[74]
Regulations.
In the establishing of camps, therefore, there was much of the go-as-you-please order of procedure.
It is true that regiments commanded by strict disciplinarians were likely to and did keep pretty close to regulations.
Many others approximated this standard, but still there then remained a large residuum who suited themselves, or, rather, perhaps did not attempt to suit anybody unless compelled to by superior authority; so that in entering some camps one might find everything betokening the supervision of a critical military spirit, while others were such a hurly-burly lack of plan that a mere plough-jogger might have been, and perhaps was, the controlling genius of the camp.
When troops located in the woods, as they always did for their winter cantonments, this lack of system in the arrangement was likely to be deviated from on account of trees.
But to the promised topic of the chapter.
Come with me into one of the log huts.
I have already spoken of its walls, its roof, its chimney, its fire-place.
The door we are to enter may be cut in the same end with the fire-place.
Such was often the case, as there was just about unoccupied space enough for that purpose.
But where four or more soldiers located together it was oftener put in the centre of one side.
In that case the fire-place was in the opposite side as a rule.
In entering a door at the end one would usually observe two bunks across the opposite end, one near the ground (or floor, when there was such a luxury, which was rarely), and the other well up towards the top of the walls.
I say, usually. It depended upon circumstances.
When two men only occupied the hut there was one bunk.
Sometimes when four occupied it there was but one, and that one running lengthwise.
There are other exceptions which I need not mention; but the average hut contained two bunks.
The construction of these bunks was varied in character.
Some were built of boards from hardtack boxes; some of barrel-staves laid crosswise on two poles; some men improvised
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