ONE:
TWO:"Then I'd ruther be on top, where I kin see something. Kin they shoot through the sides o' the tender, and let all the water out and stop the engine?""Well, make your way back to the cars and git in and lay down."
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ONE:CHAPTER XVII. GATHERING UP THE BOYS AFTER THE BATTLE.
TWO:
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ONE:
TWO:"Who are you, boys?" said the newcomer, after gravely returning the salute.
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TWO:Norma kept her eyes on her glass. "Nothing," she said, in a new, strained voice.
FORE:"How many men have you got over there in the works."
FORE:As the light broadened, and revealed the familiar hills and woods, unpeopled by masses of enemies, the shivery "2 o'clock-in-the-morning-feeling" vanished from the boys' hearts, and was succeeded by eagerness to see the redoubtable rebels, of whom so much had been said.With a shiver of apprehension, with a nervous memory of the bitter hours just past, with the sight before their eyes of the scarcely-cold dead, the remainder of the company fell in with sadly-shrunken ranks.
FORE:"There's no man on my right for me to look toward. What 'm I to do?" complained Gid Mackall.
FORE:
FORE:He proceeded on down the line until he came in front of Jim Humphreys and Sandy Baker, when Shorty's gun clicked again.
FORE:
FORE:"You're too all-fired smart with your tongue, Scruggs. If you were only half as smart learnin' your business"
FORE:"Goodness," murmured Gid Mackall, as he set down the carpet-sack which he would persist in carrying, "are they always in a hurry? I s'posed that when soldiers wuzzent marchin' or fightin' they lay around camp and played cards and stole chickens, and wrote letters home, but everybody 'round here seems on the dead rush."
TWO:"If we disobey the masters the machines and the trees will not obey us, and there will be no more work and no small ones. For this is the order of the world: some obeying and some to be obeyed. It is visible and plain. When the chain is broken all the chain breaks." out for him, and fetch him up in the way he shood go, if I
TWO:"What'n the world are they stoppin' here for?" groaned Si. "Some woman's got a dozen aigs or a pound o' butter that she wants to send to town. I s'pose we'll stop here until she finishes churnin', or gits another aig to make up a dozen. I never did see sich putterin' along."
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TWO:"I have heard o' the place. Lived there long?"
TWO:"To tell you the truth," answered Shorty, "I was after them to enlist with us. We lost five men in the shuffle at Nashville, and I was lookin' out for some to take their places.
"Si," said Shorty, "we thought old Rosecrans had heaped up the measure when we started out from Nashville for Stone River. But that was only the beginning for the gang he got together for the Tullyhomy campaign, and 'taint more than onct to what old Sherman's goin' to begin business with. I like it. I like to see any man start into a game with a full hand and a big stack o' chips.""Good idee. What is it?" responded Si with alacrity."Wasn't expecting nothing else," said Albert Grimes. "I've been watchin' the Sargint and Corpril, and they're acting just as if it was every day bizniss. I'm not going to expect anything till I see them lookin' serious."SUBJECT: The daily paper