Burning Daylight by Jack London

outlook, it was all very well to toss an ante away in a night’s

frolic. That was what he had done the night of the poker-game in

Circle City when he lost fifty thousand–all that he possessed.

But he had looked on that fifty thousand as a mere ante. When it

came to millions, it was different. Such a fortune was a stake,

and was not to be sown on bar-room floors, literally sown, flung

broadcast out of the moosehide sacks by drunken millionaires

who had lost all sense of proportion. There was McMann, who ran

up a single bar-room bill of thirty-eight thousand dollars; and

Jimmie the Rough, who spent one hundred thousand a month for four

months in riotous living, and then fell down drunk in the snow

one March night and was frozen to death; and Swiftwater Bill,

who, after spending three valuable claims in an extravagance of

debauchery, borrowed three thousand dollars with which to leave

the country, and who, out of this sum, because the lady-love that

had jilted him liked eggs, cornered the one hundred and ten dozen

eggs on the Dawson market, paying twenty-four dollars a dozen for

them and promptly feeding them to the wolf-dogs.

Champagne sold at from forty to fifty dollars a quart, and

canned oyster stew at fifteen dollars. Daylight indulged in no

such luxuries. He did not mind treating a bar-room of men to

whiskey at fifty cents a drink, but there was somewhere in his

own extravagant nature a sense of fitness and arithmetic that

revolted against paying fifteen dollars for the contents of an

oyster can. On the other hand, he possibly spent more money in

relieving hard-luck cases than did the wildest of the new

millionaires on insane debauchery. Father Judge, of the

hospital, could have told of far more important donations than

that first ten sacks of flour. And old-timers who came to

Daylight invariably went away relieved according to their need.

But fifty dollars for a quart of fizzy champagne! That was

appalling.

And yet he still, on occasion, made one of his old-time

hell-roaring nights. But he did so for different reasons.

First, it was expected of him because it had been his way in the

old days. And second, he could afford it. But he no longer

cared quite so much for that form of diversion. He had

developed, in a new way, the taste for power. It had become a

lust with him. By far the wealthiest miner in Alaska, he wanted

to be still wealthier. It was a big game he was playing in, and

he liked it better than any other game. In a way, the part he

played was creative. He was doing something. And at no time,

striking another chord of his nature, could he take the joy in a

million-dollar Eldorado dump that was at all equivalent to the

joy he took in watching his two sawmills working and the big down

river log-rafts swinging into the bank in the big eddy just above

Moosehide Mountain. Gold, even on the scales, was, after all, an

Burning Daylight

74

abstraction. It represented things and the power to do. But the

sawmills were the things themselves, concrete and tangible, and

they were things that were a means to the doing of more things.

They were dreams come true, hard and indubitable realizations of

fairy gossamers.

With the summer rush from the Outside came special correspondents

for the big newspapers and magazines, and one and all, using

unlimited space, they wrote Daylight up; so that, so far as the

world was concerned, Daylight loomed the largest figure in

Alaska. Of course, after several months, the world became

interested in the Spanish War, and forgot all about him; but in

the Klondike itself Daylight still remained the most prominent

figure. Passing along the streets of Dawson, all heads turned to

follow him, and in the saloons chechaquos watched him awesomely,

scarcely taking their eyes from him as long as he remained in

their range of vision. Not alone was he the richest man in the

country, but he was Burning Daylight, the pioneer, the man who,

almost in the midst of antiquity of that young land, had crossed

the Chilcoot and drifted down the Yukon to meet those elder

giants, Al Mayo and Jack McQuestion. He was the Burning Daylight

of scores of wild adventures, the man who carried word to the

ice-bound whaling fleet across the tundra wilderness to the

Arctic Sea, who raced the mail from Circle to Salt Water and back

again in sixty days, who saved the whole Tanana tribe from

perishing in the winter of ’91–in short, the man who smote the

chechaquos’ imaginations more violently than any other dozen men

rolled into one.

He had the fatal facility for self-advertisement. Things he did,

no matter how adventitious or spontaneous, struck the popular

imagination as remarkable. And the latest thing he had done was

always on men’s lips, whether it was being first in the

heartbreaking stampede to Danish Creek, in killing the record

baldface grizzly over on Sulphur Creek, or in winning the

single-paddle canoe race on the Queen’s Birthday, after being

forced to participate at the last moment by the failure of the

sourdough representative to appear. Thus, one night in the

Moosehorn, he locked horns with Jack Kearns in the long-promised

return game of poker. The sky and eight o’clock in the morning

were made the limits, and at the close of the game Daylight’s

winnings were two hundred and thirty thousand dollars. To Jack

Kearns, already a several-times millionaire, this loss was not

vital. But the whole community was thrilled by the size of the

stakes, and each one of the dozen correspondents in the field

sent out a sensational article.

CHAPTER XII

Despite his many sources of revenue, Daylight’s pyramiding kept

him pinched for cash throughout the first winter. The

pay-gravel, thawed on bed-rock and hoisted to the surface,

immediately froze again. Thus his dumps, containing several

Burning Daylight

75

millions of gold, were inaccessible. Not until the returning sun

thawed the dumps and melted the water to wash them was he able to

handle the gold they contained. And then he found himself with a

surplus of gold, deposited in the two newly organized banks; and

he was promptly besieged by men and groups of men to enlist his

capital in their enterprises.

But he elected to play his own game, and he entered combinations

only when they were generally defensive or offensive. Thus,

though he had paid the highest wages, he joined the Mine-owners’

Association, engineered the fight, and effectually curbed the

growing insubordination of the wage-earners. Times had changed.

The old days were gone forever. This was a new era, and

Daylight, the wealthy mine-owner, was loyal to his class

affiliations. It was true, the old-timers who worked for him, in

order to be saved from the club of the organized owners, were

made foremen over the gang of chechaquos; but this, with

Daylight, was a matter of heart, not head. In his heart he could

not forget the old days, while with his head he played the

economic game according to the latest and most practical methods.

But outside of such group-combinations of exploiters, he refused

to bind himself to any man’s game. He was playing a great lone

hand, and he needed all his money for his own backing. The newly

founded stock-exchange interested him keenly. He had never

before seen such an institution, but he was quick to see its

virtues and to utilize it. Most of all, it was gambling, and on

many an occasion not necessary for the advancement of his own

schemes, he, as he called it, went the stock-exchange a flutter,

out of sheer wantonness and fun.

“It sure beats faro,” was his comment one day, when, after

keeping the Dawson speculators in a fever for a week by alternate

bulling and bearing, he showed his hand and cleaned up what would

have been a fortune to any other man.

Other men, having made their strike, had headed south for the

States, taking a furlough from the grim Arctic battle. But,

asked when he was going Outside, Daylight always laughed and said

when he had finished playing his hand. He also added that a man

was a fool to quit a game just when a winning hand had been dealt

him.

It was held by the thousands of hero-worshipping chechaquos that

Daylight was a man absolutely without fear. But Bettles and Dan

MacDonald and other sourdoughs shook their heads and laughed as

they mentioned women. And they were right. He had always been

afraid of them from the time, himself a lad of seventeen, when

Queen Anne, of Juneau, made open and ridiculous love to him. For

that matter, he never had known women. Born in a mining-camp

where they were rare and mysterious, having no sisters, his

mother dying while he was an infant, he had never been in contact

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