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"He is very nearly, but has yet a few hours of grace," replied Mr.
Comstock. "He will be seventeen to-morrow, and I was hoping that you might enlist him to-day. My son's object in going into the Corps is to work for a commission. That is one of the inducements which I understand the Corps offers its enlisted personnel, is it not?"
"You are right, Mr. Comstock; at the present time our officers are taken from graduates of the Naval Academy or from the ranks. There have been times when civilian appointments were allowed, but the law has now been changed."
"In that case then, could you take my boy into your organization? He understands that his advancement depends entirely on his own merit, and he has taken a decided stand as to what he intends to do and has my full consent to try it."
"Does he also understand that the number of officers appointed from the ranks are few, and picked for their exceptionally good records and ability, and that he serves an apprentices.h.i.+p until he is twenty-one years of age?" inquired the Commandant.
"Yes, sir," answered Richard, speaking for the first time.
"Why do you not enter the Naval Academy, young man, and after graduation come into the Corps?" asked the General, looking at d.i.c.k with his stern eyes.
"Well, sir, I failed to get the appointment at the last minute."
"Do you also realize there are many unpleasant things connected with the life of an enlisted man, and are you prepared to meet them?"
"Yes, sir, and I believe I can make good."
"I like your spirit, young man," said the General approvingly; "the motto of the Marine Corps is '_Semper Fidelis_--Always Faithful,' and to be a true marine you must bear that motto in mind at all times and under all conditions, if it is your hope to succeed in the service."
He now turned to d.i.c.k's father:
"Ordinarily, Mr. Comstock, our young men are held at the school for a few days before we complete their enlistment in order that they may get an idea of the life and duties to which they are about to bind themselves when taking the oath of allegiance. In your son's case, I believe he knows what he wants, and he is the kind of young man we wish to get. Were he compelled to wait according to our usual custom he would be past the age limit, consequently I will further your desires and arrange to have him sworn into service immediately, providing he pa.s.ses the surgeon's examination. I will give you an order to the Commanding Officer of the Marine Barracks which will answer your purpose."
Saying this he gave the necessary directions to the aide, who had remained standing near by, and a little later d.i.c.k and his father were on a street car bound for the barracks, where the School for Musics was located. Arriving there they soon found themselves in the presence of the colonel commanding the post, who, on reading the instructions of the Commandant, looked the boy over with an approving eye.
"I reckon you will be about the tallest apprentice we have here," he said, and calling an orderly directed him to escort d.i.c.k to the examining surgeon, and invited Mr. Comstock to sit and await the result.
The Marine Corps is primarily organized for service with the Navy, though this has by no means been its only function in the past, nor likely to be in the future. On many occasions the Corps has acted independently and also with the Army, which is provided for in the statutes. Being attached to the Navy and operating with it at Navy Yards, Naval Stations and on board s.h.i.+p its medical officers are supplied by the Navy, for the Corps maintains no sanitary service of its own.
The Navy surgeon gave the lad a very thorough examination, one even more thorough than usual, and after d.i.c.k had been pa.s.sed and departed he remarked to his a.s.sistant:
"That boy is one of the finest specimens of the American youth I have ever examined. He is so clean limbed and perfectly muscled that it was a joy to look at him."
After this visit, d.i.c.k, with the attendant orderly, returned to the office of the Commanding Officer.
"Well, the surgeon states you are all right," said Colonel Waverly, having glanced at the slip of paper the orderly handed him; "you are quite positive that you wish to undertake the obligation, young man?"
"Quite, sir," was d.i.c.k's laconic response.
"Very well," and the Colonel then called loudly for the Sergeant Major.
"Sergeant Major, this young man is to be enlisted as an apprentice at once. Make out the necessary papers."
Fifteen minutes later, with his right hand held high, his head proudly erect, Richard Comstock took the solemn oath of allegiance to his country, which so few young men seriously consider as they repeat its impressive vows, and with the final words he graduated to man's estate.
CHAPTER V
A DRUMMER IN THE U. S. MARINES
"Rise and s.h.i.+ne! Come on, you kids, shake a leg and get up out of this!"
d.i.c.k Comstock sleepily rubbed his eyes for the fraction of a second and then sprang out of his comfortable bunk as the sergeant's voice bellowed through the room. In the long dormitory thirty-odd boys, their ages ranging from fifteen to d.i.c.k's own, were hurrying their preparations to get into uniform and down on the parade ground in time for reveille roll call. Another day in a marine's life had begun.
Out the doors and down the stairs clattered the noisy, boisterous throng, fastening last b.u.t.tons as they emerged into the light of the midsummer rising sun.
August was half gone and d.i.c.k had now completed over a month and a half in Uncle Sam's _corps d'elite_, for such it was acknowledged to be by well informed military men of both continents. During that time he had not found the days hanging heavily on his hands. Being fortunate in knowing, before he came into the service, how to handle the ebony sticks and blow a bugle, he had escaped a good deal of the monotonous preliminary ground work which the boys in the "school for musics" were required to undergo. It is true that he first had to prove his ability to his drill masters, and having received no regular instruction previously, he made no mention of his accomplishments during his first few days at the school.
With the others he had gone each morning to the bas.e.m.e.nt, where the drumming lessons were given; sat astride the wooden benches with his companions and l.u.s.tily pounded out "Ma-ma, Dad-dy," till the very walls seemed to shake and tremble from the fearful racket.
The old retired drummer who called him up for his first lesson asked d.i.c.k no questions.
"Comstock!" he had called out, and d.i.c.k went modestly forward to receive his instructions from the old martinet, for such he was, and had to be with that mischievously inclined, irresponsible lot of young Americans.
"I want you to start in practising this to-day--yes, that is right--you hold the sticks correctly! Now, make two strokes with the left hand,--slow, like this,--then two with the right. Now watch me," and the old fellow tapped the bench before him demonstrating his meaning.
With each two strokes of the left-hand stick he would say aloud, "Ma-ma," and with the right-hand strokes, "Dad-dy," slowly at first then more quickly, till finally the plank beneath gave forth the wonderful roll of sound never acquired except by long and faithful practise.
"Now you see how it should be done! At first you must only try to do it slowly, for unless you get this down thoroughly at the start you will never be a drummer. Next!" And d.i.c.k was moved along to practise in playing "Mama, Daddy," "Mama, Daddy," for the next hour.
It had been otherwise with the bugle instructor. He saw at once that the boy knew how to "tongue" the mouthpiece, and that his lip was in condition, and after trying him out the first day and finding him able to read notes, d.i.c.k was told to learn the calls with which he was unfamiliar and left to work out his own salvation.
In a little over a month he pa.s.sed the required examination and was regularly appointed a drummer.
The prediction of Colonel Waverly that d.i.c.k would probably be the largest boy in the school proved nearly correct, there being but one other boy, Henry Clay Cabell, a Southerner, who approached him in size.
"Hank" or "Daddy" Cabell, as he was called by the rest of the school until d.i.c.k's entrance, had been the oldest boy there; he was as tall as Richard, but did not have the weight nor strength. From their first meeting d.i.c.k and Henry formed a liking for each other which daily increased and strengthened. Henry confided to d.i.c.k that he hoped to work his way up to a commission, and they agreed to help each other with that end in view. At the same time d.i.c.k was graduated and made a drummer Henry Cabell was appointed a trumpeter, and it was their fondest desire to be detailed for duty at the same station if sent away in the near future, as was very likely to be the case.
On this particular August morning while the two walked back to their squad room after the regular physical drill which followed the reveille roll call, they were discussing this matter.
"I reckon it won't be long before we get our walking papers," said Henry in his deliberate Southern drawl, "now that we are no longer apprentices.
"I'll be glad to leave that crazy bunch, anyway," he continued as they stopped for a moment under the barracks arcade and watched the apprentices racing wildly across the parade ground after being dismissed from their drill. "I don't reckon they ever will learn anything. They are only mischief-making children, and seem to have no sense of responsibility at all. Sometimes I wonder why they take such babies into a crack organization like this. Do you reckon it ever pays in the long run? They try to fuss 'Old Grumpy' the entire time, and never make the least attempt to learn their lessons at school."
"I guess you've still a great deal to learn about the marines," remarked d.i.c.k drily. "In the first place, those boys seldom fool Gunnery Sergeant Miller with their tricks. He has been handling boys for such a long time in the capacity of 'N.C.O.[#] in Charge' that they have to get up pretty early in the morning to put one over on him. He has been through the mill himself, for he is a graduate from this very school.
It's just because they are kids, that's all, and most of them have not had the advantages you and I have enjoyed, Hank, in the way of schooling and home training and a.s.sociations. They get the spirit of the Corps sooner or later, I guess. You see, we were fortunate; we both went through high school, and that is why we were excused from taking the lessons those boys have to labor over. Some of those chaps never got beyond the primary schools till they came here."
[#] Non-commissioned officer.
"Where did you get all your dope, d.i.c.k?" inquired Henry, rather curious to know how his friend found out so many things.
"Well, you see, Hank, I'm in the Marine Corps to learn all I can about it. I want to be familiar with its history in every way, and I've had several talks with Miller and other N.C.O.'s about service things. In this way I get quite a little valuable information not put down in the rules and regulations; and it may come in handy some day."
"Oh yes, I reckon so, and you may be right; but for my part the N.C.O.'s are such an ignorant lot themselves, and more or less vulgar too, that I avoid all of them as much as possible. Until you came along, d.i.c.k, I hardly spoke to anyone in the barracks. It goes against the grain to have too close an intimacy with them."