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<h2> CHAPTER XIV </h2>
<h3> NOT FAR TO SEEK </h3>
<p>In the present state of controversies most profoundly religious, the Lord
alone can decide (though thousands of men would hurry to pronounce) for or
against the orthodoxy of the ancient Sawyer's prayer. But if sound
doctrine can be established by success (as it always is), Uncle Sam's
theology must have been unusually sound; for it pleased a gracious Power
to know what he wanted, and to grant it.</p>
<p>Brave as Mr. Gundry was, and much-enduring and resigned, the latter years
of his life on earth must have dragged on very heavily, with abstract
resignation only, and none of his blood to care for him. Being so
obstinate a man, he might have never admitted this, but proved against
every one's voice, except his own, his special blessedness. But this must
have been a trial to him, and happily he was spared from it.</p>
<p>For although Firm had been very badly shot, and kept us for weeks in
anxiety about him, his strong young constitution and well-nourished frame
got over it. A truly good and learned doctor came from Sacramento, and we
hung upon his words, and found that there he left us hanging. And this was
the wisest thing perhaps that he could do, because in America medical men
are not absurdly expected, as they are in England, to do any good, but are
valued chiefly upon their power of predicting what they can not help. And
this man of science perceived that he might do harm to himself and his
family by predicting amiss, whereas he could do no good to his patient by
predicting rightly. And so he foretold both good and evil, to meet the
intentions of Providence.</p>
<p>He had not been sent for in vain, however; and to give him his due, he
saved Ephraim's life, for he drew from the wound a large bullet, which, if
left, must have poisoned all his circulation, although it was made of pure
silver. The Sawyer wished to keep this silver bullet as a token, but the
doctor said that it belonged to him according to miners' law; and so it
came to a moderate argument. Each was a thoroughly stubborn man, according
to the bent of all good men, and reasoning increased their unreason. But
the doctor won—as indeed he deserved, for the extraction had been
delicate—because, when reason had been exhausted, he just said this:</p>
<p>"Colonel Gundry, let us have no more words. The true owner is your
grandson. I will put it back where I took it from."</p>
<p>Upon this, the Sawyer being tickled, as men very often are in sad moments,
took the doctor by the hand, and gave him the bullet heartily. And the
medical man had a loop made to it, and wore it upon his watch chain. And
he told the story so often (saying that another man perhaps might have got
it out, but no other man could have kept it), that among a great race who
judge by facts it doubled his practice immediately.</p>
<p>The leader of the robbers, known far and wide as "Captain Pedro," was
buried where he fell; and the whole so raised Uncle Sam's reputation that
his house was never attacked again; and if any bad characters were forced
by circumstances to come near him, they never asked for any thing stronger
than ginger-beer or lemonade, and departed very promptly. For as soon as
Ephraim Gundry could give account of his disaster, it was clear that Don
Pedro owed his fate to a bottle of the Sawyer's whiskey. Firm had only
intended to give him a lesson for misbehavior, being fired by his
grandfather's words about swinging me on the saddle. This idea had justly
appeared to him to demand a protest; to deliver which he at once set forth
with a valuable cowhide whip. Coming thus to the Rovers' camp, and finding
their captain sitting in the shade to digest his dinner, Firm laid hold of
him by the neck, and gave way to feelings of severity. Don Pedro regretted
his misconduct, and being lifted up for the moment above his ordinary
view, perceived that he might have done better, and shaped the pattern of
his tongue to it. Firm, hearing this, had good hopes of him; yet knowing
how volatile repentance is, he strove to form a well-marked track for it.
And when the captain ceased to receive cowhide, he must have had it long
enough to miss it.</p>
<p>Now this might have ended honorably and amicably for all concerned, if the
captain had known when he was well off. Unluckily he had purloined a
bottle of Mr. Gundry's whiskey, and he drew the cork now to rub his
stripes, and the smell of it moved him to try it inside. And before very
long his ideas of honor, which he had sense enough to drop when sober,
began to come into his eyes again, and to stir him up to mischief. Hence
it was that he followed Firm, who was riding home well satisfied, and
appeased his honor by shooting in cold blood, and justice by being shot
anyhow.</p>
<p>It was beautiful, through all this trying time, to watch Uncle Sam's
proceedings: he appeared so delightfully calm and almost careless whenever
he was looked at. And then he was ashamed of himself perpetually, if any
one went on with it. Nobody tried to observe him, of course, or remark
upon any of his doings, and for this he would become so grateful that he
would long to tell all his thoughts, and then stop. This must have been a
great worry to him, seeing how open his manner was; and whenever he wanted
to hide any thing, he informed us of that intention. So that we exhorted
Firm every day to come round and restore us to our usual state. This was
the poor fellow's special desire; and often he was angry with himself, and
made himself worse again by declaring that he must be a milksop to lie
there so long. Whereas, it was much more near the truth that few other
men, even in the Western States, would ever have got over such a wound. I
am not learned enough to say exactly where the damage was, but the doctor
called it, I think, the sternum, and pronounced that "a building-up
process" was required, and must take a long time, if it ever could be
done.</p>
<p>It was done at last, thanks to Suan Isco, who scarcely ever left him by
day or night, and treated him skillfully with healing herbs. But he,
without meaning it, vexed her often by calling for me—a mere
ignorant child. Suan was dreadfully jealous of this, and perhaps I was
proud of that sentiment of hers, and tried to justify it, instead of
laboring to remove it, as would have been the more proper course. And Firm
most ungratefully said that my hand was lighter than poor Suan's, and
every thing I did was better done, according to him, which was shameful on
his part, and as untrue as any thing could be. However, we yielded to him
in all things while he was so delicate; and it often made us poor weak
things cry to be the masters of a tall strong man.</p>
<p>Firm Gundry received that shot in May, about ten days before the
twelvemonth was completed from my father's death. The brightness of summer
and beauty of autumn went by without his feeling them, and while his
system was working hard to fortify itself by walling up, as the learned
man had called it. There had been some difficulties in this process,
caused partly, perhaps, by our too lavish supply of the raw material; and
before Firm's gap in his "sternum" was stopped, the mountains were coming
down upon us, as we always used to say when the snow-line stooped. In some
seasons this is a sharp time of hurry, broken with storms, and capricious,
while men have to slur in the driving weather tasks that should have been
matured long since. But in other years the long descent into the depth of
winter is taken not with a jump like that, but gently and softly and
windingly, with a great many glimpses back at the summer, and a good deal
of leaning on the arm of the sun.</p>
<p>And so it was this time. The autumn and the winter for a fortnight stood
looking quietly at each other. They had quite agreed to share the hours,
to suit the arrangements of the sun. The nights were starry and fresh and
brisk, without any touch of tartness; and the days were sunny and soft and
gentle, without any sense of languor. It was a lovely scene—blue
shadows gliding among golden light.</p>
<p>The Sawyer came forth, and cried, "What a shame! This makes me feel quite
young again. And yet I have done not a stroke of work. No excuse; make no
excuse. I can do that pretty well for myself. Praise God for all His
mercies. I might do worse, perhaps, than have a pipe."</p>
<p>Then Firm came out to surprise him, and to please us all with the sight of
himself. He steadied his steps with one great white hand upon his
grandfather's Sunday staff, and his clear blue eyes were trembling with a
sense of gratitude and a fear of tears. And I stepped behind a red
strawberry-tree, for my sense of respect for him almost made me sob.</p>
<p>Then Jowler thought it high time to appear upon the scene, and convince us
that he was not a dead dog yet. He had known tribulation, as his master
had, and had found it a difficult thing to keep from the shadowy hunting
ground of dogs who have lived a conscientious life. I had wondered at
first what his reason could have been for not coming forward, according to
his custom, to meet that troop of robbers. But his reason, alas! was too
cogent to himself, though nobody else in that dreadful time could pay any
attention to him. The Rovers, well knowing poor Jowler's repute, and
declining the fair mode of testing it, had sent in advance a very crafty
scout, a half-bred Indian, who knew as much about dogs as they could ever
hope to know about themselves. This rogue approached faithful Jowler—so
we were told long afterward—not in an upright way, but as if he had
been a brother quadruped. And he took advantage of the dog's unfeigned
surprise and interest to accost him with a piece of kidney containing a
powerful poison. According to all sound analogy, this should have stopped
the dear fellow's earthly tracks; but his spirit was such that he simply
went away to nurse himself up in retirement. Neither man nor dog can tell
what agonies he suffered; and doubtless his tortures of mind about duty
unperformed were the worst of all. These things are out of human knowledge
in its present unsympathetic state. Enough that poor Jowler came home at
last, with his ribs all up and his tail very low.</p>
<p>Like friends who have come together again, almost from the jaws of death,
we sat in the sunny noon, and thoroughly enjoyed ourselves. The trees
above us looked proud and cheerful, laying aside the mere frippery of
leaves with a good grace and contented arms, and a surety of having quite
enough next spring. Much of the fruity wealth of autumn still was
clustering in our sight, heavily fetching the arched bough down to lessen
the fall, when fall they must. And against the golden leaves of maple
behind the unpretending roof a special wreath of blue shone like a
climbing Ipomaea. But coming to examine this, one found it to be nothing
more nor less than the smoke of the kitchen chimney, busy with a quiet
roasting job.</p>
<p>This shows how clear the air was; but a thousand times as much could never
tell how clear our spirits were. Nobody made any "demonstration," or cut
any frolicsome capers, or even said any thing exuberant. The steadfast
brooding breed of England, which despises antics, was present in us all,
and strengthened by a soil whose native growth is peril, chance, and
marvel. And so we nodded at one another, and I ran over and courtesied to
Uncle Sam, and he took me to him.</p>
<p>"You have been a dear good child," he said, as he rose, and looked over my
head at Firm. "My own granddarter, if such there had been, could not have
done more to comfort me, nor half so much, for aught I know. There is no
picking and choosing among the females, as God gives them. But he has
given you for a blessing and saving to my old age, my dearie."</p>
<p>"Oh, Uncle Sam, now the nugget!" I cried, desiring like a child to escape
deep feeling, and fearing any strong words from Firm. "You have promised
me ever so long that I should be the first to show Firm the nugget."</p>
<p>"And so you shall, my dear, and Firm shall see it before he is an hour
older, and Jowler shall come down to show us where it is."</p>
<p>Firm, who had little faith in the nugget, but took it for a dream of mine,
and had proved conclusively from his pillow that it could not exist in
earnest, now with a gentle, satirical smile declared his anxiety to see
it; and I led him along by his better arm, faster, perhaps, than he ought
to have walked.</p>
<p>In a very few minutes we were at the place, and I ran eagerly to point it;
but behold, where the nugget had been, there was nothing except the white
bed of the river! The blue water flowed very softly on its way, without a
gleam of gold to corrupt it.</p>
<p>"Oh, nobody will ever believe me again!" I exclaimed, in the saddest of
sad dismay. "I dreamed about it first, but it never can have been a dream
throughout. You know that I told you about it, Uncle Sam, even when you
were very busy, and that shows that it never could have been a dream."</p>
<p>"You told me about it, I remember now," Mr. Gundry answered, dryly; "but
it does not follow that there was such a thing. My dear, you may have
imagined it; because it was the proper time for it to come, when my good
friends had no money to lend. Your heart was so good that it got into your
brain, and you must not be vexed, my dear child; it has done you good to
dream of it."</p>
<p>"I said so all along," Firm observed. "Miss Rema felt that it ought to be,
and so she believed that it must be, there. She is always so warm and
trustful."</p>
<p>"Is that all you are good for?" I cried, with no gratitude for his
compliment. "As sure as I stand here, I saw a great bowlder of gold, and
so did Jowler, and I gave you the piece that he brought up. Did you take
them all in a dream, Uncle Sam? Come, can you get over that?"</p>
<p>I assure you that for the moment I knew not whether I stood upon my feet
or head, until I perceived an extraordinary grin on the Sawyer's ample
countenance; but Firm was not in the secret yet, for he gazed at me with
compassion, and Uncle Sam looked at us both as if he were balancing our
abilities.</p>
<p>"Send your dog in, missy," at last he said. "He is more your dog than
mine, I believe, and he obeys you like a Christian. Let him go and find it
if he can."</p>
<p>At a sign from me, the great dog dashed in, and scratched with all four
feet at once, and made the valley echo with the ring of mighty barkings;
and in less than two minutes there shone the nugget, as yellow and as big
as ever.</p>
<p>"Ha! ha! I never saw a finer thing," shouted Uncle Sam, like a school-boy.
"I were too many for you, missy dear; but the old dog wollops the whole of
us. I just shot a barrow-load of gravel on your nugget, to keep it all
snug till Firm should come round; and if the boy had never come round,
there the gold might have waited the will of the Almighty. It is a big
spot, anyhow."</p>
<p>It certainly was not a little spot, though they all seemed to make so
light of it—which vexed me, because I had found it, and was as proud
as if I had made it. Not by any means that the Sawyer was half as careless
as he seemed to be; he put on much of this for my sake, having very lofty
principles, especially concerning the duty of the young. Young people were
never to have small ideas, so far as he could help it, particularly upon
such matters as Mammon, or the world, or fashion; and not so very seldom
he was obliged to catch himself up in his talking, when he chanced to be
going on and forgetting that I, who required a higher vein of thought for
my youth, was taking his words downright; and I think that all this had a
great deal to do with his treating all that gold in such an exemplary
manner; for if it had really mattered nothing, what made him go in the
dark and shoot a great barrow-load of gravel over it?</p>
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