[The Soldier Boy; or, Tom Somers in the Army by Oliver Optic]@TWC D-Link bookThe Soldier Boy; or, Tom Somers in the Army CHAPTER XXV 1/11
CHAPTER XXV. IN THE HOSPITAL. The night was very dark, so that the rebels in the boat could not distinguish the uniform of those who had applied for a passage on the schooner.
Perhaps Tom Somers's experience in the Blue Ridge and on the Shenandoah had improved his strategic ability, so that his words and his manner seemed plausible.
But as strategy and cunning always owe their success to the comparative stupidity of the victims, Tom and his companions gained the half-deck of the schooner more by the palpable blundering of her crew than through the brilliancy of their own scheme. Tom did not stop, in the midst of the exciting enterprise, to determine the particular reason of his success, as we, his humble biographer, have done.
He was on the enemy's ground, and confronting the enemy's forces, and logic was as much out of place as rebellion in a free republican country.
He was closely followed by Hapgood, and at a later period by Fred Pemberton.
<<Back Index Next>> D-Link book Top TWC mobile books
|