登陆注册
19499400000001

第1章

Chapter I

When history has granted him the justice of perspective, we shall know the American Pioneer as one of the most picturesque of her many figures.Resourceful, self-reliant, bold; adapting himself with fluidity to diverse circumstances and conditions;meeting with equal cheerfulness of confidence and completeness of capability both unknown dangers and the perils by which he has been educated; seizing the useful in the lives of the beasts and men nearest him, and assimilating it with marvellous rapidity; he presents to the world a picture of complete adequacy which it would be difficult to match in any other walk of life.He is a strong man, with a strong man's virtues and a strong man's vices.In him the passions are elemental, the dramas epic, for he lives in the age when men are close to nature, and draw from her their forces.He satisfies his needs direct from the earth.Stripped of all the towns can give him, he merely resorts to a facile substitution.

It becomes an affair of rawhide for leather, buckskin for cloth, venison for canned tomatoes.We feel that his steps are planted on solid earth, for civilizations may crumble without disturbing his magnificent self-poise.In him we perceive dimly his environment.

He has something about him which other men do not possess--a frank clearness of the eye, a swing of the shoulder, a carriage of the hips, a tilt of the hat, an air of muscular well-being which marks him as belonging to the advance guard, whether he wears buckskin, mackinaw, sombrero, or broadcloth.The woods are there, the plains, the rivers.Snow is there, and the line of the prairie.Mountain peaks and still pine forests have impressed themselves subtly; so that when we turn to admire his unconsciously graceful swing, we seem to hear the ax biting the pine, or the prospector's pick tapping the rock.And in his eye is the capability of quiet humor, which is just the quality that the surmounting of many difficulties will give a man.

Like the nature he has fought until he understands, his disposition is at once kindly and terrible.Outside the subtleties of his calling, he sees only red.Relieved of the strenuousness of his occupation, he turns all the force of the wonderful energies that have carried him far where other men would have halted, to channels in which a gentle current makes flood enough.It is the mountain torrent and the canal.Instead of pleasure, he seeks orgies.He runs to wild excesses of drinking, fighting, and carousing--which would frighten most men to sobriety--with a happy, reckless spirit that carries him beyond the limits of even his extraordinary forces.

This is not the moment to judge him.And yet one cannot help admiring the magnificently picturesque spectacle of such energies running riot.The power is still in evidence, though beyond its proper application.

Chapter II

In the network of streams draining the eastern portion of Michigan and known as the Saginaw waters, the great firm of Morrison & Daly had for many years carried on extensive logging operations in the wilderness.The number of their camps was legion, of their employees a multitude.Each spring they had gathered in their capacious booms from thirty to fifty million feet of pine logs.

Now at last, in the early eighties, they reached the end of their holdings.Another winter would finish the cut.Two summers would see the great mills at Beeson Lake dismantled or sold, while Mr.

Daly, the "woods partner" of the combination, would flit away to the scenes of new and perhaps more extensive operations.At this juncture Mr.Daly called to him John Radway, a man whom he knew to possess extensive experience, a little capital, and a desire for more of both.

"Radway," said he, when the two found themselves alone in the mill office, "we expect to cut this year some fifty millions, which will finish our pine holdings in the Saginaw waters.Most of this timber lies over in the Crooked Lake district, and that we expect to put in ourselves.We own, however, five million on the Cass Branch which we would like to log on contract.Would you care to take the job?""How much a thousand do you give?" asked Radway.

"Four dollars," replied the lumberman.

"I'll look at it," replied the jobber.

So Radway got the "descriptions" and a little map divided into townships, sections, and quarter sections; and went out to look at it.He searched until he found a "blaze" on a tree, the marking on which indicated it as the corner of a section.From this corner the boundary lines were blazed at right angles in either direction.

Radway followed the blazed lines.Thus he was able accurately to locate isolated "forties" (forty acres), "eighties," quarter sections, and sections in a primeval wilderness.The feat, however, required considerable woodcraft, an exact sense of direction, and a pocket compass.

These resources were still further drawn upon for the next task.

Radway tramped the woods, hills, and valleys to determine the most practical route over which to build a logging road from the standing timber to the shores of Cass Branch.He found it to be an affair of some puzzlement.The pines stood on a country rolling with hills, deep with pot-holes.It became necessary to dodge in and out, here and there, between the knolls, around or through the swamps, still keeping, however, the same general direction, and preserving always the requisite level or down grade.Radway had no vantage point from which to survey the country.A city man would promptly have lost himself in the tangle; but the woodsman emerged at last on the banks of the stream, leaving behind him a meandering trail of clipped trees that wound, twisted, doubled, and turned, but kept ever to a country without steep hills.From the main road he purposed arteries to tap the most distant parts.

"I'll take it," said he to Daly.

同类推荐
  • 无言童子经

    无言童子经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 大花严长者问佛那罗延力经

    大花严长者问佛那罗延力经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 佛说懈怠耕者经

    佛说懈怠耕者经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 希叟绍昙禅师广录

    希叟绍昙禅师广录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 寒松操禅师语录

    寒松操禅师语录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 医妃策,猫王不好惹

    医妃策,猫王不好惹

    意外横生,她穿越到书里了。相公是九命猫,腹黑是他的本性,霸道是他的专利,无耻是他的标志!为了报复他。某夜,她将他扑倒了,得意地坐在他上面。“你这是要干什么?”某猫有点气愤这种动作。谁料,她却是装做嫣然一笑,“没什么,只是很好奇,你是一只猫,所以想试试你那里到底行不行而已。”她还沉浸在自己的报复快意之中,殊不知,某猫更加腹黑狡猾。他借力翻身,使力把她压在下,就这样,她被他华丽丽地扑倒了。“你要干什么?”她努力瞪着他。他只邪魅一笑,“我倒也想知道,猫和人XXOO之后,会生一个什么东西出来?”闻言,某女在无限后悔之中............
  • 瑶姬女仙:上官皇后

    瑶姬女仙:上官皇后

    桃花坞,桃花庵,桃花庵里桃花仙南有鸢,北有笙,春风十里两不同。太平盛世,人心不古;步步惊心的宫闱闺阁,鲜衣怒马的逍遥江湖,重生而来的她将如何演绎这传奇的一生。东方,东方,我将你的姓氏念了千百遍,你可知是为何?—上官桃花我谢过你为我砚过的墨,可是江湖离敦煌太远,能留便不要走。—东方墨这一生戎马,只为你杀。—雪涟一你永远是我的小仙女。—杨过一人一剑一江湖。—上官名炎一见公子误终生。—魏小白此文不走传统的唯美路线,唯美中笑点不断。
  • 为君解罗裳:妖女倾天下

    为君解罗裳:妖女倾天下

    这东南国,谁人不知,谁人不晓,这要嫁的王爷,是传说中的暴君,杀人不眨眼,嗜血成狂的一个魔君的?圣旨一下,要千家的女儿嫁给东南国国的这个平南王爷,千家一听,仿佛是立马炸开了锅一样的,你不愿意去,我不愿意去,自然,就是由这个痴儿傻儿嫁过去了?
  • 仙界霸主

    仙界霸主

    人界有南霸天,仙界有天霸天,只要有实力,谁不想霸天!看一个平庸小子,如何一步一步,走上仙界霸主的宝座。。。。。本书q群:189825325
  • 万古邪尊

    万古邪尊

    生活失意的大学生王恒穿越异世,觉醒脑中的一缕神缘,获得绝世武力,碾压无数天才,成长为世界的至高神。
  • 童年论

    童年论

    近年来,学界对童年社会学研究的兴趣与日俱增,本书旨在介绍这一研究领域中的主要发展情况。在当代社会学和人类学研究的基础上,本书建立了童年研究与社会学理论之间的联系,呈现了它的历史、政治和文化维度,并通过对童年的社会结构性特征及其日常生活背景的深入分析揭示了童年的社会建构特征。本书并不是根据家庭、学校和玩耍这样的传统类别,而是围绕空间、时间、文化、身体和工作这样的主体来组织内容的。通过这种方式,本书分析了近年来童年研究中新的研究方法的差异,以此为童年研究领域提供有价值的启示。
  • 鱼骨衫奇案

    鱼骨衫奇案

    由三十四篇民间传奇故事组成,收录《乱世海龙皮》、《鱼骨衫奇案》、《鬼莲案》等。
  • 都市修仙

    都市修仙

    沈良辰为了突破境界,弥补心境上的裂痕,却意外重生到了八百年前的都市……
  • 开阔眼界的历史故事

    开阔眼界的历史故事

    五千年的沧桑,五千年的文明,中华大地从荒芜走向繁华,从野蛮走向文明,中华五千年的历史,在这里凝结成一个个智慧与愚昧、生与死、盛与衰的故事。让我们静静地向你诉说吧。
  • 方法总比问题多

    方法总比问题多

    造就一流员工的职场培训读本。优秀的人找方法,平庸的人找借口。没有解决不了的问题,只有不会解决问题的人。没有做不到,只有想不到。思路决定出路,方法总比问题多。阅读本书,让你成为方法高手,做问题的终结者。