The Drummer Boy | Page 2

John Trowbridge
saw Colonel Crockett taking
aim at him," added Frank: "says the coon, 'Don't shoot! If it's you,
colonel, I'll come down!' And I tell ye," cried the boy, enthusiastically,
"there's something besides a joke in it. Jeff'll be glad to come down out
of his tree, before we hang him on it."

"But if you go to war, Frank," exclaimed the little invalid, from her
pillow, "you will be shot."
"I expect to be shot at a few times," he replied; "but every man that's
shot at isn't shot, sissy; and every man that's shot isn't killed; and every
man that's killed isn't dead--if what the Bible says is true."
"O my son," said Mrs. Manly, regarding him with affectionate
earnestness, "do you know what you say? have you considered it well?"
"Yes," said Frank, "I've thought it all over. It hasn't been out of my
thoughts, day or night, this ever so long; though I was determined not
to open my lips about it to any one, till my mind was made up. I know
five or six that have enlisted, and I'm just as well able to serve my
country as any of them. I believe I can go through all the hardships any
of them can. And though Helen laughs at me now for a coward, before
I've been in a fight, she won't laugh at me afterwards." But here the
lad's voice broke, and he dashed a tear from his eye.
"No, no, Frank," said Helen, remorsefully, thinking suddenly of those
whose brothers have gone forth bravely to battle, and never come home
again. And she saw in imagination her own dear, brave, loving brother
carried bleeding from the field, his bright, handsome face deathly pale,
the eyes that now beamed so hopefully and tenderly, closing--perhaps
forever. "Forgive my jokes, Frank; but you are too young to go to war.
We have lost one brother by secession, and we can't afford to lose
another."
She alluded to George, the oldest of the children, who had been several
years in the Carolinas; who had married a wife there, and become a
slave-owner; and who, when the war broke out, forgot his native north,
and the free institutions under which he had been bred, to side with the
south and slavery. This had proved a source of deep grief to his parents;
not because the pecuniary support they had derived from him, up to the
fall of Fort Sumter, was now cut off, greatly to their distress,--for they
were poor,--but because, when he saw the Union flag fall at Charleston,
he had written home that it was a glorious sight; and they knew that the
love of his wife, and the love of his property, had made him a traitor to

his country.
"If I've a brother enlisted on the wrong side," said Frank, "so much the
more reason that I should enlist on the right side. And I am not so
young but that I can be doing something for my country, and something
for you here at home, at the same time. If I volunteer, you will be
allowed state aid, and I mean to send home all my pay, to the last dollar.
I wish you would tell me, father, that I can have your consent."
Mr. Manly sat in his easy-chair, with his legs crossed, his hands
pressed together, and his head sunk upon his breast. For a long time he
had not spoken. He was a feeble man, who had not succeeded well in
the business of life; his great fault being that he always relied too much
upon others, and not enough upon himself. The result was, that his wife
had become more the head of the family than he was, and every
important question of this kind, as Frank well knew, was referred to her
for decision.
"O, I don't know, I don't know, my son," Mr. Manly groaned; and,
uncrossing his legs, he crossed them again in another posture. "I have
said all I can; now you must talk with your mother."
"There, mother," said Frank, who had got the answer he expected, and
now proceeded to make good use of it; "father is willing, you see. All I
want now is for you to say yes. I must go and enlist to-morrow, if I
mean to get into the same company with the other boys; and I'm sure
you'd rather I'd go with the fellows I know, than with strangers. We are
going to befriend each other, and stand by each other to the last."
"Some of them, I am afraid, are not such persons as I would wish to
have you on very intimate terms with, any where, my child," answered
Mrs. Manly; "for there is one danger I should
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