Two Little Confederates
E-text prepared by Juliet Sutherland, Diane Monico, and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net)
BOOKS FOR YOUNG READERS BY THOMAS NELSON PAGE
Tommy Trot's Visit to Santa Claus Santa Claus's Partner A Captured Santa Claus Among the Camps Two Little Confederates The Page Story Book CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS
I'M IN COMMAND, SAID THE GENTLEMAN, SMILING AT HIM OVER THE TOWEL.
Copyright, 1888, by CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS Copyright, 1916, by THOMAS NELSON PAGE Printed in the United States of America
The Two Little Confederates lived at Oakland. It was not a handsome place, as modern ideas go, but down in Old Virginia, where the standard was different from the later one, it passed in old times as one of the best plantations in all that region. The boys thought it the greatest place in the world, of course excepting Richmond, where they had been one year to the fair, and had seen a man pull fire out of his mouth, and do other wonderful things. It was quite secluded. It lay, it is true, right between two of the county roads, the Court-house Road being on one side, and on the other the great Mountain Road, down which the large covered wagons with six horses and jingling bells used to go; but the lodge lay this side of the one, and the big woods, where the boys shot squirrels, and hunted 'possums and coons, and which reached to the edge of Holetown, stretched between the house and the other, so that the big gate-post where the semi-weekly mail was left by the mail-rider each Tuesday and Friday afternoon was a long walk, even by the near cut through the woods. The railroad was ten miles away by the road. There was a nearer way, only about half the distance, by which the negroes used to walk and which during the war, after all the horses were gone, the boys, too, learned to travel; but before that, the road by Trinity Church and Honeyman's Bridge was the only route, and the other was simply a dim bridle-path, and the horseshoe-ford was known to the initiated alone.