The Khaki Boys over the Top Doing and Daring for Uncle Sam
THE KHAKI BOYS OVER THE TOP CONTENTS CHAPTER PAGE I BLOWN BACK 1 II TO THE RESCUE 11 III SENT TO THE REAR 19 IV A DOUBLE LOSS 28 V WHAT'S TO BE DONE 38 VI GOOD NEWS 44 VII UNDER FIERCE FIRE 52 VIII THE OLD MILL 61
his early acquaintance with sound English literature did do him a
great deal of good: it opened and expanded his mind; it trained his
intelligence; it stored his brain with images and ideas which were
ever after to him a source of unmitigated delight and unalloyed
pleasure. He read whenever he had nothing else to do. He read
Milton with especial delight; and he also read the verses that his
fellow-countryman, Rob Burns, the Ayrshire ploughman, was then just
beginning to speak straight to the heart of every aspiring Scotch
peasant lad. With these things Tam Telford filled the upper
stories of his brain quite as much as with the trade details of his
own particular useful handicraft; and the result soon showed that
therein Tam Telford had not acted uncannily or unwisely.
Nor did he read only; he wrote too--verses, not very good, nor yet
very bad, but well expressed, in fairly well chosen language, and
with due regard to the nice laws of metre and of grammar, which is
in itself a great point. Writing verse is an occupation at which
only very few even among men of literary education ever really
succeed; and nine-tenths of published verse is mere mediocre
twaddle, quite unworthy of being put into the dignity of print.
Yet Telford did well for all that in trying his hand, with but poor
result, at this most difficult and dangerous of all the arts. His
rhymes were worth nothing as rhymes; but they were worth a great
deal as discipline and training: they helped to form the man, and
that in itself is always something. Most men who have in them the
power to do any great thing pass in early life through a verse-
THE KHAKI BOYS OVER THE TOP CONTENTS CHAPTER PAGE I BLOWN BACK 1 II TO THE RESCUE 11 III SENT TO THE REAR 19 IV A DOUBLE LOSS 28 V WHAT'S TO BE DONE 38 VI GOOD NEWS 44 VII UNDER FIERCE FIRE 52 VIII THE OLD MILL 61