleet in question. When he had passed the last fleet he
+ disappeared once more, and came back to sight clad in the white and
+ silver armor of a general officer of his own army, with helmet and
+ plume. The flash-light now changed colors through the whole gamut of
+ the rainbow, and the Emperor knelt in the attitude of Columbus
+ discovering America.
+
+ Sam was immensely impressed.
+
+ "Oh, Cleary!" he said, "if we only had an Emperor."
+
+ "The President is doing his best," said Cleary. "Don't blame him."
+
+ "Oh, but what can he do? Why haven't we some one like that to embody
+ the ideal of the State, to picture us to ourselves, to realize our
+ aspirations?"
+
+ As he said this a strange noise arose from the crowd near the
+ landing-stage where the Emperor was about to alight. The far greater
+ part of this crowd was composed of natives, and they had been entirely
+ taken aback by the exhibition. They were just beginning to understand
+ it, and as the war-lord moved about the deck followed by the glare of
+ the flash-light, and again struck an attitude before descending into
+ the gig which was to take him ashore, some one of the Porsslanese in
+ the crowd laughed. His neighbor laughed too, then another and then
+ another, until the whole native multitude was laughing. The laugh
+ rippled along the shore through the long stretch of natives collected
+ there like the swells from a passing steamer. It seemed to extend back
+ from the shore through the whole town, and, tho it was undoubtedly
+ fancy, Sam thought he heard it spreading, like the rings from a stone
+ thrown into the water, over the entire land. The foreigners stood
+ aghast. The Porsslanese are not a laughing people. They had never been
+ known to laugh before except in the most feeble manner. The events of
+ the past year had not been especially humorous, and the coming of the
+ great war-lord was far from being a laughing matter. Yet with the
+ perversity of heathen they had selected this impressive occasion for
+ showing their incurable barbarism and bad taste. Sam fairly shuddered.
+
+ "It's a sacrilege," he cried. "I believe that nothing short of
+ extermination will reclaim this unhappy land. They are calling down the
+ vengeance of heaven upon them."
+
+ They walked back to town with the foreign officer.
+
+ "He's a wonderful man, the Emperor," said he, in indifferent English.
+ "How quickly he changed his clothes, and what a compliment it was!"
+
+ "A sort of lightning-change artist," said Cleary. "He could make his
+ fortune at a continuous performance."
+
+ In the dark Sam blushed for his friend, but fortunately their companion
+ did not understand the allusion.
+
+ "You should have seen him when he visited our Queen," he said. "She
+ came to meet him in the uniform of a Tutonian hussar, breeches and all.
+ You can imagine how he was touched by it. That very afternoon he called
+ upon her dressed in the costume of one of our royal princesses with a
+ long satin train. It made him wonderfully popular. Our Queen responded
+ at once by making his infant daughters colonels of several of our
+ regiments. One of them is colonel of mine," he added proudly.
+
+ "What would you do if you went to war with Tutonia, and one of the kids
+ should order you to shoot on your own army?" asked Cleary. "It might be
+ embarrassing."
+
+ But the foreigner did not understand this either.
+
+ "And to think that these Porsslanese dogs have received him with
+ laughter!" said he.
+
+ At eleven o'clock on the same evening the Emperor was closeted with his
+ aged field-marshal, von Balderdash, in a handsomely furnished
+ sitting-room. A Turk's head had been set up in the middle of the room,
+ and His Majesty, dressed in the uniform of a cavalry general, was
+ engaged in making passes at it with a saber. He had already taken a
+ ride on horseback with his staff. The field-marshal stood wearily
+ leaning against the wall at the side of a desk piled up with papers.
+
+ "We have avenged the death of our ambassador," Balderdash was saying.
+ "We have sent out five punitive expeditions in all. Our quarter of the
+ imperial city shows the power of arms more completely than any other.
+ We have set the highest standard, and our army is the admiration of
+ all."
+
+ The count watched the face of his master as he spoke, but there was no
+ sign of satisfaction in it. The Emperor was out of humor.
+
+ "We have not done enough," he said. "If we had, those pagans would not
+ have ventured to laugh--yes, actually to laugh--in our imperial
+ presence. Balderdash, you have not done your duty. I shall take command
+ myself at once. We must have a real punitive expedition, and not one of
+ your imitations. If they want war, let them have it."
+
+ "We can not have war, Your Majesty, without an enemy, and we can find
+ no enemy. All their armed men are killed or have fled, and the rest of
+ the population run away from us as soon as we appear."
+
+ "Count," said the Emperor sternly, "do you remember your oath to our
+ person? Do you know your duties as a field-marshal?"
+
+ "I think so, Your Majesty."
+
+ "Is it not your duty to provide every requisite for war at my command?"
+
+ "Yes, Your Majesty."
+
+ "Then I depend upon you to provide an enemy. What military requisite is
+ more important? Remember the fate of Fismark, and do your duty. We
+ must have a war. That is what I have come here for, and I do not
+ propose to be disappointed. We must have a punitive expedition at once.
+ What are my engagements for to-morrow?"
+
+ "Your Majesty's mustache artist is coming at 5:30," replied the count,
+ looking at a memorandum. "Breakfast at 6--inspection of infantry at
+ 6:30--naval maneuvres at 8--reception of our officers at
+ 10:30--reception of foreign officers at 11:30--reception of civilians
+ at 12--luncheon at 12:30--photographer from 1 to 3. We have made no
+ appointments after 3, Your Majesty."
+
+ "Then put down the punitive expedition for 3:15," said the war lord,
+ twisting his mustache in front of his eyes. "I propose to have this
+ whole nation kow-tow before me in unison before I leave their miserable
+ land. Take the necessary measures at once for the ceremony. Now I am
+ going to call out the whole garrison and see if they are kept in
+ readiness. You may go, and send me an aide-de-camp. You understand
+ that you must find me an enemy on whom I can wreak vengeance for all
+ these wrongs."
+
+ "I understand, Your Majesty," said the count, bending low before him.
+ "I accept this Gospel of Your Majesty's most blessed Person," and he
+ took his leave.
+
+ The expedition did not start promptly at 3:15, for unexpected
+ complications arose. The other powers wanted to send out punitive
+ expeditions too, and they sought to have it established that the
+ Porsslanese laugh was directed against all the fleets as well as
+ against the Emperor. A judicious distribution of decorations persuaded
+ all the armies to drop this pretension except the Anglian, and it was
+ finally arranged that the Tutonian and Anglian armies should cooperate
+ and take the field together under the Emperor's immediate command. A
+ week had elapsed before this force was prepared, but it finally started
+ out, General Fawlorn commanding the Anglian contingent.
+
+ Sam, who was still only convalescent and who had been assigned some
+ duties connected with forwarding despatches which left him a great deal
+ of leisure, looked with envious eyes upon the departing host. He had
+ never seen anything like the magnificence of the uniforms of the
+ Emperor's staff. He envied them their gilt and stars, and he envied
+ them the prospect of winning the great battles which Balderdash had
+ promised them. They marched at once upon a fortified town in which a
+ large force of Fencers were reported to be established. They besieged
+ it for six days according to all the rules of the Tutonian manual, and
+ finally entered it with great precautions, and found it absolutely
+ empty. At one village a regiment of Anglian Asiatics cut to pieces a
+ hundred natives who were alleged to be Fencers, but it transpired
+ afterward that none of them were armed. Balderdash was frightened half
+ to death, expecting his imperial master to protest against the lack of
+ opposition, but, strange to say, he took it very well and delivered
+ orations on all occasions extolling the prowess of his troops in
+ putting to flight the hordes of a vast empire. This campaign lasted a
+ month, and the expedition finally returned to the port and was received
+ with all the marks of glory that Tutonian officialism could command.
+ The Emperor at once cabled to several kings and all his relations that
+ Providence had graciously preserved him in the midst of great dangers
+ and brought his enterprise to a successful termination.
+
+ "They may be great soldiers," said Cleary one day to Sam, "but they
+ don't understand the newspaper business. The Emperor has a natural
+ talent for advertising, but it hasn't been properly cultivated. They
+ oughtn't to have let it leak out that there wasn't even a battle. Why,
+ Taffy says he could go from one end of the Empire to the other with a
+ squadron of cavalry! As for me, I shouldn't mind trying it without the
+ cavalry. When they did kill any people, it was like killing pheasants
+ at one of his famous battues. I wonder he wasn't photographed in the
+ middle of a pile of them, the way he is when he goes shooting at home.
+ Perhaps he'll get up some sport here in a big hen-coop. I'll suggest
+ it to Balderdash."
+
+ Sam refused to think ill of the great war-lord, and embraced every
+ opportunity to see him. He had been formally presented to him at a
+ reception of officers, but there was a crowd present, and Sam did not
+ expect him to recognize him again. On one occasion Sam happened to be
+ standing in the street when the Emperor, accompanied by some of his
+ officers, came past on foot. Sam stood on one side and saluted. To his
+ surprise the Emperor stopped and beckoned to him. Sam came forward,
+ bowing, blushing, and stammering.
+
+ "I am glad to see an officer of your country here, General," said His
+ Majesty. "May I ask your name? Ah, Jinks! I have heard your name
+ before. What do you think of expansion, General?"
+
+ "I beg Your Majesty's pardon," said Sam, "but I do not think. I obey
+ orders."
+
+ The Emperor gave an exclamation of surprise and delight.
+
+ "Hear that, gentlemen," said he in his own language, turning to his
+ officers. "He does not think; he obeys orders! There is a model for
+ you. There is a motto for you to learn. God has given you an Emperor to
+ think for you. Our friend here, with only a President to fall back on,
+ has perceived the truth that a soldier must not think. He thinks at his
+ peril. General," he added in English, "you have given my army a lesson
+ to-day which they will never forget. It will give me pleasure to
+ decorate you with the Green Cockatoo, third class."
+
+ Sam began to stammer something.
+
+ "Oh, yes, I remember. Your Government does not allow you to receive it.
+ If that restriction is ever removed, let me be informed," and the
+ Emperor passed on, while Sam determined to write to his uncle and have
+ this miserable civilian law changed. It so happened that there was a
+ great dearth of news at this time, and Cleary made the most of this
+ episode. It did almost as much to make General Jinks famous as anything
+ that he had done before, and he was widely advertised at home as the
+ officer who had astounded the Emperor by his wisdom and given a lesson
+ to the finest army in the world.
+
+ [Illustration: THE PERFECT SOLDIER
+ "THE EMPEROR GAVE AN EXCLAMATION OF SURPRISE AND DELIGHT"]
+
+ "Sam, your luck never gives out," said Cleary. "They'll make you a
+ major-general, I expect, now."
+
+ "I should rather like to have the thanks of Congress," answered Sam, as
+ if that were a mere bagatelle. This conversation occurred in a
+ restaurant. A young officer was sitting alone at the next table, and he
+ gave his order to the waiter in a high, penetrating voice.
+
+ "Bless my soul! if that isn't Clark," cried Cleary. "See, he's a second
+ lieutenant still. Let's ask him over to our table."
+
+ "Go ahead," said Sam, "but don't say anything about East Point."
+
+ Cleary invited him over as a fellow countryman, and the three men dined
+ together, never once saying anything to denote that they had met
+ before. Whether Clark noticed that Cleary was rather persistent in
+ offering him the red pepper for every course, it was impossible to
+ determine.
+
+ It was generally supposed that the Emperor had done all that could be
+ done in Porsslania, but those who believed this, knew little of the
+ resources of the first soldier of Christendom. Even Count von
+ Balderdash was ignorant of the card which his master had determined to
+ play in view of all mankind.
+
+ "Balderdash," said he one night, as the poor count sat trying to
+ repress his yawns and longing for bed,--"Balderdash, we have shown the
+ heathen here what we can do. We have exacted vengeance from them. Now I
+ wish to show to the civilized world, and especially to their armies
+ here, that we have the best army, the best discipline, the greatest
+ power on earth, and the bravest Christians in our ranks. I have not
+ told you yet what I propose to do, but the time has come to go ahead
+ with it. In our vessel, the _Eagle_, which we brought with us, there
+ are confined thirty persons convicted at home of the frightful crime of
+ lese-majesty, a crime which shows that the criminal is atheistic,
+ anarchistic, and unfit to live. I had them selected among those who
+ have near relations here in the army. They all have either sons,
+ brothers, or fathers enlisted here. Of course at home our wretched
+ parliamentary system would make it inadvisable to have them executed.
+ Here there is no such difficulty. You have often heard me at the annual
+ swearing in of recruits tell them that they are now my children and
+ must do what I say, even if I should order them to shoot down their own
+ parents. I wish to show the world that this is so, and that my soldiers
+ believe it and will act upon it. Such an army will inspire terror
+ indeed. Most of the prisoners are men, but I have included among them
+ two or three of the most abandoned women, who have been imprisoned for
+ criticizing my sacred person. You approve of my plan?"
+
+ "I approve of all that Your Majesty ever suggests."
+
+ "Of course it makes no difference whether you do or not, but I wish you
+ to have the prisoners brought ashore. You must seek out their
+ relatives among the troops, but do not let them know why. Then fix the
+ execution for some day next week, and have a general parade of all the
+ troops on that occasion."
+
+ The Emperor's secret was well kept, and, except that a special parade
+ was to be held, no one knew what the object was. A glittering array of
+ soldiers met the war-lord's eyes when he entered the public square
+ where the army was drawn up. In pursuance of his orders the enlisted
+ men who were related to the prisoners were alined in front of the
+ center with a captain in command of them. The Emperor directed his
+ horse to the spot and addressed the whole army, applying his remarks
+ particularly, however, to the detail immediately before him.
+
+ "My children," said he, "when you took the oath of allegiance as my
+ soldiers you became members of my family, and it became your solemn
+ duty to do my bidding, whatever that bidding might be. My word became
+ for you the Word of God. You gave your consciences into my keeping,
+ knowing that God had commissioned me to relieve you of that
+ responsibility. From that moment it was your aim to become perfect
+ soldiers, with your minds and consciences deposited in my hands for
+ safe-keeping. From that day forth you no longer had minds nor
+ consciences--your whole duty was summed up in the obligation to obey
+ orders. That is the soldier's only duty. And I know, my children, that
+ you are perfect soldiers and that you stand ever ready to do that duty.
+ Soldiers in other armies may occasionally forget their calling and
+ indulge in the forbidden fruits of reason and conscience, but the
+ Tutonian soldier never! We all know this. For us no proof is necessary.
+ But I wish to demonstrate the fact to the world. I have brought over
+ with me across the sea certain of your relations who have been guilty
+ of the unparalleled crime of lese-majesty. I have determined that they
+ deserve death, and that you shall carry out the execution. I have so
+ arranged it that each of the condemned shall be shot by his nearest
+ relation, be it father, son, or brother. You will show the world that
+ you are ready, nay, proud to carry out these my commands. I
+ congratulate you on being selected for this noble and patriotic task.
+ You are now before the footlights at the center of the world's stage.
+ Remember that the eyes of all mankind are upon you and that you are my
+ children. Field-marshal, carry out my orders!"
+
+ Count von Balderdash gave some orders in an undertone; the troops
+ opened on the left, and disclosed a row of prisoners, including several
+ women, standing bound and blindfolded against a wall, each one at a
+ distance of several yards from his neighbor. The captain ordered the
+ detail into position, gave the necessary orders to load, aim, and fire,
+ and the condemned men and women fell to the ground, each one pierced by
+ the bullet of his or her near relation.
+
+ The great concourse, composed largely of soldiers of the various
+ foreign armies (for most of them had now been withdrawn from the
+ Capital and Gin-Sin), looked on with wonder at this spectacle. Sam, who
+ was standing with the inventor Cope, scanned the faces of the
+ executioners with care, and was unable to detect the slightest sign of
+ emotion in them. They had not been prepared in the least for the
+ ordeal; they did not even know that their relations had been brought
+ from home, and yet they did their duty as soldiers without changing the
+ stolid expression of their faces.
+
+ "Wonderful, wonderful!" he said to Cope. "These are indeed perfect
+ soldiers. Why, they move like clockwork, like marvelous machines. And
+ what a remarkable man the Emperor is--without question the first
+ soldier of his time and of all time. Was there ever anything like it?"
+
+ "Never," answered the inventor.
+
+ Sam walked back to his lodgings alone. He wished to think, and
+ purposely avoided company. He did not notice the soldiers in the
+ streets, nor the natives in their round, pointed straw hats. He ran
+ into a man carrying water in two buckets hung from the ends of a pole
+ balanced on his shoulders, and nearly upset his load. He started back
+ and collided with a native woman with a baby tied to her back. When he
+ reached his house, he sat down in an easy-chair in his bedroom and
+ thought and thought and thought. For some hours his mind was filled
+ with unmixed admiration for the Emperor and his army. He felt like an
+ artist who had just seen a new masterpiece that surpassed all the
+ achievements of the ages, or a musician who had listened to a new
+ symphony that summed up and transcended all that had ever gone before.
+ Again and again he pictured to himself the great war-lord in his helmet
+ and white plume, explaining so eloquently and admirably the duties of a
+ soldier, and then his soldiers obeying his orders as if their service
+ were a religion to them, as indeed it was. It grew dark, but Sam did
+ not heed the darkness. Dinner-time came and went, but he was in a
+ region far above such vulgar bodily needs.
+
+ "Oh, if we only had an emperor," he thought,--"and such an emperor! Why
+ was I not born a Tutonian?"
+
+ This was an unpatriotic thought, and Sam was ashamed of it. Yet it was
+ true, he would gladly have found himself one of His Majesty's subjects
+ and a member of his incomparable army. Then he recalled his memorable
+ interview with the Emperor, and rejoiced in the remembrance that he had
+ deserved and received his commendation. He tried to imagine how it
+ would feel to be one of his officers, or even one of his privates. If
+ he had been selected as one of the squad to show the perfection of
+ their discipline, how gladly he would have taken his place in line with
+ the rest! He would have obeyed without flinching, he was sure of it. He
+ put himself in the place of one of the squad. He is ordered to take his
+ position opposite one of the condemned. He looks and sees that it is
+ his Uncle George. Would he obey the order to shoot? Most certainly. The
+ musket goes off and his uncle falls. He goes through the list of his
+ friends and relations. He does not quite like to shoot the girls, but
+ he does it. It is his duty. His commander-in-chief, who represents his
+ Creator, has ordered it. He can rely implicitly on his wisdom. Then he
+ thinks of Cleary. Yes, he would shoot Cleary down without hesitation.
+ And then comes the turn of his father and mother. He has no trouble
+ with the former, for he is sure that his father as a man must
+ understand his feelings, and he sees a smile of approval on his face as
+ he, too, falls prostrate. With his mother it is more difficult. There
+ had not been much sympathy between them in recent years, yet he
+ recalled his early boyhood on the farm, and it went against him to aim
+ his piece at her. But after all it was his duty, and with an inaudible
+ sigh he pulled the trigger. It was done. No one could have noticed his
+ reluctance. It was quite likely that some of the soldiers that
+ afternoon felt as much compunction as that. But as Sam went over all
+ this long list of tests and passed them successfully, he felt, almost
+ unconsciously, that he was coming to a precipice. His sense of
+ happiness had left him, and he began to dread the end of his
+ cogitations. There was a trial in store that he was afraid of facing.
+ In order to postpone it he went over all his friends and relations
+ again, and added mere acquaintances to the list. He busied himself in
+ this way for an hour or two, but at last the final question forced
+ itself upon him and insisted upon an answer. Would he be willing to
+ shoot Marian under orders? It was with misgivings that he began to
+ imagine this episode. As before, he marched to his place and lifted his
+ rifle to aim. He sees before him the figure which had been haunting his
+ dreams ever since he left East Point. She is bound; a handkerchief is
+ tied over her eyes, but he sees the mouth and longs to kiss it. He has
+ a strong impulse to run forward and throw his arms around her. The
+ command "Fire!" is given, but--he does not shoot. He can not. He has
+ disobeyed orders! He, the man whose one aim in life has been to become
+ a perfect soldier, who only just now was considering himself fit to be
+ a soldier of the war-lord, had disobeyed orders; he had shown himself a
+ mutineer, a deserter, a traitor; he had lost his patriotism and
+ loyalty; he had dishonored the flag; he had trampled under foot all the
+ gods that he had worshiped now for many years. He had flatly broken
+ the only code of morals that he knew--he was a coward, a hypocrite, a
+ mere civilian, masquerading in the uniform of an officer! Sam buried
+ his face in his hands and the tears trickled down through his fingers.
+ Then he sprang up and walked to and fro for a long time. At last he
+ took Marian's photograph from his pocket and put it on his
+ dressing-table. He must be a man. He must hold true to his faith. He
+ screwed up his courage and went through the forms of the afternoon in
+ his room dimly lighted by lanterns in the street. He stood up in the
+ line before the Emperor, and again listened to his inspiring speech.
+ Now he felt sure that he would not fail. He placed himself opposite the
+ photograph when the order was given. He raised an imaginary gun and
+ aimed with assurance--but just then his eye fell upon the face which he
+ could barely distinguish. He saw Marian again as she had been when he
+ bade her farewell. True, she was as much a believer in the military
+ scheme of life as he was, but he knew by instinct that she would draw
+ the line somewhere. She was not created to be a martyr to her faith.
+ The order "Fire!" came, but Sam, instead of obeying, threw down his
+ musket and ran forward, seized the photograph and kissed it. He looked
+ up, half expecting to see a crowd of spectators eying him with
+ derision. He cast himself upon his bed with his clothes on and tossed
+ about for a long time, until at last sleep came to his relief.
+
+ When he awoke in the morning the sun had long been up. In the first
+ moments of waking and before he opened his eyes, he could not recall
+ what it was that was troubling him. Suddenly the whole situation came
+ back to him, tenfold clearer than before. He saw at once beyond all
+ possibility of contradiction that he could not shoot Marian, no matter
+ who ordered him to do it; that for him the ideal of a perfect soldier
+ was altogether unattainable, and that he was obliged to admit to
+ himself that his entire life was a failure. The public might praise and
+ acclaim him, but he was essentially a fraud and could never secure his
+ own approval.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XIV
+
+ Home Again
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+
+ When Sam got up and began to undress to take his bath, his head swam so
+ that he was obliged to lie down again. He tried again two or three
+ times, but always with the same result, and finally he rang for a
+ servant and sent for an army surgeon. The doctor came at once, took his
+ temperature with a thermometer, and, after examining him, pronounced
+ that he had a bad attack of fever, probably typhoid. He advised him to
+ go to the hospital, and before noon Sam found himself comfortably
+ installed in a hospital bed, screened off by a movable partition from a
+ ward of fever patients. The doctor's surmise proved to be correct, and
+ for weeks he was dangerously ill, much of the time being delirious. He
+ suffered once or twice also from relapses, and showed very little
+ recuperative force when the fever finally left him. Meanwhile he was
+ very low-spirited. The idea preyed upon his mind that he was no soldier
+ and could never be one, and he felt that the resulting depression had a
+ great deal to do with his protracted illness. Cleary was assiduous in
+ his attentions, but, intimate as they were, Sam could never bring
+ himself to confess his culpable weakness to him. As he became
+ convalescent he had other visitors, and among them Mr. Cope, the
+ inventor of explosives and artillery.
+
+ "I am at work at a great invention which I shall owe partly to you and
+ partly to the Emperor," said he on one occasion. "Do you remember that
+ at that execution the Emperor said that the perfect soldier has no
+ conscience or reason?" Sam winced. "And then you called my attention to
+ the fact that the men performed their part like machines. That set me
+ thinking. I am always on the lookout for suggestions, and there was one
+ ready-made. Do you see? Why shouldn't a machine be made to take the
+ place of a soldier? A great idea, isn't it? Now you see we've already
+ done something in that line. A torpedo is simply an iron soldier that
+ swims under water and needs no breath, and does as he is told. Think
+ how absurd it is in battle to have a field-battery come up under fire
+ at a gallop! They swing round, unlimber, load, and fire, then harness
+ again, swing round again, and off they are. Meanwhile perhaps half the
+ men and horses have been killed. Wouldn't it be better to have the
+ whole battery a machine, instead of only the guns? The general could
+ stay behind out of range, as he does to-day, and direct the whole thing
+ with an electric battery and a telescope. It is not a difficult matter
+ when you once accept the principle, and the principle can be extended
+ to cavalry and infantry just as well. It will be a great thing for the
+ nations that are best at mechanics, and that means you and us."
+
+ "I don't see," said Sam, "how you can get on without the courage of
+ brave men."
+
+ "Courage! Why, what is more courageous than a piece of steel? It
+ wouldn't be easy to frighten it. And it is just so with all soldierly
+ qualities. Do you want obedience? What is more obedient than a machine?
+ I suppose you admit that a human soldier may disobey orders sometimes."
+
+ "Perhaps," said Sam, blushing uneasily.
+
+ "You may be sure that a steel soldier won't unless he is disabled, and
+ a human soldier may be disabled too. Then the Emperor said a soldier
+ should not reason. There's no danger of a steel soldier trying that.
+
+ "'Theirs not to reason why.
+ Theirs but to do and die.'
+
+ "Why, the Light Brigade at Balaklava won't be in it with them. And it's
+ just the same with regard to conscience. A piece of steel has no
+ conscience. What we want is a machine soldier. A soldier must be
+ obedient, and he must be without fear, conscience, or a mind of his
+ own. In all these respects a machine can surpass a man. Why, you
+ yourself, in praising those Tutonian soldiers, said that they went like
+ clockwork. That's the highest military praise possible."
+
+ Sam was much disturbed by this conversation. Mr. Cope went on to tell
+ how his Government had spent L23,000 to fire a single shot and test one
+ of his new projectiles, but Sam was not interested. Then the inventor
+ began to rally him about the lack of interest of soldiers in the
+ inventions which they used.
+
+ "If you had had to depend on yourselves for inventions," he said, "you
+ would still be fighting with cross-bows, or perhaps more likely with
+ your teeth and finger-nails. No soldier ever invented anything. We
+ inventors are the real military men."
+
+ At last Sam's unconscious tormentor took his departure, and the invalid
+ rang for the hospital orderly so that he might tell him not to let him
+ in again. To his surprise a new orderly appeared, a negro whose face
+ was strangely familiar.
+
+ "What is it, sah?" he said.
+
+ "Is that you, Mose?" cried Sam. "Why, it's almost as good as being at
+ home again."
+
+ "Bress my soul, Massa Jinks--I mean General, have you been a-hurtin'
+ yourself again?" and the man chuckled to himself till his whole body
+ shook. Under Mose's care Sam made more rapid progress and soon was able
+ to go out in a sedan-chair, borne by three men, like a mandarin. The
+ winter passed away and spring was about to set in. There was no
+ prospect of active service in Porsslania, the Powers being unable to
+ agree upon any policy. The Emperor had already gone home, and the
+ various armies were much reduced in strength. Cleary had been ordered
+ to return by his newspaper, and had taken passage in a passenger
+ steamer for the first of May.
+
+ "Why can't you come with me?" he said to Sam. "You're entitled to a
+ leave of absence, and when you get to Whoppington you can apply for
+ some other berth."
+
+ Sam followed this wise advice and obtained a furlough of three months,
+ and on the day fixed for sailing they embarked for home.
+
+ Sam was still an invalid, but the voyage did him a great deal of good,
+ and before they had been a week at sea he began to look quite like his
+ old self. There were few passengers who interested him, but he became
+ acquainted with one man of note, a Porsslanese literatus, who was
+ attached to the legation at Whoppington, and sat on the other side of
+ the captain of the steamer at meals. This gentleman, who bore the name
+ of Chung Tu, was greatly interested in military matters and listened to
+ Sam's accounts by the hour. The night before their arrival at St.
+ Kisco, the regular dinner was, as usual, converted into a banquet, and
+ a band was improvised for the occasion. At the close of dinner the
+ martial hymns of all nations were played, ending with "Yankee Doodle."
+ It was impossible to resist the impulse to laugh as this national jig
+ brought up the rear, and Sam was much displeased that the foreigners
+ on board, and there were many, should have laughed at his country. When
+ he went up on deck he found Cleary conversing with Chung Tu, and he
+ placed his steamer-chair beside theirs and joined the conversation.
+
+ "It's a great pity," said he, "that we have such a national air as
+ 'Yankee Doodle.' It holds us up to ridicule."
+
+ "Do you think so?" answered Chung Tu, who spoke English perfectly.
+ "That depends upon the point of view. You see you take the military
+ point of view. We Porsslanese are not a military nation. We do not
+ think much of armies. We do not try to spread our territory by force,
+ and we never encroach on our neighbors' land, altho we are really
+ overcrowded. Perhaps that is the reason people dislike us. We are not
+ much of an empire either. We have very little central authority, and
+ only a handful of officials. We have free speech, and even the Emperor
+ can be freely criticized without fear. We have no conscription, and no
+ one need carry a passport, as they have to in some countries. We are
+ almost a democracy. We have no exclusive hereditary rank. Any one may
+ become a mandarin if he learns enough to deserve it. We only wanted to
+ be left alone without armies, and we did not want to buy guns and
+ ships. That is all. We are almost a democracy, and that is the reason
+ that I have always studied your history with care. I have studied your
+ state papers and your hymns. I have made a special study of them, and I
+ have come to the opposite conclusion from you as to 'Yankee Doodle.' It
+ seems to me to be the work of a great poet and prophet."
+
+ "What do you mean?" asked Sam.
+
+ "Let us consider it seriously," said Chung Tu. "Have you a copy of it?"
+
+ "No," said Sam, laughing.
+
+ "Then please repeat it for us, and I will write it down."
+
+ Sam began to recite, but he found it difficult to keep his face
+ straight:
+
+ "'Yankee Doodle went to town,
+ Riding on a pony.
+ He stuck a feather in his crown
+ And called him macaroni.'"
+
+ "That is not like my version," said the attache, pulling a piece of
+ paper from the pocket of his silk jacket. "Here is mine," and he read
+ it solemnly and with emphasis:
+
+ "'Yankee Doodle came to town,
+ A-riding on a pony.
+ He stuck a feather in his cap
+ And called it macaroni.'
+
+ "Which reading is correct?" he asked of Cleary.
+
+ "I'm sure I don't know," said Cleary, laughing.
+
+ "How careless you are of your country's literature! In Porsslania we
+ would carefully guard the sayings of our ancestors and preserve them
+ from alteration. You have what you call the 'higher criticism.' You
+ should direct it to the correction of this most important poem. I have
+ studied the matter as carefully and accurately as a foreigner can, and
+ I am satisfied that my version is the most authentic. Come now, let us
+ study it. Take the first two lines:
+
+ "'Yankee Doodle came to town
+ A-riding on a pony.'
+
+ "There is nothing difficult in that. You may say that the name is a
+ strange one, and I admit that 'Doodle' is a curious surname, but 'Yang
+ Kee' is a perfectly reasonable one from a Porsslanese point of view,
+ and leads me to suppose that the wisdom contained in this poem came
+ originally from our wise men. Perhaps the name is put there as an
+ indication of the fact. However, let us accept the name. The hero came
+ to town riding on a pony. That was a very sensible thing to do.
+ Remember that those lines were written long before the discovery of
+ railways or tram-cars or bicycles or automobiles. You may say that he
+ might have taken a carriage or one of your buggies, but you forget that
+ the roads were exceedingly bad in those days, as bad as our roads near
+ the Imperial City, and it would have been dangerous perhaps to attempt
+ the journey in a vehicle of any kind. In riding to town on a pony,
+ then, he was acting like a rational man. But let us read the rest of
+ the verse:
+
+ "'He stuck a feather in his cap
+ And called it macaroni.'
+
+ "For some reason or other which is not revealed, he puts a feather in
+ his cap, and immediately he begins to act irrationally and to use
+ language so absurd that the reading itself has become doubtful. What is
+ the meaning of this? A man whose conduct has always been reasonable and
+ unexceptionable, suddenly adopts the language of a lunatic. What does
+ it mean? You have sung this verse for a century and more, and you have
+ never taken the trouble to seek for the meaning."
+
+ Sam and Cleary did not attempt to defend their neglect.
+
+ "It is clear to me," proceeded the philosopher, "it is very clear to me
+ that it is an allegory. What is the feather which he puts in his cap?
+ It is the most conspicuous feature of the military uniform, the plume,
+ the pompon, which marks all kinds of military dress-hats. When he
+ speaks of his hero as having assumed the feather, he means that he has
+ donned the uniform of a soldier. He has come to town, in other words,
+ to enlist. Then behold the transformation! He begins at once to act
+ irrationally. The whole epic paints in never-fading colors the
+ disastrous effect upon the intellect of putting on soldier-clothes. You
+ will pardon me, my friends, if I speak thus plainly, but I must open to
+ you the hidden wisdom of your own country."
+
+ Sam smiled. The idea of taking offense at any nonsense which an
+ ignorant pagan should say was quite beneath him.
+
+ "But that is not all. The style of the language and of the music is
+ most noteworthy. It is highly comical, and its object evidently is to
+ provoke a laugh, and at dinner this evening we saw that its object was
+ attained. All the other martial hymns to which we listened were grave,
+ ponderous compositions from which the element of humor was rigidly
+ excluded. It was left for the author of 'Yang Kee' to uncover the
+ ludicrous character of militarism--he has virtually committed your
+ nation to it. He was a genius of marvelous insight. He saw clearly then
+ what but few of your fellow citizens are even now aware of, that there
+ is nothing more comical than a soldier. I am convinced that he was a
+ Porsslanese who had the good fortune to sow in your literature the seed
+ of truth. You think that as a nation you have a sense of humor. I have
+ studied your humorous literature. You laugh at mothers-in-law and
+ messenger-boys and domestic servants, and many other objects which are
+ altogether serious and have no element of humor in them, and at the
+ same time you are blind to the most absurd of spectacles, the man who
+ dresses up in feathers and gold lace and thinks it is honorable to do
+ nothing for years but wait for a pretext to kill somebody," and Chung
+ Tu leaned back in his chair and smiled.
+
+ "It is we who have the sense of humor," he added. "When our common
+ people laughed at the Emperor in his uniforms, they showed the same
+ sound sense that appears in 'Yang Kee.' I thank you, my dear friends,
+ for listening to me so kindly and without anger, but I hope to preach
+ these ideas to your people, and as I take my text from your national
+ hymn, they must listen to me. Then there is another common expression
+ among you which shows, as so many proverbs do, the fundamental truth.
+ When a story is incredible you say 'Tell that to the marines,'
+ signifying that only a marine would be stupid enough to believe it. Now
+ what is a marine? As the Anglian poet says, he is 'soldier and sailor
+ too,' in other words, he epitomizes the army and navy. It is the
+ military man who is foolish enough to believe anything and who keeps
+ alive the most absurd superstitions and customs. The ancient Greeks
+ cast a side-light on this truth, for their word for private soldier was
+ 'idiot.' And on account of this strange stupidity of soldiers, things
+ that would be disgraceful in private life become glorious in war. Their
+ one virtue is obedience, unqualified by any of the balancing virtues,
+ and they wear liveries to show that they are servile. And then the
+ foolish things they try to do! You are familiar with the Peace
+ Conference--generals and admirals spending weeks in uniform with swords
+ at their sides to determine how to stop fighting, as if there were
+ anything to do but to stop! I believe they had the grace to turn the
+ war pictures in the conference room to the wall. But fancy sending
+ butchers to a conference in the interests of vegetarianism! Of course
+ nothing was done or could be done there. And the Emperor in his
+ uniform, drunk with militarism, wanted us--all our nation--wanted
+ _me_--to kow-tow before him as if he were a god! But he did not get
+ what he wanted from us. His own people may grovel before him, but we
+ will not. Oh, these soldiers, these soldiers! You look down on your
+ hangmen and butchers. We look down on our men-butchers, the soldiers,
+ in the same way. We have soldiers just as you have police, but it is a
+ low calling with us, and most people would be ashamed to have a soldier
+ in the family. Pardon me, my dear sirs. Perhaps I have spoken too
+ plainly. I mean nothing personal, but when I think of these wars, I
+ can not control my tongue. Good-night."
+
+ So saying, the attache gathered up his robes and went below.
+
+ "Queer chap," said Sam. "He must be crazy."
+
+ "We've treated them rather badly, tho," said Cleary. "I'm glad Taffy
+ hasn't had any executions, but our minister and all the rest have been
+ insisting on executions of their big people, and no one talks of
+ executing any of ours, altho they have suffered ten times as much as we
+ have."
+
+ "You forget how the affair began," said Sam. "Suppose the Porsslanese
+ had sent us missionaries to teach us their religion, and these
+ missionaries had gradually got possession of land and also some local
+ power of governing, and then we had ruthlessly murdered some of them
+ and they had seized all our ports for the purpose of benefiting us, do
+ you suppose that we would have risen like those miserable Fencers and
+ massacred anybody? It is inconceivable. They have the strangest
+ aversion to foreigners too."
+
+ "Some of them haven't," said Cleary. "Chung Tu is a friendly old soul,
+ if he is cracked. He says he believes the Powers have been turned loose
+ on his country to punish them for having invented gunpowder. He laughs
+ at Cope's inventions. He says his people set the fashion, and then
+ wisely stopped when they found that such inventions did more harm than
+ good. I think they have a right to complain of us. Why, there's one of
+ our soldiers in the steerage with seventeen of their pigtails with the
+ scalps still fastened to them as trophies! Old Chung says our ribbons
+ and decorations are the equivalent of the scalps dangling at a savage's
+ belt. I didn't tell him we had the genuine article. But, come, you had
+ better turn in. You'll have a hard day to-morrow. I've advertised your
+ coming for all I was worth, and if they don't give you a send-off at
+ St. Kisco, it isn't my fault. I'm glad you're well enough to stand it."
+
+ "I'm not as well as I look," said Sam. "I've lost all my nerve. I'm
+ even worrying a little about all my loot in those cases in the hold. It
+ sometimes seems that I oughtn't to have taken it."
+
+ "What!" cried Cleary. "Well, you are getting squeamish! After all the
+ fellows you've killed or had killed, I shouldn't mind an ornament or
+ two."
+
+ "Killing is a soldier's main business," said Sam. "Oh, well, I suppose
+ looting is, too. I won't think anything more about it. Good-night."
+
+ While Sam and his friend were conversing on deck, another conversation
+ which was to have a portentous effect upon the former's destiny was
+ taking place in the upper corridor of the Peckham Young Ladies'
+ Seminary at St. Kisco.
+
+ "He's perfectly lovely," said a young lady, standing barefoot before
+ her door in her night-dress to a group of young ladies similarly
+ attired. "I've got his photograph. And I'm not just going to stand
+ still and see him pass. It's all very well to have the school drawn up
+ in line on the wharf--that's better than nothing--but I want something
+ more, and I'm going to have it."
+
+ "What will you do, Sally?" they all cried.
+
+ "I'm going to kiss him--there!" said she.
+
+ "Oh, Sally!"
+
+ "Yes, I will too."
+
+ "I believe she will if she says so," said one of the girls. "She won't
+ stop at anything. Well, Sally Watson, if you kiss him, I will to."
+
+ "And I!" "And I!" exclaimed the others; but at that moment a step was
+ heard on the stairs, and the Peckham young ladies sought their beds and
+ pretended very hard to be asleep, altho their hearts were thumping
+ against their ribs at the mere thought of their daring resolution.
+
+ It was at ten o'clock the next morning that the steamer came alongside
+ the wharf. The city was in gala dress and flags waved everywhere. The
+ day was observed almost as a holiday, and many schools permitted their
+ pupils to take part in the procession which awaited the arrival of
+ Captain Jinks, as Sam was now commonly known in his native land. A
+ reception was arranged for him at the City Hall, and the Mayor came
+ down to the steamer in a carriage with four horses to escort him
+ thither. From the deck Sam could see a banner stretched across the
+ street, on which was an inscription to the "Hero of San Diego, the
+ Subduer of the Moritos, the Capturer of Gomaldo, the Conqueror of the
+ Great White Temple, and the Friend and Instructor of the Emperor." A
+ few months before, Sam would have enjoyed this display without alloy,
+ but now his health was really shattered, and in the bottom of his heart
+ he felt that he was unworthy of it all, for he was not the perfect
+ soldier he had believed he was, and under his uniform beat the heart of
+ a vulgar civilian. His military instincts had their limit; his
+ obedience could only be relied upon under certain circumstances. He was
+ a mere amateur, and had no claim to rank as a military hero at all.
+
+ A swarm of reporters settled down upon General Jinks as soon as they
+ could get on board, insisting upon having his opinion as to the growth
+ of the city since he had seen it, the superiority of its climate to
+ that of any part of the world, and the beauty of its women. Sam
+ answered all these questions satisfactorily, and surrendered himself to
+ the committee of citizens who had come on deck to welcome him. His
+ luggage was passed without delay by the Custom House officials, and he
+ was conducted down the wharf toward the carriage which awaited him.
+ With true chivalry young ladies' schools had been given the best
+ positions on the wharf, and Sam soon found himself passing through a
+ double row of pretty girls. He could hear such remarks as this:
+
+ "Isn't he good-looking!"
+
+ "What a lovely uniform!"
+
+ "Hasn't he got a fascinating limp!"
+
+ "How pale he is!"
+
+ "He does look just like a hero."
+
+ Sam flushed slightly at these comments, but suddenly, before he had
+ time to collect his thoughts, a slight form sprang forward from the
+ left and an inviting face presented itself to his, and with the words,
+ "May I, please?" a hearty kiss was planted on his lips. Sam had no
+ time to decline, if he had wished to. A murmur of surprise and delight
+ arose from the crowd, and in another moment another damsel rushed upon
+ him, and then another and another. Before long he was the center of a
+ throng of elbowing young ladies of all kinds, fair, plain, and
+ indifferent, all bent upon giving him a kiss. Sam had indeed lost his
+ nerve; for the first time in his life he capitulated absolutely and let
+ the attacking party work its sweet will. It was with great difficulty
+ that he was rescued by the reception committee and finally seated next
+ to the Mayor in the landau.
+
+ "What a lot of cab-drivers you have there on the wharf!" said Sam to
+ the Mayor, after their first greetings. "I never saw so many. Hear them
+ crying out to the passengers coming ashore!"
+
+ "They're not cab-drivers," he answered. "They're pension agents.
+ They're not crying 'Want a cab?' but 'Want a pension?'"
+
+ "So they are," said Sam. "What is that tune the young ladies are
+ beginning to sing?"
+
+ "Don't you know?" said the Mayor, laughing. "It's 'Captain Jinks.'
+ You'll know it well enough before you are here long. Listen."
+
+ Sam listened and heard sung for the first time lines that were to be
+ imprinted upon his tympanum until they became a torture:
+
+ "I'm Captain Jinks of the Cubapines,
+ The pink of human war-machines,
+ Who teaches emperors, kings, and queens
+ The way to run an army."
+
+ The news of the kissing reached the City Hall before the procession,
+ and when he alighted there Sam had to kiss an immense number of women
+ who were determined not to be outdone by their sisters at the wharf,
+ while the whole crowd sang "Captain Jinks" in a frenzy of enthusiasm.
+ The reception accorded to Sam at St. Kisco was so elaborate, and the
+ arrangements made to do him honor were so extended, that he was obliged
+ to stay there for several days. Meanwhile the news of his arrival and
+ of his gallantry in kissing his countrywomen, young and old, spread all
+ over the land and took hold of the popular imagination. Invitations to
+ visit various cities on his way across the Continent began to come in,
+ and everywhere Sam was acclaimed as the hero and idol of the people.
+
+ "It's great, it's great, old man!" cried Cleary. "Why, that kissing
+ business is worth a dozen victories! The people here say that no
+ general or admiral has had such a send-off in St. Kisco. Look at
+ to-day's papers! Thirteen places have petitioned to have their
+ post-offices named after you. There will be Jinksvilles and Jinkstowns
+ everywhere, and one is called Samjinks. Then they're naming their
+ babies after you like wildfire. Samuela is becoming a common girl's
+ name, and one chap has called his girl Samjinksina. All the girls are
+ practising the Jinks limp, too. I saw one huge picture of you painted
+ on the dead side of a house. It was an ad. of the 'Captain Jinks 5-cent
+ Cigar.' That's the limit of a man's ambition, I should say. And now
+ they're beginning to nominate you for President. I'm going to try to
+ work that up. I'm sending a despatch to _The Lyre_ this morning. If
+ they take it up, we can put it through. The Republicrats hold their
+ convention at St. Lewis next month, and they've been looking around for
+ a military candidate, and you're just the thing. Every woman in the
+ country will be for you. They won't dare to put up a candidate against
+ you. You'll just have a walk-over. That song, 'Captain Jinks,' will do
+ it alone. Everybody is singing it."
+
+ "I thought I was too young," said Sam. "Isn't there an age limit?"
+
+ "Not a bit of it. They abolished that when they amended the
+ Constitution and made the President's term six years, and made him
+ ineligible for reelection."
+
+ "I'd rather have a military position," said Sam. "I'd rather be general
+ of the army. But I've lost my nerve--I'm not well; and perhaps it's
+ just as well that I should take a civilian position."
+
+ "Civilian position! Nonsense! The President is commander-in-chief of
+ the army and navy, and the marines, too, for that matter."
+
+ "But he hasn't a uniform," said Sam sorrowfully. "And as for all this
+ kissing, I'm sick of it. It tires me to death, and I don't know what
+ Marian will think of it. I've written to explain that I can't help it,
+ but she will see the reports first in the papers and she may not like
+ it at all."
+
+ "Oh, she's a sensible woman," said Cleary. "She will understand a
+ political and military necessity. She won't mind."
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XV
+
+ Politics
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+
+ But Marian did mind, and for once Cleary was mistaken. She was
+ delighted at the prominence which Sam had achieved, and saw him
+ mentioned as a candidate for President with pride and gratification,
+ but she did not see how that excused his promiscuous osculation of the
+ female population of the country, and she determined that it should
+ cease. She wrote to him frequently and decidedly on the subject, and he
+ reported her protests to Cleary, who absolutely refused to allow them.
+
+ "It won't do," said he, as they discussed the subject at a hotel in a
+ small city on their line of progress. "This kissing is your strong
+ point. _The Lyre_ is backing you up on the strength of it. So is the
+ Benevolent Assimilation Trust, Limited. In every city and town the
+ girls have turned out, and you've captured them hands down. If you stop
+ now it will upset the whole business. The Convention delegates are
+ coming out for you by the dozen. Our committee is working it up so that
+ it will be nearly unanimous. There won't be another serious candidate,
+ and I doubt if they put anybody up against you when you're nominated.
+ You're as good as President now, but you must go on kissing. That's all
+ there is of it."
+
+ Sam wrote to Marian rehearsing these arguments, and he got Cleary to
+ write too, but the letters had no effect. At last he received a
+ telegram from her announcing her intention of meeting him at St. Lewis.
+ She reached that city before him and was present at the station when he
+ arrived, altho he did not know it, and from a good point of vantage
+ she saw him kissing the young ladies of that city by wholesale to an
+ accompaniment of "Captain Jinks." It was more than she could stand, and
+ when she joined her _fiance_ at the hotel the meeting was very
+ different from the one he had so often pictured to himself. It was a
+ stormy scene, intermixed with tender episodes, but she gave it as her
+ ultimatum that the kissing must cease forthwith, and, in order to give
+ a good reason for it, she insisted that they be married at once. Sam
+ was willing to take this course, and Cleary was called into their
+ counsels. At first he bitterly opposed the project, but Marian's
+ blandishments finally succeeded, and she gained him as an ally. He was
+ sent as an emissary to the campaign committee and presented the case as
+ strongly as he could for her. The proposition really seemed most
+ plausible. Could anything help the chances of a candidate more than his
+ marriage to a handsome young woman? The committee had doubts on the
+ subject and waited in person on Miss Hunter, but she persuaded them as
+ she had persuaded Cleary, and furthermore convinced them that whether
+ they were persuaded or not the marriage would take place. Marian
+ determined to fix the hour for the next day. She pledged the committee
+ to secrecy, and no word of the proposed wedding got into the papers. At
+ noon a clergyman was called into the hotel, and in Sam's private
+ sitting-room the pair were married with Cleary and a few of the members
+ of the committee as witnesses. Almost before the ceremony was over they
+ could hear the newsboys crying out the tidings of the event.
+
+ "It's out of the question to talk about a wedding-tour," said Sam,
+ after the ceremony. "I can't walk in the streets alone without being
+ mobbed, and with Marian we could not keep the clothes on our backs.
+ Just hear them singing 'Captain Jinks' now!"
+
+ "Mark my words, dear," said his wife. "You will see when we get the
+ papers to-morrow with the news of our marriage, that it has made you
+ more popular than ever. Now send out word to the reporters that you
+ will not do any more public kissing."
+
+ In obedience to these orders Cleary, acting as go-between, conveyed the
+ information as gently as he could to the representatives of the press,
+ that as a married man General Jinks expected to be spared the ordeal of
+ embracing all the young ladies of the country.
+
+ No one was prepared for the striking effect which this news, coupled
+ with that of the marriage, had upon the newspapers and their readers.
+ The first papers which Sam and his wife saw on the following morning
+ were those of St. Lewis. They expressed sorrow at the fact that Captain
+ Jinks had taken such a resolution when only a handful of the fair women
+ of St. Lewis had had the opportunity of saluting him. Were they less
+ beautiful and attractive than the ladies of St. Kisco who had kissed
+ him to their hearts' content? Marian was visibly annoyed when she saw
+ these articles, but she advised her husband to wait till they received
+ the papers from other cities. These journals came, but, alas! they went
+ rapidly from bad to worse. The Eastern papers with scarcely an
+ exception took up the strain of those of St. Lewis. Why did Captain
+ Jinks discriminate against the women of the East? He had kissed the
+ whole West. Probably he had also kissed all the women of the Cubapines
+ and Porsslania. It was only the women of the East that he could not
+ find heart to salute in the same way. Here was a hero indeed, who
+ insulted one-half of his own nation! It might have been expected that
+ the Western press would have come to Sam's support, but they did not.
+ They accused him of gross deception in not announcing that he had been
+ from the first engaged to be married. Their young women had been
+ fraudulently induced to kiss lips which had already been monopolized,
+ but which they had been led to believe to be as free as the air of
+ heaven. Black indeed must be the soul of a man who could stoop to such
+ deception! As the days went on the public became more excited and the
+ attacks more ferocious. It was rumored that his _fiancee_ had married
+ him against his will, that she was a virago and a termagant. Would the
+ country be contented to see the Executive Mansion ruled by petticoats,
+ and by those of a hussy at that? What sort of a hero was the man who
+ could be ordered about by a woman and could not call his soul his own?
+ Then they began to overhaul his record. Was he really the hero of San
+ Diego? Was it not the mistakes of Gomaldo which caused his defeat? Was
+ it not true that the boasted subjugation of the Moritos was brought
+ about by the superstitious fear of the savages inspired by the figures
+ tattooed on the captain's body? And the capture of Gomaldo, was it
+ anything but a green-goods game on a large scale? What, too, was the
+ burning of the great White Temple but an act of vandalism? And as for
+ the friendship and praise of the Emperor, who was the Emperor, anyway,
+ but an effete product of an exhausted civilization? Then had not
+ Captain Jinks opposed the promotion of men from the ranks? What sort of
+ a democrat was this? Sam felt these thrusts keenly. He had had no idea
+ of the fickleness of the people, and it was hard to believe that in a
+ single day they had ceased to adore him and begun to revile him; and
+ yet such was the case. Marian was also overcome with mortification, and
+ she heaped reproaches upon him for their forlorn condition. Cleary
+ proved himself to be a stanch friend.
+
+ "It's too bad, old man," he said. "It'll blow over, but you'll have to
+ withdraw a while for repairs. The bottom has dropped out of your boom,
+ and of course you can't be a candidate for President. Let's go quietly
+ home. I'll go along with you. _The Lyre_ has had to drop you for the
+ time. _Scribblers'_ has sent back the first article I wrote for you,
+ and they say your name has lost its commercial value. I've seen Jonas.
+ He's here to make sure of a friendly candidate, and he says you're out
+ of the question. He's doing well, I tell you. I asked him how it paid
+ to run a war for half a million a day and get a trade in return of a
+ few millions a year? 'It's the people pay for the war and we get the
+ trade,' said he. He'd like to have you President to help them along,
+ but he says it won't be possible. It's a shame. You'd have run so well,
+ if----Your platform of 'Old Gory, the Army and Navy,' would have swept
+ everything before it. But never mind. We'll try it again some day. I
+ suppose your luck couldn't hold out forever."
+
+ "Thanks, my dear Cleary," said Sam, grasping his hand. "You've been a
+ true friend. I don't think it makes much difference. I am a sick man,
+ and I must go home as soon as I can."
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XVI
+
+ The End
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+
+ Sam was indeed a sick man, and the journey to the East proved to be a
+ severe strain upon him. Cleary saw that it would be unwise to let him
+ travel alone with his wife, and accordingly he accompanied him to
+ Slowburgh, which was on the way to Homeville. They arrived in the
+ afternoon, and Sam could hardly walk to the carriage which awaited him.
+ He was put to bed as soon as he reached his uncle's house, and on the
+ advice of his uncle's doctor they sent at once to the county town for a
+ trained nurse to take charge of him, for it was out of the question for
+ him to travel farther. There was no train which Cleary could
+ conveniently take that evening to the metropolis, and he accepted the
+ urgent invitation of Congressman Jinks to spend the night. It so
+ happened that it was a gala day for Slowburgh. Four of her soldier sons
+ had returned a few days before from Porsslania and the Cubapines, and
+ this day had been set aside for a great celebration and a mass-meeting
+ at the Methodist church to welcome them. The procession was to take
+ place early in the evening, and after supper Cleary went out alone to
+ watch the proceedings, leaving his friend to the care of his relatives.
+ He took his place on the curbstone of the principal street and was soon
+ conversing with his neighbors on each side, one of whom was our old
+ friend, Mr. Reddy, and the other the young insurance agent whose
+ acquaintance Sam had made at the hotel.
+
+ "It's going to be a great show," said the former. "I wish I was spry
+ enough to parade too. It's going to be splendid, but it won't come up
+ to the time we had when I came back from the war. They've kept them
+ four boys drunk three days for nothing, but we was drunk a month."
+
+ "They've sobered them down for this evening, I believe," said the young
+ man.
+
+ "They've done their best," said Reddy, "and I think they'll go through
+ with it all right. It's a great time for them, but they'll have their
+ pension days all the rest of their lives to remind them of it, four
+ times a year."
+
+ "Who are going to take part in the procession?" asked Cleary.
+
+ "They're going to have all the military companies and patriotic
+ societies of these parts," answered Reddy, "and then the firemen too of
+ course; but they won't amount to much, for most of them are in the
+ societies, and they'd rather turn out in them."
+
+ "What societies are there?" said Cleary.
+
+ "Oh, there's the Grandsons of the Revolution and the Genuine Grandsons
+ of the Revolution, and the Daughters of Revolutionary Camp-Followers
+ and the Genuine Daughters, and then the Male Descendants of Second
+ Cousins of Heroes, and the Genuine Male Descendants, and the
+ Connections by Marriage of Colonial Tax-Collectors, and then the
+ Genuine Connections, and a lot of others I can't remember."
+
+ "The names seem to go in pairs," said Cleary.
+
+ "Well, you see, they always have a fight about something in these
+ military societies, and then they split, and the party that splits away
+ always takes the same name and puts 'Genuine' in front of it. That's
+ the way it is."
+
+ "I suppose these societies do a lot of good, don't they?" asked Cleary.
+ "These splits and quarrels remind me of the army. They must spread the
+ military spirit among the people."
+
+ "Yes, they do," said the young man. "It's what they call _esprit de
+ corps_. If fighting is military, they fight and no mistake, and the
+ women fight more than the men. I don't know how many lawsuits they've
+ had. Half of them won't speak to the other half. But they're all united
+ on one thing, I can tell you, and that is in wanting to put down the
+ Cubapinos."
+
+ "That they are," cried Reddy. "That's why they call 'em 'Patriotic
+ Societies.' It was our ancestors as fought for freedom that they made
+ the societies for. Our ancestors were patriotic and fought for freedom
+ oncet, and now we're going to be patriotic and stick by the government
+ just like they did."
+
+ "Yes, they fought for freedom, that's true. And what are the Cubapinos
+ fighting for?" asked the young man.
+
+ "Oh, shucks!" cried Reddy. "I ain't a-going to argher with you. What
+ were we talking about? Oh, yes. We were saying that them societies
+ fight together. They do fight a good deal, that's a fact, and there's
+ no end of trouble in our militia battalion too. They all want to be
+ captain, and they don't get on somehow as well as the fire companies.
+ But still it's a fine thing to see all this military spirit. I didn't
+ see a uniform for years, and now you can't hire a man to dig a ditch
+ who hasn't got a stripe on one leg of his trousers at any rate. Girls
+ like soldiers, I tell you, and they like pensions too. I've just got
+ married myself. My wife is seventeen. Now I've drawed my pension for
+ nearly forty years, and she'll draw it for sixty more if she has any
+ luck; that'll make over a hundred. That's something like. Why, if one
+ of these fellows is twenty now and marries a girl of seventeen when
+ he's ninety, and she lives till she's ninety, they can keep drawing
+ money for a hundred and fifty years, and no mistake. It's better than a
+ savings bank. Here they come!"
+
+ The procession had formed round the corner at the other end of the main
+ street, and now the band began to play, and the column could be seen
+ advancing. First the band passed with an escort of small boys running
+ along in the gutter on either side. Then came two carriages containing
+ the heroes, two in each. They held themselves stiffly and took off
+ their hats, and no one would have supposed that they had drunk too much
+ if the fact had not been universally understood by the public. Behind
+ them came a line of other carriages in which were seated the magnates
+ of the town, including the office-holders and the prominent business
+ men. They all had that self-important air which is inseparable from
+ such shows and which denotes that the individual is feeling either like
+ a great man or a fool. Then came the militia battalion, a rather
+ shamefaced lot of young men who seemed to be painfully aware that they
+ were not at all real heroes like the soldiers in the carriages, but
+ merely make-believe imitations. The patriotic societies followed,
+ genuine and non-genuine, resplendent in "insignia," sashes, and badges.
+
+ "There's my wife, she's a G.C.M.C.T.C.," said Reddy proudly, pointing
+ out a very plain young woman with gold spectacles. "And here come the
+ Genuine Ancestors of Future Veterans. See that old woman there on the
+ other side? She made all the fuss. You see when anybody wants to get
+ into a society and finds they can't get in they go off and start
+ another. And some people that hadn't any tax collectors or connections
+ or anything, they just got up the 'Ancestors of Future Veterans,' and
+ everybody in town wanted to get into that. And old Miss Blunt there,
+ she wanted to come in too, and she's over seventy, and they said she
+ couldn't be an ancestor nohow, and she said she could and she would,
+ and they voted forty-one to forty against her, and the forty went off
+ and founded the Genuine Ancestors, and they're twice as big as the
+ others now. Hear 'em applaud?"
+
+ The old lady walked along with a martial tread, and was loudly cheered
+ as she passed.
+
+ "Now we'd better get into the church if we want seats," said the young
+ man, and Cleary followed him, leaving the ancient warrior behind. The
+ church was very crowded and very hot, and Cleary had to sit on a step
+ of the platform, but it was an exhibition of patriotism worth
+ beholding. The band played with great gusto, and the whole audience was
+ at the highest pitch of excitement. The chairman made an address, and
+ Josh Thatcher responded in a few words for himself and his three
+ companions. Then flowers were presented to them, and a little girl
+ recited the "Charge of the Light Brigade," but the main feature of the
+ program was the oration of Dr. Taylor, the pastor of the church. He was
+ famed as an orator not only in his denomination and in the county but
+ in the National Order of Total Abstinence, of which he was a leading
+ light. In his address he welcomed the four heroes back to their hearths
+ and firesides. He thanked them for having conquered so many lands and
+ spread the blessings of civilization and Christianity to the ends of
+ the earth.
+
+ "We have been told, my friends, by wicked and unpatriotic scoffers,
+ that these wars have stirred up the passions of our people, that there
+ are more lynchings and deeds of violence than ever before, and that
+ negro soldiers returning from the war have shot down citizens from
+ car-windows. I have even been told that its effect is to be seen in the
+ attempts of worthy citizens, including a distinguished judge, to have
+ the whipping-post reestablished in our midst. I can only say for myself
+ that such traitors and traducers should be the first victims of the
+ whipping-post. (Cheers.) So far from crime having increased since the
+ departure of these young heroes, I can testify that there has been a
+ marked decrease in our community. Since they left, not a single barn
+ has been burned, not a chicken stolen. My friend, Mrs. Crane, informs
+ me that she keeps more chickens than ever before, and that she has not
+ missed one in over a year. I am also told that during the absence of
+ these young men the amount of liquor drunk in our town has sensibly
+ diminished. The war then has been a blessing to us and to our nation."
+
+ During these remarks Josh Thatcher, who was sitting in the front row,
+ gave sundry digs in the ribs to his cousin Tom, and they both laughed
+ aloud.
+
+ "We welcome our heroes back," continued the orator. "We open our arms
+ to them. All that we have is theirs. We applaud their manly courage and
+ Christian self-sacrifice. We shall never, never forget their services,
+ and we shall recite their noble deeds to our children and to our
+ children's children."
+
+ The meeting broke up with three cheers and a tiger for each of the four
+ heroes. For an hour later the crowds stood in the street talking over
+ the great events of the day, each of the young veterans forming the
+ center of an admiring group, Tom Thatcher being surrounded by a bevy of
+ pretty girls who seemed to find nothing objectionable in his pimpled
+ face and hoarse voice. Cleary stood for a long time watching them and
+ talking with the insurance man.
+
+ "It's their night," said the latter, "but it won't last long. We know
+ them too well. When the barns begin to burn again, folks'll all know
+ what it means. I wish they'd keep a war going a long way off forever
+ for these fellows. It would be a good riddance. And that's all talk of
+ old Taylor's anyway. He won't take them to his heart, not by a great
+ deal. I heard Dave Black ask him for a job to-day, and he wants a man
+ too, and he said, 'What--an ex-soldier? Not much!' The words were out
+ of his mouth before he knew what he'd said. He's a slick one."
+
+ When Cleary returned to Mr. Jinks' house, he found Sam much worse, and
+ the gravest fears were entertained as to his recovery. In the morning
+ he was a little easier, and Cleary was able to have a little talk with
+ him before he left. Sam had been told by the doctor that his condition
+ was serious, and he had no desire to get well.
+
+ "You must brace up, old man," said Cleary cheerily. "I'll come back in
+ a few days and we'll lay out our plans for the future. You're the
+ finest soldier that ever lived, and I haven't done with you yet."
+
+ "Don't say that, don't say that!" cried Sam. "I'm no soldier at all. I
+ wanted to be a perfect soldier, and I can't. It's that that's breaking
+ my heart. I don't mind the nomination for President nor anything else
+ in comparison. My poor wife! Why did I let her marry a coward like me?
+ I can't tell you now, but if I'm alive when you come here again I'll
+ tell you all."
+
+ "Nonsense, old man," said Cleary. "You've got the fever on you again.
+ It's in your blood. When it gets out, you'll be all right."
+
+ It was with tears in his eyes that Cleary bade his friend good-by, for
+ he could see that he was a very sick man. It was impossible, however,
+ for him to remain longer, and as Sam's wife and cousin were there to
+ nurse him, and his father and mother had been telegraphed for, he felt
+ that there was no necessity for him to remain.
+
+ After the lapse of three weeks Cleary received the sad news that Sam
+ had shown unmistakable signs of insanity and had been removed to an
+ insane asylum. His father wrote that while his insanity was of a mild
+ form, the doctors thought it best for him to be placed in an
+ institution where he could receive the most scientific treatment. Six
+ months later Cleary, who was now one of the editors of the _Lyre_,
+ went on a sad pilgrimage to see his friend. The asylum was several
+ hours away from the metropolis beyond East Point, and was none other
+ than the great building which they had described to the chief of the
+ Moritos. Cleary took a carriage at the station and drove to his
+ destination, and at last arrived at the huge edifice in the midst of
+ its wide domain. He went into the reception-room and explained his
+ errand. After a while a young doctor came to him, and told him that he
+ could have an interview with Captain Jinks at once, and offered to act
+ as his guide. It was a long walk through corridors and passages and up
+ winding stairs to Sam's apartment, and Cleary questioned the doctor as
+ they went.
+
+ "Captain Jinks is a dear fellow," said the doctor in response to his
+ inquiries. "We are all fond of him. At first he was a little
+ intractable and denied our right to direct him, but now that we've got
+ it all down on a military basis, he will do anything we tell him. I
+ believe he would walk out of the window if I ordered him too. But I
+ have to put on a military coat to make him obey. We keep one on
+ purpose. As soon as he sees it on anybody he's as obedient as a child.
+ He's such a perfect gentleman, too. It's a very sad case. Here's his
+ room."
+
+ The doctor knocked.
+
+ "Who goes there?" cried a husky voice, which Cleary hardly recognized
+ as Sam's.
+
+ "A friend," answered the doctor.
+
+ "Advance, friend, and give the countersign," said the same voice.
+
+ "Old Gory!" cried the doctor, with most unmilitary emphasis, and he
+ opened the door and they entered.
+
+ Cleary saw what seemed to be the shadow of Sam, pale, haggard, and
+ emaciated, sitting in a shabby undress uniform before a large deal
+ table. Upon the table was a most elaborate arrangement of books and
+ blocks of wood, apparently representing fortifications, which were
+ manned by a dilapidated set of lead soldiers--the earliest treasures of
+ Sam's boyhood, which had been sent to him from home at his request.
+ Sam did not lift his eyes from the table, and moved the men about with
+ his hand as if he were playing a game of chess.
+
+ "Here is a friend of yours to see you, Captain," said the doctor.
+
+ Sam slowly raised his head and looked at Cleary for some time without
+ recognizing him. Gradually a faint smile made its appearance.
+
+ "I know you," he said in the same strained voice. "I know you.
+ You're----"
+
+ "Cleary," said Cleary.
+
+ "Cleary? Cleary? Let me see. Why, to be sure, you're Cleary." And he
+ rose from his chair unsteadily and took the hand that Cleary offered
+ him.
+
+ "How are you, old man? I'm so glad to see you again," said Cleary.
+
+ "And so am I," said Sam, who now seemed to be almost his old self
+ again. "Sit down."
+
+ Cleary drew up a chair to the table, while the doctor retired and shut
+ the door.
+
+ "How are you getting on?" said Cleary. "You're going to get well soon,
+ aren't you?"
+
+ "I am well now," said Sam. "I was awfully ill, I know that, but it all
+ came from my mind. I think I told you that. My heart was breaking
+ because I couldn't be a perfect soldier. I had to face the question and
+ grapple with it. It was an awful experience; I can't bear to speak of
+ it or even think of it. But I won. I'm a perfect soldier now! I can do
+ anything with my men here, and I will obey any order I receive, I don't
+ care what it is."
+
+ As he spoke of his experience a pained expression came over his face,
+ but he looked proud and almost happy when he announced the result of
+ the conflict.
+
+ "They say I'm a lunatic, I know they do," he continued, looking round
+ to see that no one else was present, and lowering his voice to a
+ whisper. "They say I'm a lunatic, but I'm not. When they say I'm a
+ lunatic they mean I'm a perfect soldier--a complete soldier. And they
+ call those fine fellows lead soldiers! Lunatics and lead soldiers
+ indeed! Well, suppose we are! I tell you an army of lead soldiers with
+ a lunatic at the head would be the best army in the world. We do what
+ we're told, and we're not afraid of anything."
+
+ Sam stopped talking at this juncture and went on for some time in
+ silence maneuvering his troops. Finally he picked up the colonel with
+ the white plume, and a ray of light from the afternoon sun fell upon
+ it, and he held it before him, gazing upon it entranced. The door
+ opened, and the doctor entered.
+
+ "I fear you must go now, Mr. Cleary. He can't stand much excitement.
+ He's quiet now. Just come out with me without saying anything," and
+ Cleary followed him out of the room, while Sam sat motionless with his
+ eyes fixed on his talisman.
+
+ "He sits like that for hours," said the doctor. "It's a kind of
+ hypnotism, I think, which we don't quite understand yet. I am writing
+ up the case for _The Medical Gazette_. It's a peculiar kind of
+ insanity, this preoccupation with uniforms and soldiers, and the
+ readiness to do anything a man in regimentals tells him to."
+
+ "It's rather more common, perhaps, out of asylums than in them,"
+ muttered Cleary, but the doctor did not hear him. "Do you think he
+ will ever recover, doctor?" he continued.
+
+ The doctor shook his head ominously.
+
+ "And will he live to old age in this condition?"
+
+ "He might, if there were nothing else the matter with him, but there
+ is, and perhaps it's a fortunate thing. He's got a new disease called
+ filariasis, a sort of low fever that he picked up in the Cubapines or
+ Porsslania. There's a good deal of it among the soldiers who have come
+ back. We have a lot of lunatics from the army here and several of them
+ have this new fever too. It wouldn't kill him alone, either, but the
+ two things together will surely carry him off. He will hardly live
+ another half-year."
+
+ "I suppose his family is looking out for him?" said Cleary.
+
+ "His mother visits him pretty regularly, and his father comes
+ sometimes," said the doctor, "but I think his wife has only been here
+ twice. And she's living at East Point, too, only an hour or two away.
+ She's a born flirt, and I think she's tired of him. I'm told that
+ one of this year's graduates there, a fellow named Saunders, is paying
+ attention to her, and when the poor captain dies, I doubt if she
+ remains long a widow."
+
+ [Illustration: HARMLESS
+ "HE SITS LIKE THAT FOR HOURS"]
+
+ "Then I suppose there is nothing I can do for the dear old chap?" asked
+ Cleary, with tears in his eyes, as he took his leave of the doctor at
+ the door of the building.
+
+ "Nothing at all, my dear sir. He has everything he wants, and in fact
+ he wants nothing but his lead soldiers. He won't even let us give him a
+ new set of them. And he has all the liberty he wants on the grounds
+ here, and he can walk or even take a drive if he wishes to, for he is
+ perfectly harmless."
+
+ "Perfectly harmless!" repeated Cleary to himself, as he got into his
+ carriage. "What an idea! A perfectly harmless soldier!"
+
+
+ THE END
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Transcriber's Notes
+ For consistency the following changes have been made.
+
+ Page 3 firearms changed to fire-arms
+ 10 field marshal changed to field-marshal
+ 134 got here? changed to got here?"
+ 168 out on at once on changed to out at once on
+ 202 exclamed changed to exclaimed
+ 202 out of it? changed to out of it.
+ 219 you along.' changed to you along."
+ 237 "'Im a changed to 'I'm a
+ 273 exclamed changed to exclaimed
+ 295 bomb-shells changed to bombshells
+ 349 "'He stuck changed to 'He stuck
+ 357 "and I!" And I!" changed to "And I!" "And I!"
+ 382 denommination changed to denomination
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Captain Jinks, Hero, by Ernest Crosby
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