"It was the private soldier who taught me not to step on the heels of my file closer.
He also taught me how to make a feather bed of two oak rails.
How to grind coffee in a tin cup with the shank of a bayonet.
How to boil roasting ears in the their own husks in the ashes.
How to drink boiling coffee without blistering my throat.
How to conceal my person behind a sapling not half so thick as my body.
How to fill my canteen from a warm pond and let the water cool in the sun on a hot day.
How to march eighteen or twenty miles over rough roads day after day without getting an ache in my feet.
How to make one day's rations last three days without going hungry.
How to get a refreshing drink of water without swallowing a drop.
How to lift a nervous hen from the bosom of her family without any outcry from herself or relatives.
How to fool the sergeant on roll-call – once. That trick was like a limited ticket, good "for this day and this train only."How to "explain things" to the captain.
How to launder one's linen, which was woven of the coarsest flannel, in cold water.
How to make one's self clean when it was muddy, and how to look fresh when it was dusty.
How to divide the last pint of water in your canteen so as to get a drink and a sponge bath and have enough left for coffee.
How to make two month's pay – twenty six dollars – last till next pay-day, two or three months away, after you had sent half of it home and spent half the remainder.
How to keep awake on picket all night when your dry eyes ached and burned for sleep.
How to sleep like a tired working man under the guns of a battery shelling the enemy's lines.
How to light a fire in the woods with wet twigs in a pelting rain and a fretful wind with your last match."[Burdette, "Drums of the 47th" ppg. 113-114]
Any idia what "How to fool the sergeant on roll-call – once. That trick was like a limited ticket, good "for this day and this train only." was all about?
Any other documentation of the use of practical jokes in the army during the Civil War?
He also taught me how to make a feather bed of two oak rails.
How to grind coffee in a tin cup with the shank of a bayonet.
How to boil roasting ears in the their own husks in the ashes.
How to drink boiling coffee without blistering my throat.
How to conceal my person behind a sapling not half so thick as my body.
How to fill my canteen from a warm pond and let the water cool in the sun on a hot day.
How to march eighteen or twenty miles over rough roads day after day without getting an ache in my feet.
How to make one day's rations last three days without going hungry.
How to get a refreshing drink of water without swallowing a drop.
How to lift a nervous hen from the bosom of her family without any outcry from herself or relatives.
How to fool the sergeant on roll-call – once. That trick was like a limited ticket, good "for this day and this train only."How to "explain things" to the captain.
How to launder one's linen, which was woven of the coarsest flannel, in cold water.
How to make one's self clean when it was muddy, and how to look fresh when it was dusty.
How to divide the last pint of water in your canteen so as to get a drink and a sponge bath and have enough left for coffee.
How to make two month's pay – twenty six dollars – last till next pay-day, two or three months away, after you had sent half of it home and spent half the remainder.
How to keep awake on picket all night when your dry eyes ached and burned for sleep.
How to sleep like a tired working man under the guns of a battery shelling the enemy's lines.
How to light a fire in the woods with wet twigs in a pelting rain and a fretful wind with your last match."[Burdette, "Drums of the 47th" ppg. 113-114]
Any idia what "How to fool the sergeant on roll-call – once. That trick was like a limited ticket, good "for this day and this train only." was all about?
Any other documentation of the use of practical jokes in the army during the Civil War?
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