[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 XXXIII 1/21
CHAPTER XXXIII. LIEUTENANT SOMERS AND OTHERS. Tom Somers had been absent from home nearly a year; and much as his heart was in the work of putting down the rebellion, he was delighted with the thought of visiting, even for a brief period, the loved ones who thought of and prayed for him in the little cottage in Pinchbrook.
I am not quite sure that the well-merited promotion he had just received did not have some influence upon him, for it would not have been unnatural for a young man of eighteen, who had won his shoulder-straps by hard fighting on a bloody field, to feel some pride in the laurels he had earned.
Not that Tom was proud or vain; but he was moved by a lofty and noble ambition.
It is quite likely he wondered what the people of Pinchbrook would say when he appeared there with the straps upon his shoulders. Of course he thought what his father would say, what his mother would say, and he could see the wrinkled face of gran'ther Greene expand into a genial smile of commendation.
It is quite possible that he had even more interest in his reception at No -- -- Rutland Street, when he should present himself to the author and finisher of those marvellous socks, which had wielded such an immense influence upon their wearer in camp and on the field.
<<Back Index Next>> D-Link book Top TWC mobile books
|