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<h2> Yosemite Jim, or a Tale of the Great White Death </h2>
<p>YOSEMITE JIM wuz the name he had,<br/>
And he came from no one knowed whar;<br/>
Quiet, easy goin' sort of a cuss,<br/>
And wuz reckoned on the squar'.<br/>
Ridin' a route for the Wells Fargo folks<br/>
May have made him stern and grim;<br/>
But thar wasn't a man that crossed the divide<br/>
But 'ud swar by Yosemite Jim.<br/>
<br/>
He wa'n't one of the regular sort<br/>
What you'd meet thar any day,<br/>
But as near as the camp could figure it out,<br/>
In a show down he'd likely stay.<br/>
A shambling, awkward figure,<br/>
Rawboned, tall and slim,<br/>
And his schaps and togs in general<br/>
Jist looked like they'd fell on him.<br/>
<br/>
I wuz somewhat of a tenderfoot then,<br/>
Hadn't jist got the lay of the land;<br/>
Thar wuz a good many things in them thar parts<br/>
As I couldn't quite understand.<br/>
But I took a likin' to Yosemite Jim,<br/>
Wuz with him on my very first trick;<br/>
And from that time on I stuck to him<br/>
Like a kitten to a good warm brick.<br/>
<br/>
Our headquarters then wuz the valley camp,<br/>
It wuz down by the redwood way,<br/>
With Chaparel across the spur,<br/>
'Bout fifty miles away.<br/>
Wall, what I'm goin' to tell you, pard,<br/>
Happened thar whar the trail runs into the sky;<br/>
And if it hadn't a-bin fer Yosemite Jim,<br/>
Wall, I'd be countin' my chips on high.<br/>
<br/>
The galoot that wuz punchin' the broncos fer me<br/>
Wuz a greaser from down Monterey;<br/>
And Jim used to say, "Keep your eye on him, pard,<br/>
I don't think he's cum fer to stay;<br/>
His eyes are too shifty and yeller,<br/>
And his face is sullen and hard;<br/>
And 'taint that so much as a feelin' I have;<br/>
Anyhow, keep your eye on him, pard."<br/>
<br/>
One day when the mercury wuz way out of sight,<br/>
And the frost it wuz on every nail,<br/>
With jist the mail sack and specie box,<br/>
The greaser and I hit the trail.<br/>
We picked two passengers up at Big Pine,<br/>
And while the broncos were changed that day<br/>
I noticed them havin' a sneakin' chat<br/>
With the greaser from down Monterey.<br/>
<br/>
Did you ever hear tell of the Great White Death,<br/>
That creeps down the mountain side,<br/>
Leavin' behind it a ghastly track<br/>
Whar those who have met it died?<br/>
Wall, pard, as true as I'm a-livin',<br/>
No man wants to see it twice;<br/>
White and grim as a funeral shroud,<br/>
A mass of mist and ice.<br/>
<br/>
Wall, we hadn't got far from the Big Pine relay<br/>
When my hair it commenced to rise,<br/>
For I saw across by the Lone Bear spur<br/>
A cloud of most monstrous size.<br/>
And the greaser acted sort of peculiar,<br/>
And the broncos commenced to neigh;<br/>
Wall, some thoughts went through my mind jist then<br/>
I won't forgit till my dyin' day.<br/>
<br/>
In less time than it takes to tell it,<br/>
We were into the Great White Death,<br/>
With its millions of frozen snowflakes<br/>
A-takin' away our breath.<br/>
And jist then somethin' happened, pard,<br/>
The greaser from down Monterey<br/>
Tried to sneak off with the specie box,<br/>
Along with the passengers from Big Pine relay.<br/>
<br/>
All at once a figure on hossback<br/>
Cum a-whoopin' it down the trail,<br/>
And bullets from out of a Winchester<br/>
Commenced to fly like hail.<br/>
The greaser and them two passengers<br/>
Cashed in their chips to him,<br/>
Fer the feller what wuz doin' the shootin'<br/>
Wuz my friend, Yosemite Jim.<br/>
<br/>
Wall, we planted them thar together,<br/>
When the cloud had passed away;<br/>
And all they've got fer a tombstone<br/>
Is the mountains, dull and gray.<br/>
So, pard, let's take one together,<br/>
And I'll drink a toast to him,<br/>
Fer though he wuz rough and ready,<br/>
He'd a heart, YOSEMITE JIM.<br/></p>
<p>The Great White Death, so named by the Indians, occurs in the higher
altitudes of the Rocky and Sierra Nevada Mountains. It is almost
indescribable. It might properly be termed a frozen fog. It has the effect
of bringing on acute congestion of the lungs, from which few rarely
recover. Viewed at a distance it is a magnificent sight, each and every
particle of the frozen moisture being a miniature prism, which reflects
the sun's rays in a manner once seen never to be forgotten.—By CAL.
STEWART, formerly Overland Messenger for the Wells-Fargo Express Company.</p>
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