Bidding his wife and son Tommy goodbye, Captain Barton of the Confederate Army starts for the war to take his place at the head of his troop. The boy is filled with the war spirit. Some of his young friends enter the house with drum and ...See moreBidding his wife and son Tommy goodbye, Captain Barton of the Confederate Army starts for the war to take his place at the head of his troop. The boy is filled with the war spirit. Some of his young friends enter the house with drum and mimic gun and try to enlist him in service. Tommy pleads with his mother to let him join their ranks, but she refuses. Awaiting his opportunity, the little fellow steals away and is soon in charge of the juvenile warriors. In their play they come across a deserted cave, where they make one of their number prisoner. Mammy, who has been sent after Tommy, sees him coming from the cave and immediately drags him toward home. On their way a horse comes dashing down the road, with its rider, who falls from the saddle as he nears Tommy and Mammy. At a glance Tommy recognizes his father, who has been wounded and is being pursued by the Union soldiers. Tommy hides his father in some bushes nearby, starts the horse down the road and tells the Federal soldiers, who ask him if he has seen the Confederate captain, that he has gone that way, pointing to the quickly-disappearing horse, thus throwing them off the scent. He then takes his father to the cave and hides him there, but not without some very narrow escapes from capture by the pursuers. Mammy assists Tommy in making the captain as comfortable as possible in the cave and succeeds in getting provisions to him, until the coast is clear and Captain Barton is able to return in safety to his wife and family, all of whom praise the little hero for his courage and shrewdness. Written by
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