Everybody must wait till next June.”
It was well that this warning was plainly uttered, for the
adventurous spirits of Montana instantly took fire. Nothing else was
talked of by the men on the street and in the trains. Even my brother
said, “I wish I could go.”
“But you can't,” I argued. “It is time you started for New York.
Herne will drop you if you don't turn up for rehearsal in September.”
Reluctantly agreeing to this, he turned his face toward the East
whilst I kept on toward Seattle, to visit my classmate Burton Babcock,
who was living in a village on Puget Sound.
The coast towns were humming with mining news and mining plans. The
word “Klondike” blazed out on banners, on shop windows and on brick
walls. Alert and thrifty merchants at once began to advertise Klondike
shoes, Klondike coats, Klondike camp goods. Hundreds of Klondike
exploring companies were being organized. In imagination each
shop-keeper saw the gold seekers of the world in line of march, their
faces set toward Seattle and the Sound. Every sign indicated a boom.
This swift leaping to grasp an opportunity was characteristically
American, and I would have gladly taken part in the play, but alas! my
Grant history was still unfinished, and I had already overstayed my
vacation limit. I should have returned at once, but my friend Babcock
was expecting me to visit him, and this I did.
Anacortes (once a port of vast pretentions), was, at this time, a
boom-town in decay, and Burton whom I had not seen for ten years,
seemed equally forlorn. After trying his hand at several professions,
he had finally drifted to this place, and was living alone in a rude
cabin, camping like a woodsman. Being without special training in any
trade, he had fallen into competition with the lowest kind of unskilled
labor.
Like my Uncle David, another unsuccessful explorer, he had grown old
before his time, and for a few minutes I could detect in him nothing of
the lithe youth I had known at school on the Iowa prairie twenty years
before. Shaggy of beard, wrinkled and bent he seemed already an old
man.
By severest toil in the mills and in the forest he had become the
owner of two small houses on a ragged street—these and a timber claim
on the Skagit River formed his entire fortune.
Though careless of dress and hard of hand, his speech remained that
of the thinker, and much of his reading was still along high,
philosophical lines. He had been a singular youth, and he had developed
into a still more singular man. With an instinctive love of the forest,
he had become a daring and experienced mountaineer. As he described to
me his solitary trips over the high Cascades I was reminded of John
Muir, for he, too, often spent weeks in the high peaks above his claim
with only such outfit as he could carry on his back.
“What do you do it for?” I asked. “Are you gold-hunting?”
With a soft chuckle he answered, “Oh, no; I do it just for the fun
of it. I love to move around up there, alone, above timber line. It's
beautiful up there.”
Naturally, I recalled the scenes of our boyhood. I spoke of the Burr
Oak Lyceums, of our life at the Osage Seminary, and of the boys and
girls we had loved, but he was not disposed, at the moment, to dwell on
them or on the past. His heart (I soon discovered) was aflame with
desire to join the rush of gold-seekers. “I wish you would grubstake
me,” he timidly suggested. “I'd like to try my hand at digging gold in
the Klondike.”
“It's too late in the season,” I replied. “Wait till spring. Wait
till I finish my history of Grant and I'll go in with you.”
With this arrangement (which on my part was more than half a jest) I
left him and started homeward by way of Lake MacDonald, the Blackfoot
Reservation and Fort Benton, my mind teeming with subjects for poems,
short stories and novels. My vacation was over. Aspiring vaguely to
qualify as the fictionist of this region, I was eager to be at work.
Here was my next and larger field. As my neighbors in Iowa and Dakota
were moving on into these more splendid spaces, so now I resolved to
follow them and be their chronicler.
This trip completed my conversion. I resolved to preempt a place in
the history of the great Northwest which was at once a wilderness and a
cosmopolis, for in it I found men and women from many lands, drawn to
the mountains in search of health, or recreation, or gold. I perceived
that almost any character I could imagine could be verified in this
amazing mixture.
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