<h3>HOW THE DELINQUENT SOLDIER PAID HIS DEBT.</h3>
<p>There is a great similarity in the many stories of Lincoln's leniency
to soldiers incurring the death-penalty according to the code of
war, and no wonder, when they were so numerous that he often had
four-and-twenty sentences to sign or ignore in a day.</p>
<p>A member of a Vermont regiment was so sentenced for sleeping at his
post. The more than usual intercession made for him induced Lincoln
to visit the culprit in his cell. He found him a simple country lad,
impressing him as a reminder of himself at that age. In the like plain
and rustic vein he discoursed with him.</p>
<p>"I have been put to a deal of bother on your account, Scott," he said
paternally. "What I want to know is how are you going to pay <i>my</i>
bill?"</p>
<p>From a lawyer turned sword of the State, this was reasonable enough;
so the young man responded:</p>
<p>"I hope I am as grateful to you, Mr. Lincoln, as any man can be for
his life. But this came so sudden that I did not lay out for it. But
I have my bounty-money in the savings-bank, and I guess we could raise
some money by a mortgage on the farm; and, if we wait till pay-day
for the regiment, I guess the boys will help some, and we can make
it up--if it isn't more nor five or six hundred, eh?"</p>
<p>With the same gravity, the intermediator reckoned the cost would be
more.</p>
<p>"My son," said he, "the bill is a large one. Your friends cannot pay
it--nor your comrades, nor the farm, nor the pay! If from this day
William Scott does his duty so that, if I were there when he came to
die, he could look me in the face as now and say: 'I have kept my
promise and have done my duty as a soldier,' then <i>my</i> debt will
be paid."</p>
<p>The boy made the promise, and was immediately restored to the
regiment. He earned promotion, but refused it. At Lee's Mills, on the
Warwick River, he was wounded while distinguishing himself in a grand
assault. Mortally wounded in saving three lives, he was enabled with
his dying breath to send a message to the President to the effect
that he had redeemed his pledge. On his breast was found one of the
likenesses of Lincoln with the motto, "God bless our President!" which
the Grand Army men were given. He thanked the benefactor for having
let him fall like a soldier, in battle, and not like a coward, by
his comrades' rifles.
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