Roughing It Mark Twain (e manga reader .TXT) đ
- Author: Mark Twain
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All at once the town was thrown into a state of extraordinary excitement. In mining parlance the Wide West had âstruck it rich!â Everybody went to see the new developments, and for some days there was such a crowd of people about the Wide West shaft that a stranger would have supposed there was a mass meeting in session there. No other topic was discussed but the rich strike, and nobody thought or dreamed about anything else. Every man brought away a specimen, ground it up in a hand mortar, washed it out in his horn spoon, and glared speechless upon the marvelous result. It was not hard rock, but black, decomposed stuff which could be crumbled in the hand like a baked potato, and when spread out on a paper exhibited a thick sprinkling of gold and particles of ânativeâ silver. Higbie brought a handful to the cabin, and when he had washed it out his amazement was beyond description. Wide West stock soared skywards. It was said that repeated offers had been made for it at a thousand dollars a foot, and promptly refused. We have all had the âbluesââ âthe mere sky-bluesâ âbut mine were indigo, nowâ âbecause I did not own in the Wide West. The world seemed hollow to me, and existence a grief. I lost my appetite, and ceased to take an interest in anything. Still I had to stay, and listen to other peopleâs rejoicings, because I had no money to get out of the camp with.
The Wide West company put a stop to the carrying away of âspecimens,â and well they might, for every handful of the ore was worth a sum of some consequence. To show the exceeding value of the ore, I will remark that a sixteen-hundred-pounds parcel of it was sold, just as it lay, at the mouth of the shaft, at one dollar a pound; and the man who bought it âpackedâ it on mules a hundred and fifty or two hundred miles, over the mountains, to San Francisco, satisfied that it would yield at a rate that would richly compensate him for his trouble. The Wide West people also commanded their foreman to refuse any but their own operatives permission to enter the mine at any time or for any purpose. I kept up my âblueâ meditations and Higbie kept up a deal of thinking, too, but of a different sort. He puzzled over the ârock,â examined it with a glass, inspected it in different lights and from different points of view, and after each experiment delivered himself, in soliloquy, of one and the same unvarying opinion in the same unvarying formula:
âIt is not Wide West rock!â
He said once or twice that he meant to have a look into the Wide West shaft if he got shot for it. I was wretched, and did not care whether he got a look into it or not. He failed that day, and tried again at night; failed again; got up at dawn and tried, and failed again. Then he lay in ambush in the sage brush hour after hour, waiting for the two or three hands to adjourn to the shade of a boulder for dinner; made a start once, but was prematureâ âone of the men came back for something; tried it again, but when almost at the mouth of the shaft, another of the men rose up from behind the boulder as if to reconnoitre, and he dropped on the ground and lay quiet; presently he crawled on his hands and knees to the mouth of the shaft, gave a quick glance around, then seized the rope and slid down the shaft. He disappeared in the gloom of a âside driftâ just as a head appeared in the mouth of the shaft and somebody shouted âHello!ââ âwhich he did not answer. He was not disturbed any more. An hour later he entered the cabin, hot, red, and ready to burst with smothered excitement, and exclaimed in a stage whisper:
âI knew it! We are rich! Itâs a blind lead!â
I thought the very earth reeled under me. Doubtâ âconvictionâ âdoubt againâ âexultationâ âhope, amazement, belief, unbeliefâ âevery emotion imaginable swept in wild procession through my heart and brain, and I could not speak a word. After a moment or two of this mental fury, I shook myself to rights, and said:
âSay it again!â
âItâs blind lead!â
âCal., letâsâ âletâs burn the houseâ âor kill somebody! Letâs get out where thereâs room to hurrah! But what is the use? It is a hundred times too good to be true.â
âItâs a blind lead, for a million!â âhanging wallâ âfoot wallâ âclay casingsâ âeverything complete!â He swung his hat and gave three cheers, and I cast doubt to the winds and chimed in with a will. For I was worth a million dollars, and did not care âwhether school kept or not!â
But perhaps I ought to explain. A âblind leadâ is a lead or ledge that does not âcrop outâ above the surface. A miner does not know where to look for such leads, but they are often stumbled upon by accident in the course of driving a tunnel or sinking a shaft. Higbie knew the Wide West rock perfectly well, and the more he had examined the new developments the more he was satisfied that the ore could not have come from the Wide West vein. And so had it occurred to him alone, of all the camp, that there was a blind lead down in the shaft, and that even the Wide West people themselves did not suspect it. He was right. When he went down the shaft, he found that the blind lead held its independent way through the Wide West vein, cutting it diagonally, and that it
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