Burning Daylight by Jack London

Elijah’s soul had been seared by famine, and he was obsessed by

fear of repeating the experience.

“I jest can’t bear to separate from grub,” he explained. “I know

it’s downright foolishness, but I jest can’t help it. It’s all I

can do to tear myself away from the table when I know I’m full to

bustin’ and ain’t got storage for another bite. I’m going back

to Circle to camp by a cache until I get cured.”

Daylight lingered a few days longer, gathering strength and

arranging his meagre outfit. He planned to go in light, carrying

a pack of seventy-five pounds and making his five dogs pack as

well, Indian fashion, loading them with thirty pounds each.

Depending on the report of Ladue, he intended to follow Bob

Henderson’s example and live practically on straight meat. When

Jack Kearns’ scow, laden with the sawmill from Lake Linderman,

tied up at Sixty Mile, Daylight bundled his outfit and dogs on

board, turned his town-site application over to Elijah to be

filed, and the same day was landed at the mouth of Indian River.

Forty miles up the river, at what had been described to him as

Quartz Creek, he came upon signs of Bob Henderson’s work, and

also at Australia Creek, thirty miles farther on. The weeks came

and went, but Daylight never encountered the other man. However,

he found moose plentiful, and he and his dogs prospered on the

meat diet. He found “pay” that was no more than “wages” on a

dozen surface bars, and from the generous spread of flour gold in

the muck and gravel of a score of creeks, he was more confident

than ever that coarse gold in quantity was waiting to be

unearthed. Often he turned his eyes to the northward ridge of

hills, and pondered if the gold came from them. In the end, he

ascended Dominion Creek to its head, crossed the divide, and came

down on the tributary to the Klondike that was later to be called

Hunker Creek. While on the divide, had he kept the big dome on

his right, he would have come down on the Gold Bottom, so named

by Bob Henderson, whom he would have found at work on it, taking

out the first pay-gold ever panned on the Klondike. Instead,

Daylight continued down Hunker to the Klondike, and on to the

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summer fishing camp of the Indians on the Yukon.

Here for a day he camped with Carmack, a squaw-man, and his

Indian brother-in-law, Skookum Jim, bought a boat, and, with his

dogs on board, drifted down the Yukon to Forty Mile. August was

drawing to a close, the days were growing shorter, and winter was

coming on. Still with unbounded faith in his hunch that a strike

was coming in the Upper Country, his plan was to get together a

party of four or five, and, if that was impossible, at least a

partner, and to pole back up the river before the freeze-up to do

winter prospecting. But the men of Forty Mile were without

faith. The diggings to the westward were good enough for them.

Then it was that Carmack, his brother-in-law, Skookum Jim, and

Cultus Charlie, another Indian, arrived in a canoe at Forty Mile,

went straight to the gold commissioner, and recorded three claims

and a discovery claim on Bonanza Creek. After that, in the

Sourdough Saloon, that night, they exhibited coarse gold to the

sceptical crowd. Men grinned and shook their heads. They had

seen the motions of a gold strike gone through before. This was

too patently a scheme of Harper’s and Joe Ladue’s, trying to

entice prospecting in the vicinity of their town site and trading

post. And who was Carmack? A squaw-man. And who ever heard of

a squaw-man striking anything? And what was Bonanza Creek?

Merely a moose pasture, entering the Klondike just above its

mouth, and known to old-timers as Rabbit Creek. Now if Daylight

or Bob Henderson had recorded claims and shown coarse gold,

they’d known there was something in it. But Carmack, the

squaw-man! And Skookum Jim! And Cultus Charlie! No, no; that

was

asking too much.

Daylight, too, was sceptical, and this despite his faith in the

Upper Country. Had he not, only a few days before, seen Carmack

loafing with his Indians and with never a thought of prospecting?

But at eleven that night, sitting on the edge of his bunk and

unlacing his moccasins, a thought came to him. He put on his

coat and hat and went back to the Sourdough. Carmack was still

there, flashing his coarse gold in the eyes of an unbelieving

generation. Daylight ranged alongside of him and emptied

Carmack’s sack into a blower. This he studied for a long time.

Then, from his own sack, into another blower, he emptied several

ounces of Circle City and Forty Mile gold. Again, for a long

time, he studied and compared. Finally, he pocketed his own

gold, returned Carmack’s, and held up his hand for silence.

“Boys, I want to tell you-all something,” he said. “She’s sure

come–the up-river strike. And I tell you-all, clear and

forcible, this is it. There ain’t never been gold like that in a

blower in this country before. It’s new gold. It’s got more

silver in it. You-all can see it by the color. Carmack’s sure

made a strike. Who-all’s got faith to come along with me?”

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62

There were no volunteers. Instead, laughter and jeers went up.

“Mebbe you got a town site up there,” some one suggested.

“I sure have,” was the retort, “and a third interest in Harper

and Ladue’s. And I can see my corner lots selling out for more

than your hen-scratching ever turned up on Birch Creek.”

“That’s all right, Daylight,” one Curly Parson interposed

soothingly. “You’ve got a reputation, and we know you’re dead

sure on the square. But you’re as likely as any to be mistook on

a flimflam game, such as these loafers is putting up. I ask you

straight: When did Carmack do this here prospecting? You said

yourself he was lying in camp, fishing salmon along with his

Siwash relations, and that was only the other day.”

“And Daylight told the truth,” Carmack interrupted excitedly.

“And I’m telling the truth, the gospel truth. I wasn’t

prospecting. Hadn’t no idea of it. But when Daylight pulls out,

the very same day, who drifts in, down river, on a raft-load of

supplies, but Bob Henderson. He’d come out to Sixty Mile,

planning to go back up Indian River and portage the grub across

the divide between Quartz Creek and Gold Bottom-”

“Where in hell’s Gold Bottom?” Curly Parsons demanded.

“Over beyond Bonanza that was Rabbit Creek,” the squaw-man went

on. “It’s a draw of a big creek that runs into the Klondike.

That’s the way I went up, but I come back by crossing the divide,

keeping along the crest several miles, and dropping down into

Bonanza. ‘Come along with me, Carmack, and get staked,’ says Bob

Henderson to me. ‘I’ve hit it this time, on Gold Bottom. I’ve

took out forty-five ounces already.’ And I went along, Skookum

Jim and Cultus Charlie, too. And we all staked on Gold Bottom.

I come back by Bonanza on the chance of finding a moose. Along

down Bonanza we stopped and cooked grub. I went to sleep, and

what does Skookum Jim do but try his hand at prospecting. He’d

been watching Henderson, you see. He goes right slap up to the

foot of a birch tree, first pan, fills it with dirt, and washes

out more’n a dollar coarse gold. Then he wakes me up, and I goes

at it. I got two and a half the first lick. Then I named the

creek ‘Bonanza,’ staked Discovery, and we come here and

recorded.”

He looked about him anxiously for signs of belief, but found

himself in a circle of incredulous faces–all save Daylight, who

had studied his countenance while he told his story.

“How much is Harper and Ladue givin’ you for manufacturing a

stampede?” some one asked.

“They don’t know nothing about it,” Carmack answered. “I tell

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63

you it’s the God Almighty’s truth. I washed out three ounces in

an hour.”

“And there’s the gold,” Daylight said. “I tell you-all boys they

ain’t never been gold like that in the blower before. Look at

the color of it.”

“A trifle darker,” Curly Parson said. “Most likely Carmack’s

been carrying a couple of silver dollars along in the same sack.

And what’s more, if there’s anything in it, why ain’t Bob

Henderson smoking along to record?”

“He’s up on Gold Bottom,” Carmack explained. “We made the strike

coming back.”

A burst of laughter was his reward.

“Who-all’ll go pardners with me and pull out in a poling-boat

to-morrow for this here Bonanza?” Daylight asked.

No one volunteered.

“Then who-all’ll take a job from me, cash wages in advance, to

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