1 They began to walk like a drunken man and his friend.
2 He's a nice feller, he is, an we was allus good friends.
3 He paused in piteous anxiety to await his friend's reply.
4 The youth went slowly toward the fire indicated by his departed friend.
5 The dusty blue lines of their friends were disclosed a short distance away.
6 His face had been twisted into an expression of every agony he had imagined for his friend.
7 Suddenly, as the two friends marched on, the tall soldier seemed to be overcome by a tremor.
8 After a time he began to sidle near to the youth, and in a diffident way try to make him a friend.
9 In death it exposed to his enemies that poverty which in life he had perhaps concealed from his friends.
10 The youth wished his friend to lean upon him, but the other always shook his head and strangely protested.
11 Since the youth's arrival as a guardian for his friend, the other wounded men had ceased to display much interest.
12 Turning his head swiftly, the youth saw his friend running in a staggering and stumbling way toward a little clump of bushes.
13 He, in his thoughts, was careering off in other places, even as the carpenter who as he works whistles and thinks of his friend or his enemy, his home or a saloon.
14 This spectacle of gradual strangulation made the youth writhe, and once as his friend rolled his eyes, he saw something in them that made him sink wailing to the ground.
15 His body lay stretched out in the position of a tired man resting, but upon his face there was an astonished and sorrowful look, as if he thought some friend had done him an ill turn.
16 "Oh, you'll see fighting this time, my boy, what'll be regular out-and-out fighting," added the tall soldier, with the air of a man who is about to exhibit a battle for the benefit of his friends.
17 He was swelled with a tale he had heard from a reliable friend, who had heard it from a truthful cavalryman, who had heard it from his trustworthy brother, one of the orderlies at division headquarters.
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