Captain Jinks, Hero | Page 4

Ernest Cros
"hero" from his pocket (he
always carried it about with him) and compared the two warriors. The
"hero" was still unique, incomparable, but Sam realized that he was an
ideal which might be lived up to, not an impossible dream, not the
denizen of an inaccessible heaven. From that day he bent his little
energies to the task of removing his family to Homeville.
It is not so much strength as perseverance which moves the world.
Colonel Jinks had laid up a competence and had always intended to
retire, when he could afford it, to the market town. Among other things,
the school facilities would be much better in town than in the country.
Mrs. Jinks in a moment of folly took the side of the boy, and, whatever
may have been the controlling and predominating cause, the fact is that,
when Sam had attained the age of twelve, the Colonel sold the farm and
bought one of the best houses in Homeville. Sam at once became a
member of the John Wesley Brigade and showed an aptitude for
soldiering truly amazing. Before he was fourteen he was captain, and
wore, himself, the coveted white feather, and his military duties became
the absorbing interest of his life. He thought and spoke of nothing else,
and he was universally known in the town as "Captain Jinks," which
was often abbreviated to "Cap." No one ever passed boyhood and youth
in such congenial surroundings and with such complete satisfaction as
"Cap" Jinks of the John Wesley Boys' Brigade.
CHAPTER II
East Point

[Illustration]
But our relation to our environments will change, however much
pleased we may be with them, and "Cap" Jinks found himself gradually
growing too old for his brigade. The younger boys and their parents
began to complain that he was unreasonably standing in the way of
their promotion, and a fiery mustache gave signs to the world that he
was now something more than a boy. Still he could not bring himself to
relinquish the uniform and the white plume. A life without military
trimmings was not to be thought of, and there was no militia at
Homeville. Consequently he remained in the Boys' Brigade as long as
he could. When at last he saw that he must resign--he was now
two-and-twenty--he felt that there was only one course open to him,
and that was to join the army; and he broached this plan to his parents.
His mother did not like the idea of giving up her only son to such a
profession, but Colonel Jinks took kindly to the suggestion. It would
bring a little real militarism into the family and give a kind of ex post
facto justification to his ancient title. "Sam, my boy," said he, "you're a
chip of the old block. You'll keep up the family tradition and be a
colonel like me. I will write to your Uncle George about it to-morrow.
He'll get you an appointment to East Point without any trouble. Sam,
I'm proud of you."
Uncle George Jinks, the only brother of the Colonel, was a member of
Congress from a distant district, who had a good deal of influence with
the Administration. The Colonel wrote to him asking for the cadetship
and rehearsing at length the young captain's unusual qualifications and
his military enthusiasm. A week later he received the answer. His
brother informed him that the request could not have come at a more
opportune moment, as he had a vacancy to fill and had been on the
point of calling a public examination of young men in his district for
the purpose of selecting a candidate; but in view of the evident fitness
of his nephew, he would alter his plans and offer him the place without
further ceremony. He wished only that Sam would do credit to the
name of Jinks.
It was on a beautiful day in June that "Cap" Jinks bade farewell to

Homeville. The family came out in front of the house, keeping back
their tears as best they could at this the first parting; but Sam, tho he
loved them well, had no room in his heart for regret. There was a vision
of glory beckoning him on which obliterated all other feelings. The
Boys' Brigade was drawn up at the side of the road and presented arms
as he drove by, and he saw in this the promise of greater things. As he
sat on the back seat of the wagon by himself behind the driver, he took
from his pocket the old original "hero," the lead officer of his boyhood,
and gazed at it smiling. "Now I am to be a real hero," he thought, "and
all the world will repeat the name of Sam Jinks and read about his
exploits."
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