The Drummer Boy - LightNovelsOnl.com
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"So you see, my young friend," said Mr. Egglestone, "you have, for your own comfort, and for the benefit of your good parents, a snug little fortune, which you will come into possession of in due time. As for the miniature, I may as well hand it to you now. I found it after the old man's death. He always wore it on his heart."
He took it from its little soiled buckskin sheath, and gave it to Mrs.
Manly. She turned pale as she looked at it. Frank was eager to see it, and, almost reluctantly, she placed it in his hands. It might almost have pa.s.sed for a portrait of himself, only it was that of a girl; and he knew at once that it was his mother, as she had looked at his age.
While he was gazing at the singular memento of the old man's romantic and undying attachment, Mrs. Manly looked away, with the air of one resolutely turning her mind from one painful subject to another.
"I wish to ask you, Mr. Egglestone, what disposition has been made of--I had another son, you know."
He understood her.
"I trust," said he, "that what Captain Edney and myself thought proper to do will meet your approval. After the battle, the wife of Captain Manly sent a request to have his body forwarded to her by a flag of truce. We consulted Frank, who told us to do as we pleased about it. Accordingly, we obtained permission to grant her request, and the body of her husband was sent to her."
There was for a moment a look, as of one who felt bitter wrong, on Mrs.
Manly's face; but it pa.s.sed.
"You did well, Mr. Egglestone. To her who had got the soul belonged the body also. May peace go with it to her desolated home!"
"Mother!" whispered Frank, gazing still at the miniature, "tell me! am I right? do I know now why it was the dear old man thought so much of me?"
"If you have not guessed, my child. I will tell you. Years ago, when I was the little girl you see there, he was good enough to think _I_ was good enough to marry him. That is all."
Frank said no more, but laid the picture on his heart,--for it was his, and the dearest part of the dear old man's legacy.
x.x.xV.
CONCLUSION.
After a long delay Captain Edney came; apologizing for not appearing to welcome his drummer boy's mother and his old schoolmistress before. His excuse was valid: one of his men, S. Tucket by name, had got into a sc.r.a.pe by running off with one of Uncle Sam's carts, and he had been to help him out of it.
He found a new light s.h.i.+ning in the hospital--the light of woman's influence; the light of life to Frank and his friend At.w.a.ter, nor to them only, but to all upon whom it shone.
Mrs. Manly remained in the hospital until her son was able to travel, when leave of absence was granted him, and all his friends crowded to bid him farewell, as he departed in the boat with his mother for the north--for home!
Of his journey, of his happy arrival, the greetings from father, sister, little brother, friends--of all this I would gladly write a chapter or two; but he is no longer the Drummer Boy now, and so our business with him is over. And so he left the service? Not he.
"I'm to be a Soldier Boy now!" he declared to all those who came to shake him by the hand and hear his story from his own lips.
His wound was soon healed, and he hastened to return to his regiment; for he was eager to be learning everything belonging to the profession of a soldier. It was not long, however, before he came north again--this time on surprising business. Captain Edney, who had won the rank of Colonel at the battle of Newbern, had been sent home to raise a regiment; and he had been permitted to choose from his own company such persons as he thought best fitted to a.s.sist him, and hold commissions under him.
He chose Gray, Seth Tucket, and Frank. Another of our friends afterwards joined the regiment, with the rank of First Lieutenant; having quite recovered from his wound, under the tender nursing of his wife.
With his friends Edney, Gray, Tucket, and At.w.a.ter, Frank was as happy as ever a young officer in a new service could be. He began as second lieutenant; but----
But here our story must end; for to relate how he has fought his way up, step by step, to a rank which was never more fairly earned, would require a separate volume,--materials for which we may possibly find some day in his own letters to his mother, and in those of Colonel Edney to his sister Helen.
Some extracts from a letter just received from the hero of these pages may perhaps interest the reader.
"I cannot tell you, sir, how much astonished I was on opening the package you sent me. I don't think the mysterious bundle that contained the watch dear old 'Mr. St. John' gave me surprised me half as much. I had never seen any _proof-sheets_ before, and hardly knew what to make of them at first. Then you should have heard me scream at Gray and At.w.a.ter. 'Boys,' says I, 'here's a story founded on our adventures!' I sat up all that night reading it, and I must confess I had to blush a good many times before I got through. I see you have not called any of us by our real names; but I soon found out who 'Abe,' and 'Seth,' and 'Jack Winch,' and all the other characters are meant for. I have read ever so many pages to 'Seth'
himself, and he has laughed as heartily as any of us over his own oddities. We all wonder how you could have written the story, giving all the circ.u.mstances, and even the conversations that took place, so correctly; but I remember, when I was at your house, you kept me talking, and wrote down nearly every thing I said; besides which, I find there was a good deal more in my journal and letters than I supposed, when I consented to let you have them and make what use of them you pleased. Little did I think then, that ever such a book as the 'Drummer Boy' could be made out of them.
"You ask me to point out any important errors I may notice, in order that you may correct them before the book is published. Well, the night the row was in camp, when the 'Blues' cut down the captain's tent, the company was ordered out, and the roll called, and three other fellows put under guard, before Abe and I were let off. I might mention two or three similar mistakes, but I consider them too trifling to speak of. There are, besides, two or three omissions, which struck me in reading the wind-up of the story. 'Jack Winch'
went home, and died of a fever within a month. If it isn't too late, I wish you would put that in; for I think it shows that those who think most of saving their lives are sometimes the first to lose them.
"You might add, too, that 'Mr. Egglestone' is now the chaplain of our regiment. We all love him, and he is doing a great deal of good here.
I have put the 'Drummer Boy' into his hands, and I just saw him laughing over it. If every body reads it with the interest we do here in camp, it will be a great success.
"There is another thing--but this you need not put into the book.
With the money my dear old friend and master left me, I have bought the house our folks live in, so that, whatever happens to me, they will never be without a home....
"In conclusion, let me say that, while you have told some things of me I would rather every body should forget, you have, on the whole, given me a much better character than I deserve.
"We are already beginning to call each other by the names you have given us, and I take great pleasure in subscribing myself,
"Yours, truly,
"FRANK MANLY."
Harry Castlemon Books
The popularity enjoyed by Harry Castlemon as a writer of interesting books for boys is second to none. His works are celebrated everywhere and in great demand. We publish a few of the best.
BOY TRAPPERS FRANK AT DON CARLOS RANCHO FRANK BEFORE VICKSBURG FRANK IN THE WOODS FRANK ON A GUNBOAT FRANK ON THE PRAIRIE FRANK, THE YOUNG NATURALIST