[Captain Sam by George Cary Eggleston]@TWC D-Link bookCaptain Sam CHAPTER II 5/15
He had already removed his boots, coat and hat, and thrown them together in a pile, as he had done every night since the march began, partly because he knew that it is always better to sleep with the limbs as free as possible from pressure of any kind, and partly because he suffered a little from an old wound in the foot, received about a year before in the Indian assault upon Fort Sinquefield, and found it more comfortable, after walking all day, to remove his boots. The camp grew quiet only by degrees.
Boys have so many things to talk about that when they are together they are pretty certain to talk a good while before going to sleep, and especially so when they are lying in the open air, under the starlight, near a pile of blazing logs.
They all stretched themselves out on the ground, weary with their day's march, and determined to go at once to sleep, but somehow each one found something that he wanted to say and so it was more than an hour before the camp was quite still.
Then every one slept except Jake Elliott.
He lay quietly by a tree, and seemed to be sleeping soundly enough, but in fact he was not even dozing.
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