<h2 class="illo"> A MINE, A MINER, AND A CAT </h2>
<p>The mining camps of California in the days
of '49 are full of romance and history and
any man who has once tasted their free independent
adventure can never more escape the
influence. The gambling chance which every
miner took in those fascinating days, is continually
tempting him again to the old life. This charm,
which that most merciless Enchantress of the California
Hills casts on all alike, is unfathomable, and
grips the mighty as well as the weak. The quest
of gold, which rewarded some and eluded others
in those days, still has a grappling temptation to
every man who has once been under its spell.
To the pioneer Californian, it is a summons forever
luring him to that old battle ground round
the big shaft where the sky is big and it feels
good just to be alive. You will find that the old-time
miners forever chafe in the dullness and
conventionalities of any humdrum existence along
commercial lines, and for any slight excuse will
exultantly take the wide tramp road that leads
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_44' name='Page_44'>[44]</SPAN></span>
to what they call "God's own country." They
are found ever eager to give body, and soul if
necessary, joyously, in the intoxicating excitement
this fickle sorceress holds out to them in the game
of chance which they think <i>must</i> win in the end.</p>
<p>One of these sturdy relics of the early days
in the golden west, after years of struggle and
vain trials to settle down into the drudgery of
precarious success in trade, grew tired of waiting
for the miracle of prosperity to even begin
to happen, and was in despair. In his blue discouragement
those dream ghosts of the happy
mining days were ungovernable in their insistent
presence and pulling at his heart strings with
an almost visible and steady line.</p>
<p>Long ago when he first came to the west, in
the mad rush after gold in '49 he had been one
of the "pardners" to locate and work a certain
claim. In the fever and scramble of making a
fortune in a minute, and expecting to pick up
handfuls of gold with little trouble, this company
had become discouraged at the slow profits yielded
by this claim, and had abandoned it upon the
report of much richer discoveries farther on, he
following with the others. During all these years
that he had tried to settle down into steady, legitimate
business a haunting certainty had grown in
his mind that they had been too hasty in abandoning
this mine. The remembrance of a promising
lead, which had been discovered in one of those
hustling days and which, in their breathless hurry
for big lumps, had not been followed faithfully
enough, and consequently had been overlooked and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_45' name='Page_45'>[45]</SPAN></span>
forgotten, obsessed his present gloomy outlook
until it could no longer be ignored.</p>
<p>One especially desperate day, when affairs had
been unusually irksome, he sat down in dejection
and thought deep and hard on this inward and
tantalizing urge to the old mountains. Immediately
following this quiet hour with himself he
gave up the effort of trying to succeed in his present
uncongenial work, and throwing discretion to
the winds, yielded in glorious abandon to the call
in his blood, ringing too loud to longer oppose.
Fortunately there were no ties of family or responsibilities
other than business to shake off,
so shouldering his pick and shovel, treasured
through all these years, he joyously started with
his chin up and his back straight, for the splendid
freedom of the old familiar hills. His destination
the long abandoned claim hidden away in the
far-off wilds, where there was a chance, sure,
and no one had yet, as far as he could learn, discovered
the "lead."</p>
<p>He determined to go there again, to work it
alone this time, and to be deliberate and to stay
with it until the hills <i>did</i> deliver up to him their
royal secret. To this miner-man it meant life,
real life, health and above all, freedom, with a
big chance of a fortune. If it were a fool's folly,
he would gamely take a "flyer" and abide by the
result at any cost.</p>
<p>So this strong-handed, broad-shouldered man,
big in heart and big in soul and a lover of the
silent places, in answering the call of his old miner
days, set his hopeful face toward the great mountains
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_46' name='Page_46'>[46]</SPAN></span>
and the days to come, in reckless venture,
with only faith, a pair of strong arms and a pick
and spade to help him solve the problem. It is a
well-known fact that these men going into the
wildness and loneliness of these rugged heights,
cherish a cat as indispensable to their camp life;
as important an addition to their "grub stakes"
as beans and coffee. And so intimate do these
two become under their isolated, and often desperate
conditions, that an almost human friendship
and affection springs up between them.</p>
<p>At the last trading post nearest the mine the
man planned to "outfit" and to secure a four-footed
partner. The cat he thought would be so
easy that he never gave it a second thought, but
on his arrival at the little town busied himself
packing and getting everything in light transportation
order for the "return horse" on the
morrow. These arrangements off his mind, he
got very busy in looking about for the last requisite,
a cat. His intentions in regard to acquiring
one were perfectly honorable. He would
beg one if possible, buy one if necessary, but
he must have a cat at any price, not only for its
company and usefulness, but in accordance with
all past traditions of mines and miners. There
were cats and cats a plenty in this little mining
town, clinging to the rough side of the granite
hill, but, as it seemed, none to spare. Not one
to give away and not one to sell, and he might
as well have tried to barter with the air, as no
price or accommodation could induce any one of
them to part with one of their precious little beasts,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_47' name='Page_47'>[47]</SPAN></span>
and he was in despair. After strenuous hours
of vain persuasion, which had eliminated the question
of choice or price in regard to the cat, he
had gone to the public house for supper, exhausted
and out of patience, but none the less determined
on having the desired "partner." The early starlight
found him sitting on the dark veranda, solitary
and alone, pondering the cat question, not as
to spots or breeding or even a cat, but as to which,
and how. He must have a cat and these people
being the last resort would have to furnish it
at whatever cost. With his chair tilted back,
his hands deep in his pockets and his face turned
heavenward he seemed to be looking at the stars
for inspiration, and from the short, quick puffs
and lively glow of his pipe, it was evident he was
thinking hard. After he had finished his smoke
in silent cogitation with the sky, he seemed to
have settled the difficult problem to his satisfaction,
for when he rose to "turn in" there was
the gleam of a slow smile on his rugged face.
Knocking out his pipe and brushing the ashes
from his breast, with a huge yawn, he stretched
his arms up over his six feet of length, hardening
his muscles for the morrow, and sauntered indoors
for the few short hours of rest in a bed,
which luxury he allowed himself as a grand finale
to civilization.</p>
<p>In what seemed to him but a moment later,
it was the next morning, and throwing aside the
blankets he was up and out in the chill gray dawn
without disturbing any of the household. As the
eastern sky lightened the purple mists, he trudged
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_48' name='Page_48'>[48]</SPAN></span>
cheerily along under the frosty twinkle of the
receding stars, his back to the dusty little hamlet
and a triumphant smile of contented satisfaction
beaming on his happy face, turned toward the
gleaming snow peaks of to-morrow. No one would
have suspected this big happy tramp of having
an infamous secret on his conscience or have surmised
that he harbored a wee felony snuggled
closely inside of his outer flannel shirt. As he
had been in somewhat of a hurry in committing
this crime, he had not been over-scrupulous in
selecting any particular kind of a cat. Still, as
he was at last in possession of a live kitten, a
something he felt he could not have faced the
solitude and silence of his lonely camp life without,
in sweet content he would never be critical.
This victory in the small matter of a small cat,
attested well for his future, showing that he had
resources and skillful ways of his own in circumventing
an adverse fate, and that he was made
of the stuff that wins in the end.</p>
<p>Just as the white mountain peaks, far above
the timber line, caught the first pink glory of
the coming sun, the man with the light of hope
in his dark eyes, reached the foothills. He crossed
the first low divide, and in the sheltered ravine
beyond stopped beside a tiny trickle of snow water,
flashing gently down among the boulders, and
made camp for breaking his fast. Here for the
first time he took from his bosom the scraggy
little treasure for which he had risked his honest
reputation, and which had safely slept, curled in
its snug quarters, all the way.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_49' name='Page_49'>[49]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The very first act of the astonished small tenderfoot
on this rather rude awakening and introduction,
was to make a wild dash for liberty,
which came near being a total eclipse of their
acquaintance. It was only after a very lively
chase, in which the man had to hide his terrible
anxiety and to use the utmost patient cunning,
that the frightened little animal was captured
by his more than frightened mate. In the quiet
moments that followed, when they were sizing
each other up by the comfort of their little friendship
fire, their intimacy began. In admonition
his baby highness was given a serious and profound
lecture on the futility of having such independent
ideas as he seemed to possess. The
poor little motherless captive looked meek and
helpless enough beside the big man, and in this
big unknown world, his great baby eyes glancing
and searching about in vague apprehension; but
although he was terribly puzzled over the situation,
he was finally brought to reason and to the
straight and narrow path of obedience.</p>
<p>With a firm and tender touch, electric with
love and sympathy, the man stroked his prize,
answering the questioning, luminous yellow eyes
so steadily fixed on his own dark ones, with a
gaze of such mysterious power and assurance that
the kitten sat charmed, with curling paws, the
wonder-stare melting into one of understanding
and implicit trust, that was to be lifelong. So
comforting was the man's trick of hand and voice,
that this trying moment ended forever all controversy
as to doctrine or discipline between them.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_50' name='Page_50'>[50]</SPAN></span>
From that momentous time on, as long as they
lived together, they fought out the grim battle
in moments of importance, as of one mind. Already
the touch of his master hand and the sound
of his commanding voice had taken tight hold of
the baby heart and held it like magic, and as
the kitten grew in wisdom and caution he learned
to trust this big man more and more, as one who
understood and sympathized.</p>
<p>In resuming their tramp, the rougher country
began and the trail was a puzzle. The man could
not find even a ghost of a track, as he worked his
way through the thick masses of underbrush, for
it had been years since anybody had traveled this
way. But mile after mile, crossing cañons, over
small mountains, up and down, in and out, the
hardy pioneer picked his difficult way across the
trackless country, going straight, guided by a
miner's mysterious sixth sense, which is an instinct
enabling him to see things and read things
to which others are blind.</p>
<p>Toward the last of the daylight, on the second
day, these tired tramps, the man footsore but
with unwearied spirits came upon the small clearing
of the old mining camp of the halcyon days
of '49. Once it had swarmed with eager, buoyant
men, but now it lay deserted and wrapped in
solitude. In great exhilaration they took possession
of the one and only remaining dilapidated
shack, standing, dark and doorless, silhouetted
against the fading light. Nobody had been in
this forsaken place or probably thought of it for
years and years. In its prime it had been a rather
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_51' name='Page_51'>[51]</SPAN></span>
pretentious cabin of the regulation kind built of
logs but was now only a suggestion of its former
grandeur. Hordes of small furry tribes were
"holding down the claim" and using its shelter
to rear generations of their kind. The fireplace,
with its great outside chimney, built of mud and
rocks, was standing intact, the smut of the old log
fires still clinging inside where myriads of bats
had hung their nests against its sooty walls.</p>
<p>The new arrivals took possession of this old-timer
under a torrent of abusive, squeaky protest
that sounded very much like "cussing," this
intrusion into their domain being highly resented
by the present tenants. But the strangers had
come with a purpose, and to stay, so took possession
of the hut as with a flourish of trumpets,
making preparations for the night, scattering the
scolding families to temporary hiding, and anticipating
no end of fun in banishing them forever
to their own territory. In time the miner settled
down into a daily routine of business and pleasure,
with only the cat and the solemn and magnificent
trees for company. He was wholly happy in getting
the cabin into living order, delightfully systematic
in regulating the primitive housekeeping
arrangements, and shamefully contented with the
homely result, but always on the lookout for
golden possibilities. He was not conscious of a
dull or lonesome moment in the heavenly largeness
of the pure mountain air, but every day was
one of stirring fascination to him in the thought
of what might come with the next turn of the
shovel.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_52' name='Page_52'>[52]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The great peace and majesty of the California
mountains, glowing in their summer fulness, was
marvelous to the city man, who had been aching
for these exuberant heights so long. The crisp
keen air was like wine in his veins and made his
blood tingle. As he bared his arms with cheerful
determination his whole being thrilled and he
struck and dug into the flinty rock with a strength
born of a faith, that however he might blunder,
the gods would be kind and he would come to his
own in the end.</p>
<p>Each wonderful day was followed by another
as wonderful, the weeks speeding as lightly as
homing birds. If there were troubles that sometimes
seemed dark and dreadful, and difficulties
hard to overcome, the two were happy, the cat
being the very heart of the camp life and living
on the most intimate terms of love and equality
with his devoted master in the leveling process
of their primitive life. The kitten had grown
into the utmost splendid stature of his race, going
from strength to strength, being all muscle
and nerve, unusually broad of chest, looking as
if bred to the mountain fastness and able to endure
all sorts of pioneer hardships. His baby
coat was now thick and silky fur and was growing
more glossy and beautiful every day, so that
the man in his pride gazed upon him with an eye
of rapture in the possession, and felt sure that
in his successful raid into the enemy's camp, he
had unwittingly stumbled on something beyond
the common kind. Handsome, shining and saucy,
he was wonderfully wise and cunning for a cat,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_53' name='Page_53'>[53]</SPAN></span>
having no equal in the chase. The vain little
creatures of the forest, grown bold and reckless
and almost fearless during the years that they
had been unmolested, did not have half a chance,
and learned that they must exert their utmost
to escape this cruel forager.</p>
<div class="figcenter"><SPAN name="i077" id="i077"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/i-077.jpg" width-obs="340" height-obs="490" alt="" /> <p class="caption">THE CAT<br/> <span class='smcap'>The Kitten Had Grown Into the<br/>
Most Splendid Bigness of His Race,<br/>
Handsome, Shining and Saucy,<br/>
All Muscle and Nerve, Unusually Broad<br/>
of Chest and Looking as if Bred to<br/>
the Mountain Fastness and<br/>
Able to Endure<br/>
all Sorts of Pioneer Hardships</span></p>
</div>
<p>It was in the evening, when pick and shovel
were standing sentinel in the corner and the chimney
sending its curly blue beacons of comfort
toward the sky, that this wonderful "pardner"
of the miner shone in all the glory of his domestic
virtues, giving the rough cabin the grace
and semblance of home. This evening hour bestowed
happiness on both the man and the cat,
and marked the very height of their goodfellowship.
The man, his day's work over, steeped in
the tang of the pine logs roaring in the huge
fireplace, was at rest and at peace with all the
world, puffing voluminous clouds from his pipe.
His drowsy friend, too, was filled to the heart
with the warmth from the ruddy logs and, in
blinking satisfaction, would occasionally relieve
his overflowing gratitude by low throaty murmurs
of blissful content. These tranquil hours
by the fire certainly atoned for many hardships,
and feeling such a glow of nameless satisfaction
in the snug, solitary enjoyment of them, the thankful
man was more than compensated for all the
sacrifices he had made. Being a willing, self-imposed
exile, he felt that his blessings were more
than he really deserved.</p>
<p>In the narrow canon at the base of these mountains,
closing it in on both sides, was where the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_54' name='Page_54'>[54]</SPAN></span>
miner was following the old lead in which he
had so much faith. In the rocky bottom grew
scraggy fir and pine trees and in the crevice at
the very bottom, a little stream hurried along,
a trifling affair at this time of the year, but in
the winter assuming the proportions of a raging
torrent, as it was fed from the great volume of
water that fell from the heights above. Here
the miner washed his "pay dirt" at the "clean
up," and it was also the cat's happy hunting
ground, for it was the home of the wood mice,
chipmunks, squirrels and other "small deer" nutting
among the pines and going their ways boldly
and busily, thoroughly intent on the business of
living and making a living.</p>
<p>The cat roamed these wilds freely, foraging
unchallenged, exploring with eyes and nose every
tree, hollow and boulder, for he, too, was a practical,
busy cat, making a living, as he had to
work out his own salvation in this respect. He
certainly had the right of way in this world of
forage, and the thrifty little bodies that in the
days of abundance would prepare for a day of
need, had to be very wily as to where they laid
their stores, for the cat would nose and ferret
out their most secret hiding places.</p>
<p>One morning the miner, taking his dirt to
the ravine, found the cat vigorously digging in
the loose earth at the opening of a gigantic fissure
in the rocky peaks, a fissure that led in gradual
ascent, its sides sheer and steep, to the peaks
above. So intent was the cat on his quarry that
he did not notice his master's greeting, but kept
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_55' name='Page_55'>[55]</SPAN></span>
the dry earth briskly flying to the right and left.
The man supposed, as a matter of course, that
he was on a scent and had cornered some game
in its den, and in careless sympathy thought to
help him out and struck his shovel deep into the
loose earth. As he turned the heavy load he
gasped, for he found it freighted with sparkling
metal. He rubbed his eyes in wonder, dazed with
astonishment, looking first at the cat now sitting
demurely by with a satisfied air, as if he had
done his part and then at the twinkling scales
of gold blinking up at him as he shifted it through
his shaking fingers. This sudden realization of
the hopes of all the long hard years and the past
months of active search, staggered his faculties.
In a bewildered way he fingered the gravel in
his hand, and wondered if it could be that he
had "struck it rich" this time; if so, it was surely
this prince of cats, either by chance or luck, that
had proven the cleverer prospector of the two.</p>
<p>He followed the deep narrow gulch on and on,
up and up, not for an instant suspecting the marvelous
wealth it would reveal. He was lured on
by frequently finding deep and rich pockets of
yellow ore, mixed with water-worn loose rocks and
dirt, which evidently had been collecting in this
rough trough for a million years, washed down
from the steep sides and many peaks above and
around.</p>
<p>When night came down, shutting the cañon
in absolute darkness, it roused the man from his
golden dream with a start, and he straightened
his bent, aching body and mopped his hot forehead.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_56' name='Page_56'>[56]</SPAN></span>
His first thought was for the cat, totally
forgotten through all these absorbing hours, and
an instant of self-reproach for fear he had not
followed, but had gone back to the cabin at the
usual time. At his startled call the neglected
cat came rubbing his comforting presence about
his feet, showing that he had been faithful all
through the long day in which he had not been
noticed. This God-sent lucky chum, that had
brought him the great good fortune, had unmistakably
an air of triumph gleaming from the
depths of his great black pupils, and his beautiful
sleek body assumed an attitude scandalously near
a swagger, as if waiting for this opportunity to
presume on his partnership in this affair, to advise
his master that they had better be getting
home. The miner instantly recognized the justice
of his impertinence and caught him up in his
arms, and they camped right there where they
were through the short, starry night, hugged
close.</p>
<p>At the first faint glimmering of day, the miner
and the cat found their way back to the cabin.
The man had pulled himself together by this time
and had his nerve steadied back into its wonted
control and his brain normal, in good working
order. After his night's rest, in which the calm
had returned to his overwrought imagination, he
was able to meditate reasonably on the good fortune
which began now to assume definite shape.
To convince himself past all doubting, he drew
from his pockets the yellow proof. There was
no doubt about its being the real thing and he
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_57' name='Page_57'>[57]</SPAN></span>
lifted his hat in gratitude to the cat, for this little
prospector had certainly opened up for him the
best lead in the whole country. The magnitude
of what this developed was more than he ever
dreamed could be. It seemed to him that all the
gold that God ever gave to the world was in that
one gulch, and there it lay unappropriated from
end to end. It was like an Aladdin's fairy lamp,
a gift of the gods. Millions were there and all
there was to do was to pick up the yellow lumps.
How this golden placer could have lain there,
hidden in the sand and gravel of this fissure so
long undiscovered, was a mystery that baffled
even the miner's most profound attempts to conjecture.
He had simply to accept his good fortune
with a glad heart, as one of the favored
caresses of the Enchantress of the Hills. His
luck in being the "hundredth man" was, he
claimed, all owing to his wonderful mascot, that
in a time of desperation he had just gone out
and annexed. His mate shared sympathetically
in the sense of well-being in these great days of
success, and must have realized, from the almost
reverent homage that was accorded him, that he
had played some very important part in winning
the game.</p>
<p>And the partners linger and linger, rejoicing
in the big loneliness of this little paradise all
their own, ever happy and without a care, their
cheery hearts growing bigger and bigger in unbroken
friendship. The miner knows that just
"over yonder," beyond the purple twilight, is
the busy world and that he can "clean up" and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_58' name='Page_58'>[58]</SPAN></span>
go back to things and the life of people of affairs
at any moment. Yet he stays on, loving
this life under the sky, of joy and independence,
hardship and adventure, with its splendid achievement,
too much to make any change in the happy
order of things.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_59' name='Page_59'>[59]</SPAN></span></p>
<p class="center b15 p6">
AÏDA AND SAADI</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_61' name='Page_61'>[61]</SPAN></span>
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='Page_60' name='Page_60'></SPAN></span></p>
<div class="figcenter p6">
<ANTIMG src="images/i-047.jpg" width-obs="403" height-obs="172" alt="" /></div>
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