<h1 id='ch3'>THE SKELETON MINE.<br/> A Tale of South Africa.</h1>
<p class='pindent'>I was one of the first prospectors in the Transval to search
for gold and a precious dance it lead me. At that time but
few Englishmen had ventured into the Boer country and such
was the jealousy with which they were regarded that it was
impossible to secure any information which would assist in
the search. Footsore and weary I tramped from farm to
farm, content to obtain a supper of mealies and the toughest of
tough South African mutton. There were rumors on every hand
that gold existed but to locate it was quite another matter.
It has since transpired that in my wanderings I passed over
some of the richest gold bearing deposits in the world but so
unlike the gold bearing fields of California and Australia is
the Rand that the most experienced miner would never have
dreamed of the richness of the claims. I was not searching
for quartz but the poor man’s field, placer mines. To add to
my perplexities my money ran short and I could only replenish
my purse at Cape Town. I sank so low that I was compelled
to sell my horse and from that hour I was on a level
with a Kaffir in the estimation of the Boers. The white man
who approaches a farmhouse in the Transval on foot must be
prepared for abject humiliation. Fortunately I had acquired
some knowledge of sheep in Australia else I believe that I
should have starved. When all else failed I became a sheep
doctor and vended a compound whose virtues would have
done credit to the most widely advertised patent medicine
nostrum.</p>
<p class='pindent'>One long to be remembered evening I arrived at a Boer’s
house situated twenty miles from any other habitation.
When I asked for supper and a night’s lodging the door was
slammed in my face and in the worst of German I was ordered
to begone. Physically I was incapable of complying with
the command and mentally I had not the slightest intention
of departing. In an outhouse, devoted to storing mealies,
sheep skins and harness, an old man was sitting on the doorstep
compounding a mixture, which I recognized as a sheep
remedy. I approached him and gave him to understand that
I was possessed of a remedy which would work wonders in
such cases. He was all attention instantly and the result
was that in a few minutes an excellent meal was spread in
the house, to which I was invited. Then I proceeded to mix
a number of simples, which the man possessed, and finally I
poured into the simmering mass, with the greatest care and
ostentation, a few grains of borasic acid, which I fortunately
possessed.</p>
<p class='pindent'>The following day I was the most surprised man in South
Africa when I learned that my preparation was working a
marvellous cure. I was invited to remain with the Boer the
balance of the season as an honored guest. Day after day I
tramped the hills, returning at night as wise and as rich as
when I set out. There were unmistakable indications that
gold should be found in the vicinity but the stubborn fact
remained that I could not find it. I had given up all hopes
and only remained to recruit my strength previous to setting
out on my long journey to the coast when the following remarkable
circumstances transpired.</p>
<p class='pindent'>I slept in a great four poster bed of proportions ample for a
race of giants, and as I was deposited between two feather
ticks in the old German fashion, the weather being the reverse
of cold, my dreams were not the most pleasant and my
rest not untroubled. But for offending the good housewife I
would have asked for a sheepskin on the floor.</p>
<p class='pindent'>One sultry night, after a long day’s walk, I found myself
tossing and restless and unable to get even a forty wink nap.
For hours I thus lay lamenting my fate and regretting having
abandoned the land of the Golden Fleece for the land of
King Solomon’s mines. At a late hour I fell into a disturbed
sleep. I awoke with a start and listened attentively. All
was quiet in the house and yet I felt certain that some one
was preparing to leave the place. How long this impression
remained I am unable to say. I am by no means certain that
I again fell asleep, and yet I am compelled by that which
followed to acknowledge that it is probable that such was the
fact. Whether dreaming or waking, I saw a venerable old
man, dressed as a German peasant, walk quietly out of the
front door, cast a suspicious glance around, as if to ascertain
whether he had been observed and then slip out into the
darkness, where he disappeared.</p>
<p class='pindent'>So realistic was the scene that the following morning I inquired
whether a friend of the family had paid them a visit
after I had retired.</p>
<p class='pindent'>The answer was, “No.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Two nights later I saw precisely the same thing happen
again but as on the former occasion I could not decide whether
I had been dreaming or not. The appearance of the venerable
old man was indellibly stamped upon my brain. I saw
distinctly that he was very old, that his beard was as white
as a lamb’s fleece and that he was dressed in an antiquated
garb, seen only in the most secluded parts of Germany, in
which country I had spent several months attending a school
in my boyhood days. The next night I determined to remain
awake but was not successful and again I saw the old man
depart. His constant re-appearance had at last a powerful
effect upon me. I decided that the next time, whether asleep
or awake, I would follow him. With this resolve upon my
mind I retired the next night and soon fell into a heavy
sleep, due, no doubt, to my former wakefulness. Once more
I awoke, or imagined that I awoke, with the well-defined
conviction that some person was preparing to leave the
house. Cautiously I crept out of bed and as the old man left
by the front door I slipped out by a side entrance. I remember
distinctly saying to myself: “This is certainly not a
dream; there is the man walking slowly over the veldt and
here I am watching and ready to follow where he may lead.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Follow him I did. My strange guide never once looked
behind him after he had left the house but proceeded directly
to the hills, which ran along the north of the farm and
were distant some two miles. He gradually quickened his
pace and finally I was compelled to run to keep him in sight.
After he entered the hills he turned and doubled on his track
in the most provoking manner and frequently I not only lost
sight of him but barely escaped meeting him face to face, so
sudden were his turns and so unexpected his re-appearances.
Why I was following him I could not tell. In fact I was
possessed of but a single impulse and that was to follow.
The old man never halted or hesitated but finally entered a
narrow valley, at the end of which rose a precipitous cliff. At
that point he suddenly disappeared. When I reached the
spot I found that beneath an overhanging rock an excavation
had been made at some time in the past, as there were
no signs of recent work. The pit was thickly strewn with
fallen leaves, and as it was but a few feet in depth, I let myself
down into it in the hope of discovering some passage by
which the old man had disappeared. My foot struck something
which was evidently metal. It proved to be an antiquated
shovel with a short handle. The night was a bright
one and at the time the moonbeams streamed directly into
the place. I could discover no means of retreat save by the
way I had entered and it was impossible for my strange
guide to have returned by that route and passed me unnoticed,
unless he possessed the power of rendering himself
invisible. To probe the matter to the bottom I commenced
digging. The ground was exceedingly hard and my progress
correspondingly slow. I threw out several shovels of
earth and then climbed up the bank and examined it. I came
upon a nugget, worth at least five pounds, then another and
another, but all smaller than the first. All of my mining instincts
were aroused and I forgot the strange circumstances
under which I had been led to the mine. Again I entered
the pit and set to work with all my energy and again I was
handsomely rewarded. The fever of greed seized upon me
and I worked as if my life depended on the result. The
seventh time I began digging but the first thrust of the
shovel brought it in contact with some hard substance. I
stooped down and found that I had uncovered the complete
skeleton of a man. An indescribable terror seized upon me.
I had been mining in a grave. I am not superstitious but
for the first I clearly realized the uncanny circumstances
which surrounded my discovery. I imagined that I heard
vague whisperings in the air and that a rumbling sound came
swelling up the valley. I lost my presence of mind, threw
down the shovel and ran for my life. I would have sworn
that a legion of nameless fiends were at my very heels, so
insane was my fright. When I emerged from the hills the
moon was shining calmly and the sense of peace and repose
brought me to my senses. I walked rapidly to the farmhouse,
which was in sight, crept in and without undressing threw
myself on the bed. I was soon asleep nor did I awake until
the housewife called me to breakfast.</p>
<p class='pindent'>When I discovered that I was dressed I was amazed. I
remembered distinctly going to bed the previous evening:
but had no recollection of having got up during the night,
until by chance I put my hand in my pocket and drew out
one of the nuggets. Then it all came back to me with a vividness
which was startling in its intensity. There could be
no doubt of the mine for the gold in my pockets was worth
fully one hundred and fifty pounds.</p>
<p class='pindent'>I resolved that I would keep my discovery a secret and
continue to work the mine which had yielded such handsome
results in a single night. Then I repaired to the hills and
began my search. Half an hour convinced me that I retained
not the slightest clew as to the location of the mine.
Day after day I continued the search but in vain. No trace
of the valley could I discover and finally I was compelled to
admit that a doubt existed in my mind as to whether the
gold had been found by me or had been placed in my pocket
by some kind fairy.</p>
<p class='pindent'>To have found and lost such an exceedingly rich deposit
was exasperating in itself but the uncertainty which enshrouded
the whole business made me doubt my own sanity.</p>
<p class='pindent'>One evening as I was sitting in the house brooding over
the problem the Boer’s wife opened a great clothes’ press,
removed several articles of wearing apparel and laid them
on the floor. My attention was immediately attracted to an
old coat.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Who owns the suit of clothes?” I inquired.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“They belonged to grandfather,” was the answer.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Is he dead?” I queried.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Dead more than twenty years, in fact before I was
married and came to live here, for he was my husband’s
father.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Did you know him?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Yes, but I was only a little girl at the time.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Why have the clothes been kept?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Before he died he gave orders that they were not to be
used and his wishes have been respected. My husband has
told me that he was a man of many peculiarities and as it
was due to him that we have the farm we cherish his name
and respect his wishes.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“What were his peculiarities?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“One was that he paid several visits to the Cape and when
he returned he always brought with him a bag of money,
but to the day of his death even his son, my husband, did
not know how he came to have it. With this money he
bought land and cattle and sheep and thus became rich.
Had he lived he would have been the richest Boer in this
part of the country. Then his death was a mystery and a mystery
which has never been cleared up. He had grown to be
old and feeble and he did no more work, but nothing could
keep him out of the hills. If anyone followed him he flew
into a great passion and cursed him roundly. My husband
feared that some accident would befall him in his wanderings
and the fear was at last realized. These clothes were
his best and he prized them very much, for he said that they
had brought him ‘good luck.’ It was for that reason he
wanted them kept, no doubt. One day he went away to the
hills and he never came back. The whole country joined
in the search but no trace was ever found. He was not able
to walk a long way and could not have wandered any distance
and that was what made his disappearance the more
strange. Some were of the opinion that he was carried off
by the Kaffirs, some that he had been murdered, for it was
well known that he always had gold in his pocket. Whatever
befell him no one knows.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>I took up the coat and hat and could have sworn that the
man I had followed to the hills was dressed in precisely the
same garments. Could it be possible that after all these
years I had found his grave? Had it been his ghost which
I had seen night after night issuing from the house and
making its way to the lonely grave in the hills? Had
his wealth been derived from the sale of the gold which he
had dug out of the pit? Admitting these facts, why had I
been chosen to solve the mystery? Was it possible that a
sympathy existed between the dead and gone Boer miner and
the needy prospector, myself? These questions I was unable
to answer. My common sense revolted at such conclusions
and yet, argue as I would, the gold was in my pocket to
prove their truth.</p>
<p class='pindent'>There remained another explanation, it was that I had not
been awake during the periods in which I saw the old man.
I had developed into a somnambulist and had got up in the
night, imagining that I was following an old man and while
in that state picked up the gold found in my pocket in the
morning. Unfortunately this theory did not account for the
previous existence of my ghostly guide. I realized the uselessness
of attempting to explain to my Boer friends the peculiar
circumstances of the case and in consequence kept
silent. From that hour I abandoned my search for a mine,
which was alike a mine and a grave, the location being only
known to ghosts or somnambulists.</p>
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