It was at a little mining-camp in
the California Sierras that he first dawned upon me
in all his grotesque sweetness.
I had arrived early in the morning,
but not in time to intercept the friend who was the
object of my visit. He had gone “prospecting,” so
they told me on the river, and would not
probably return until late in the afternoon.
They could not say what direction he had taken; they
could not suggest that I would be likely to find him
if I followed. But it was the general opinion
that I had better wait.
I looked around me. I was standing
upon the bank of the river; and apparently the only
other human beings in the world were my interlocutors,
who were even then just disappearing from my horizon,
down the steep bank, toward the river’s dry bed.
I approached the edge of the bank.
Where could I wait?
Oh! anywhere, down with
them on the river-bar, where they were working, if
I liked. Or I could make myself at home in any
of those cabins that I found lying round loose.
Or perhaps it would be cooler and pleasanter for me
in my friend’s cabin on the hill. Did I
see those three large sugar-pines, and, a little to
the right, a canvas roof and chimney, over the bushes?
Well, that was my friend’s, that was
Dick Sylvester’s cabin. I could stake my
horse in that little hollow, and just hang round there
till he came. I would find some books in the shanty.
I could amuse myself with them or I could play with
the baby.
Do what?
But they had already gone. I
leaned over the bank, and called after their vanishing
figures, “What did you say I could
do?” The answer floated slowly up on the hot,
sluggish air,
“Pla-a-y with the ba-by.”
The lazy echoes took it up, and tossed
it languidly from hill to hill, until Bald Mountain
opposite made some incoherent remark about the baby;
and then all was still.
I must have been mistaken. My
friend was not a man of family; there was not a woman
within forty miles of the river camp; he never was
so passionately devoted to children as to import a
luxury so expensive. I must have been mistaken.
I turned my horse’s head toward
the hill. As we slowly climbed the narrow trail,
the little settlement might have been some exhumed
Pompeiian suburb, so deserted and silent were its habitations.
The open doors plainly disclosed each rudely-furnished
interior, the rough pine table, with the
scant equipage of the morning meal still standing;
the wooden bunk, with its tumbled and dishevelled
blankets. A golden lizard, the very genius of
desolate stillness, had stopped breathless upon the
threshold of one cabin; a squirrel peeped impudently
into the window of another; a woodpecker, with the
general flavor of undertaking which distinguishes
that bird, withheld his sepulchral hammer from the
coffin-lid of the roof on which he was professionally
engaged, as we passed. For a moment I half regretted
that I had not accepted the invitation to the river-bed;
but, the next moment, a breeze swept up the long,
dark canyon, and the waiting files of the pines beyond
bent toward me in salutation. I think my horse
understood, as well as myself, that it was the cabins
that made the solitude human, and therefore unbearable;
for he quickened his pace, and with a gentle trot brought
me to the edge of the wood, and the three pines that
stood like vedettes before the Sylvester outpost.
Unsaddling my horse in the little
hollow, I unslung the long riata from the saddle-bow,
and, tethering him to a young sapling, turned toward
the cabin. But I had gone only a few steps, when
I heard a quick trot behind me; and poor Pomposo,
with every fibre tingling with fear, was at my heels.
I looked hurriedly around. The breeze had died
away; and only an occasional breath from the deep-chested
woods, more like a long sigh than any articulate sound,
or the dry singing of a cicala in the heated canyon,
were to be heard. I examined the ground carefully
for rattlesnakes, but in vain. Yet here was Pomposo
shivering from his arched neck to his sensitive haunches,
his very flanks pulsating with terror. I soothed
him as well as I could, and then walked to the edge
of the wood, and peered into its dark recesses.
The bright flash of a bird’s wing, or the quick
dart of a squirrel, was all I saw. I confess
it was with something of superstitious expectation
that I again turned towards the cabin. A fairy-child,
attended by Titania and her train, lying in an expensive
cradle, would not have surprised me: a Sleeping
Beauty, whose awakening would have repeopled these
solitudes with life and energy, I am afraid I began
to confidently look for, and would have kissed without
hesitation.
But I found none of these. Here
was the evidence of my friend’s taste and refinement,
in the hearth swept scrupulously clean, in the picturesque
arrangement of the fur-skins that covered the floor
and furniture, and the striped serape lying on the
wooden couch. Here were the walls fancifully
papered with illustrations from “The London News;”
here was the woodcut portrait of Mr. Emerson over the
chimney, quaintly framed with blue-jays’ wings;
here were his few favorite books on the swinging-shelf;
and here, lying upon the couch, the latest copy of
“Punch.” Dear Dick! The flour-sack
was sometimes empty; but the gentle satirist seldom
missed his weekly visit.
I threw myself on the couch, and tried
to read. But I soon exhausted my interest in
my friend’s library, and lay there staring through
the open door on the green hillside beyond. The
breeze again sprang up; and a delicious coolness,
mixed with the rare incense of the woods, stole through
the cabin. The slumbrous droning of bumblebees
outside the canvas roof, the faint cawing of rooks
on the opposite mountain, and the fatigue of my morning
ride, began to droop my eyelids. I pulled the
serape over me, as a precaution against the freshening
mountain breeze, and in a few moments was asleep.
I do not remember how long I slept.
I must have been conscious, however, during my slumber,
of my inability to keep myself covered by the serape;
for I awoke once or twice, clutching it with a despairing
hand as it was disappearing over the foot of the couch.
Then I became suddenly aroused to the fact that my
efforts to retain it were resisted by some equally
persistent force; and, letting it go, I was horrified
at seeing it swiftly drawn under the couch. At
this point I sat up, completely awake; for immediately
after, what seemed to be an exaggerated muff began
to emerge from under the couch. Presently it
appeared fully, dragging the serape after it.
There was no mistaking it now: it was a baby-bear, a
mere suckling, it was true, a helpless roll of fat
and fur, but unmistakably a grizzly cub!
I cannot recall any thing more irresistibly
ludicrous than its aspect as it slowly raised its
small, wondering eyes to mine. It was so much
taller on its haunches than its shoulders, its forelegs
were so disproportionately small, that, in walking,
its hind-feet invariably took precedence. It
was perpetually pitching forward over its pointed,
inoffensive nose, and recovering itself always, after
these involuntary somersaults with the gravest astonishment.
To add to its preposterous appearance, one of its
hind-feet was adorned by a shoe of Sylvester’s,
into which it had accidentally and inextricably stepped.
As this somewhat impeded its first impulse to fly,
it turned to me; and then, possibly recognizing in
the stranger the same species as its master, it paused.
Presently it slowly raised itself on its hind-legs,
and vaguely and deprecatingly waved a baby-paw, fringed
with little hooks of steel. I took the paw, and
shook it gravely. From that moment we were friends.
The little affair of the serape was forgotten.
Nevertheless, I was wise enough to
cement our friendship by an act of delicate courtesy.
Following the direction of his eyes, I had no difficulty
in finding on a shelf near the ridge-pole the sugar-box
and the square lumps of white sugar that even the
poorest miner is never without. While he was
eating them, I had time to examine him more closely.
His body was a silky, dark, but exquisitely-modulated
gray, deepening to black in his paws and muzzle.
His fur was excessively long, thick, and soft as eider-down;
the cushions of flesh beneath perfectly infantine
in their texture and contour. He was so very young,
that the palms of his half-human feet were still tender
as a baby’s. Except for the bright blue,
steely hooks, half sheathed in his little toes, there
was not a single harsh outline or detail in his plump
figure. He was as free from angles as one of
Leda’s offspring. Your caressing hand sank
away in his fur with dreamy languor. To look at
him long was an intoxication of the senses; to pat
him was a wild delirium; to embrace him, an utter
demoralization of the intellectual faculties.
When he had finished the sugar, he
rolled out of the door with a half-diffident, half-inviting
look in his eyes as if he expected me to follow.
I did so; but the sniffing and snorting of the keen-scented
Pomposo in the hollow not only revealed the cause of
his former terror, but decided me to take another
direction. After a moment’s hesitation,
he concluded to go with me, although I am satisfied,
from a certain impish look in his eye, that he fully
understood and rather enjoyed the fright of Pomposo.
As he rolled along at my side, with a gait not unlike
a drunken sailor, I discovered that his long hair concealed
a leather collar around his neck, which bore for its
legend the single word “Baby!” I recalled
the mysterious suggestion of the two miners. This,
then, was the “baby” with whom I was to
“play.”
How we “played;” how Baby
allowed me to roll him down hill, crawling and puffing
up again each time with perfect good-humor; how he
climbed a young sapling after my Panama hat, which
I had “shied” into one of the topmost
branches; how, after getting it, he refused to descend
until it suited his pleasure; how, when he did come
down, he persisted in walking about on three legs,
carrying my hat, a crushed and shapeless mass, clasped
to his breast with the remaining one; how I missed
him at last, and finally discovered him seated on
a table in one of the tenantless cabins, with a bottle
of sirup between his paws, vainly endeavoring to extract
its contents, these and other details of
that eventful day I shall not weary the reader with
now. Enough that, when Dick Sylvester returned,
I was pretty well fagged out, and the baby was rolled
up, an immense bolster, at the foot of the couch,
asleep. Sylvester’s first words after our
greeting were,
“Isn’t he delicious?”
“Perfectly. Where did you get him?”
“Lying under his dead mother,
five miles from here,” said Dick, lighting his
pipe. “Knocked her over at fifty yards:
perfectly clean shot; never moved afterwards.
Baby crawled out, scared, but unhurt. She must
have been carrying him in her mouth, and dropped him
when she faced me; for he wasn’t more than three
days old, and not steady on his pins. He takes
the only milk that comes to the settlement, brought
up by Adams Express at seven o’clock every morning.
They say he looks like me. Do you think so?”
asked Dick with perfect gravity, stroking his hay-colored
mustachios, and evidently assuming his best expression.
I took leave of the baby early the
next morning in Sylvester’s cabin, and, out
of respect to Pomposo’s feelings, rode by
without any postscript of expression. But the
night before I had made Sylvester solemnly swear,
that, in the event of any separation between himself
and Baby, it should revert to me. “At the
same time,” he had added, “it’s
only fair to say that I don’t think of dying
just yet, old fellow; and I don’t know of any
thing else that would part the cub and me.”
Two months after this conversation,
as I was turning over the morning’s mail at
my office in San Francisco, I noticed a letter bearing
Sylvester’s familiar hand. But it was post-marked
“Stockton,” and I opened it with some
anxiety at once. Its contents were as follows:
“O frank! Don’t
you remember what we agreed upon anent the baby?
Well, consider me as dead for the next six months,
or gone where cubs can’t follow me, East.
I know you love the baby; but do you think, dear boy, now,
really, do you think you could be a father to
it? Consider this well. You are young, thoughtless,
well-meaning enough; but dare you take upon yourself
the functions of guide, genius, or guardian to one
so young and guileless? Could you be the Mentor
to this Telemachus? Think of the temptations
of a metropolis. Look at the question well, and
let me know speedily; for I’ve got him as far
as this place, and he’s kicking up an awful
row in the hotel-yard, and rattling his chain like
a maniac. Let me know by telegraph at once.
“Sylvester.
“P.S. Of course he’s
grown a little, and doesn’t take things always
as quietly as he did. He dropped rather heavily
on two of Watson’s ‘purps’ last
week, and snatched old Watson himself bald headed,
for interfering. You remember Watson? For
an intelligent man, he knows very little of California
fauna. How are you fixed for bears on Montgomery
Street, I mean in regard to corrals and things?
S.
“P.P.S. He’s
got some new tricks. The boys have been teaching
him to put up his hands with them. He slings
an ugly left. S.”
I am afraid that my desire to possess
myself of Baby overcame all other considerations;
and I telegraphed an affirmative at once to Sylvester.
When I reached my lodgings late that afternoon, my
landlady was awaiting me with a telegram. It
was two lines from Sylvester,
“All right. Baby goes down
on night-boat. Be a father to him. S.”
It was due, then, at one o’clock
that night. For a moment I was staggered at my
own precipitation. I had as yet made no preparations,
had said nothing to my landlady about her new guest.
I expected to arrange every thing in time; and now,
through Sylvester’s indecent haste, that time
had been shortened twelve hours.
Something, however, must be done at
once. I turned to Mrs. Brown. I had great
reliance in her maternal instincts: I had that
still greater reliance common to our sex in the general
tender-heartedness of pretty women. But I confess
I was alarmed. Yet, with a feeble smile, I tried
to introduce the subject with classical ease and lightness.
I even said, “If Shakspeare’s Athenian
clown, Mrs. Brown, believed that a lion among ladies
was a dreadful thing, what must” But
here I broke down; for Mrs. Brown, with the awful
intuition of her sex, I saw at once was more occupied
with my manner than my speech. So I tried a business
brusquerie, and, placing the telegram in her hand,
said hurriedly, “We must do something about
this at once. It’s perfectly absurd; but
he will be here at one to-night. Beg thousand
pardons; but business prevented my speaking before” and
paused out of breath and courage.
Mrs. Brown read the telegram gravely,
lifted her pretty eyebrows, turned the paper over,
and looked on the other side, and then, in a remote
and chilling voice, asked me if she understood me
to say that the mother was coming also.
“Oh, dear no!” I exclaimed
with considerable relief. “The mother is
dead, you know. Sylvester, that is my friend who
sent this, shot her when the baby was only three days
old.” But the expression of Mrs. Brown’s
face at this moment was so alarming, that I saw that
nothing but the fullest explanation would save me.
Hastily, and I fear not very coherently, I told her
all.
She relaxed sweetly. She said
I had frightened her with my talk about lions.
Indeed, I think my picture of poor Baby, albeit a trifle
highly colored, touched her motherly heart. She
was even a little vexed at what she called Sylvester’s
“hard-heartedness.” Still I was not
without some apprehension. It was two months
since I had seen him; and Sylvester’s vague
allusion to his “slinging an ugly left”
pained me. I looked at sympathetic little Mrs.
Brown; and the thought of Watson’s pups covered
me with guilty confusion.
Mrs. Brown had agreed to sit up with
me until he arrived. One o’clock came,
but no Baby. Two o’clock, three o’clock,
passed. It was almost four when there was a wild
clatter of horses’ hoofs outside, and with a
jerk a wagon stopped at the door. In an instant
I had opened it, and confronted a stranger. Almost
at the same moment, the horses attempted to run away
with the wagon.
The stranger’s appearance was,
to say the least, disconcerting. His clothes
were badly torn and frayed; his linen sack hung from
his shoulders like a herald’s apron; one of
his hands was bandaged; his face scratched; and there
was no hat on his dishevelled head. To add to
the general effect, he had evidently sought relief
from his woes in drink; and he swayed from side to
side as he clung to the door-handle, and, in a very
thick voice, stated that he had “suthin”
for me outside. When he had finished, the horses
made another plunge.
Mrs. Brown thought they must be frightened at something.
“Frightened!” laughed
the stranger with bitter irony. “Oh, no!
Hossish ain’t frightened! On’y ran
away four timesh comin’ here. Oh, no!
Nobody’s frightened. Every thin’s
all ri’. Ain’t it, Bill?” he
said, addressing the driver. “On’y
been overboard twish; knocked down a hatchway once.
Thash nothin’! On’y two men unner
doctor’s han’s at Stockton. Thash
nothin’! Six hunner dollarsh cover all dammish.”
I was too much disheartened to reply,
but moved toward the wagon. The stranger eyed
me with an astonishment that almost sobered him.
“Do you reckon to tackle that
animile yourself?” he asked, as he surveyed
me from head to foot.
I did not speak, but, with an appearance
of boldness I was far from feeling, walked to the
wagon, and called “Baby!”
“All ri’. Cash loose them straps,
Bill, and stan’ clear.”
The straps were cut loose; and Baby,
the remorseless, the terrible, quietly tumbled to
the ground, and, rolling to my side, rubbed his foolish
head against me.
I think the astonishment of the two
men was beyond any vocal expression. Without
a word, the drunken stranger got into the wagon, and
drove away.
And Baby? He had grown, it is
true, a trifle larger; but he was thin, and bore the
marks of evident ill usage. His beautiful coat
was matted and unkempt; and his claws, those bright
steel hooks, had been ruthlessly pared to the quick.
His eyes were furtive and restless; and the old expression
of stupid good humor had changed to one of intelligent
distrust. His intercourse with mankind had evidently
quickened his intellect, without broadening his moral
nature.
I had great difficulty in keeping
Mrs. Brown from smothering him in blankets, and ruining
his digestion with the delicacies of her larder; but
I at last got him completely rolled up in the corner
of my room, and asleep. I lay awake some time
later with plans for his future. I finally determined
to take him to Oakland where I had built
a little cottage, and always spent my Sundays the
very next day. And in the midst of a rosy picture
of domestic felicity, I fell asleep.
When I awoke, it was broad day.
My eyes at once sought the corner where Baby had been
lying; but he was gone. I sprang from the bed,
looked under it, searched the closet, but in vain.
The door was still locked; but there were the marks
of his blunted claws upon the sill of the window that
I had forgotten to close. He had evidently escaped
that way. But where? The window opened upon
a balcony, to which the only other entrance was through
the hall. He must be still in the house.
My hand was already upon the bell-rope;
but I stayed it in time. If he had not made himself
known, why should I disturb the house? I dressed
myself hurriedly, and slipped into the hall. The
first object that met my eyes was a boot lying upon
the stairs. It bore the marks of Baby’s
teeth; and, as I looked along the hall, I saw too plainly
that the usual array of freshly-blackened boots and
shoes before the lodgers’ doors was not there.
As I ascended the stairs, I found another, but with
the blacking carefully licked off. On the third
floor were two or three more boots, slightly mouthed;
but at this point Baby’s taste for blacking had
evidently palled. A little farther on was a ladder,
leading to an open scuttle. I mounted the ladder,
and reached the flat roof, that formed a continuous
level over the row of houses to the corner of the street.
Behind the chimney on the very last roof, something
was lurking. It was the fugitive Baby. He
was covered with dust and dirt and fragments of glass.
But he was sitting on his hind-legs, and was eating
an enormous slab of peanut candy, with a look of mingled
guilt and infinite satisfaction. He even, I fancied,
slightly stroked his stomach with his disengaged fore-paw
as I approached. He knew that I was looking for
him; and the expression of his eye said plainly, “The
past, at least, is secure.”
I hurried him, with the evidences
of his guilt, back to the scuttle, and descended on
tiptoe to the floor beneath. Providence favored
us: I met no one on the stairs; and his own cushioned
tread was inaudible. I think he was conscious
of the dangers of detection; for he even forebore
to breathe, or much less chew the last mouthful he
had taken; and he skulked at my side with the sirup
dropping from his motionless jaws. I think he
would have silently choked to death just then, for
my sake; and it was not until I had reached my room
again, and threw myself panting on the sofa, that
I saw how near strangulation he had been. He gulped
once or twice apologetically, and then walked to the
corner of his own accord, and rolled himself up like
an immense sugarplum, sweating remorse and treacle
at every pore.
I locked him in when I went to breakfast,
when I found Mrs. Brown’s lodgers in a state
of intense excitement over certain mysterious events
of the night before, and the dreadful revelations of
the morning. It appeared that burglars had entered
the block from the scuttles; that, being suddenly
alarmed, they had quitted our house without committing
any depredation, dropping even the boots they had collected
in the halls; but that a desperate attempt had been
made to force the till in the confectioner’s
shop on the corner, and that the glass show-cases had
been ruthlessly smashed. A courageous servant
in N had seen a masked burglar, on his hands and
knees, attempting to enter their scuttle; but, on
her shouting, “Away wid yees!” he instantly
fled.
I sat through this recital with cheeks
that burned uncomfortably; nor was I the less embarrassed,
on raising my eyes, to meet Mrs. Brown’s fixed
curiously and mischievously on mine. As soon as
I could make my escape from the table, I did so, and,
running rapidly up stairs, sought refuge from any
possible inquiry in my own room. Baby was still
asleep in the corner. It would not be safe to
remove him until the lodgers had gone down town; and
I was revolving in my mind the expediency of keeping
him until night veiled his obtrusive eccentricity from
the public eye, when there came a cautious tap at
my door. I opened it. Mrs. Brown slipped
in quietly, closed the door softly, stood with her
back against it, and her hand on the knob, and beckoned
me mysteriously towards her. Then she asked in
a low voice,
“Is hair-dye poisonous?”
I was too confounded to speak.
“Oh, do! you know what I mean,”
she said impatiently. “This stuff.”
She produced suddenly from behind her a bottle with
a Greek label so long as to run two or three times
spirally around it from top to bottom. “He
says it isn’t a dye: it’s a vegetable
preparation, for invigorating”
“Who says?” I asked despairingly.
“Why, Mr. Parker, of course!”
said Mrs. Brown severely, with the air of having repeated
the name a great many times, “the
old gentleman in the room above. The simple question
I want to ask,” she continued with the calm
manner of one who has just convicted another of gross
ambiguity of language, “is only this: If
some of this stuff were put in a saucer, and left
carelessly on the table, and a child, or a baby, or
a cat, or any young animal, should come in at the
window, and drink it up, a whole saucer
full, because it had a sweet taste, would
it be likely to hurt them?”
I cast an anxious glance at Baby,
sleeping peacefully in the corner, and a very grateful
one at Mrs. Brown, and said I didn’t think it
would.
“Because,” said Mrs. Brown
loftily as she opened the door, “I thought,
if it was poisonous, remedies might be used in time.
Because,” she added suddenly, abandoning her
lofty manner, and wildly rushing to the corner with
a frantic embrace of the unconscious Baby, “because,
if any nasty stuff should turn its booful hair a horrid
green, or a naughty pink, it would break its own muzzer’s
heart, it would!”
But, before I could assure Mrs. Brown
of the inefficiency of hair-dye as an internal application,
she had darted from the room.
That night, with the secrecy of defaulters,
Baby and I decamped from Mrs. Brown’s.
Distrusting the too emotional nature of that noble
animal, the horse, I had recourse to a handcart, drawn
by a stout Irishman, to convey my charge to the ferry.
Even then, Baby refused to go, unless I walked by
the cart, and at times rode in it.
“I wish,” said Mrs. Brown,
as she stood by the door, wrapped in an immense shawl,
and saw us depart, “I wish it looked less solemn, less
like a pauper’s funeral.”
I must admit, that, as I walked by
the cart that night, I felt very much as if I were
accompanying the remains of some humble friend to his
last resting-place; and that, when I was obliged to
ride in it, I never could entirely convince myself
that I was not helplessly overcome by liquor, or the
victim of an accident, en route to the hospital.
But at last we reached the ferry. On the boat,
I think no one discovered Baby, except a drunken man,
who approached me to ask for a light for his cigar,
but who suddenly dropped it, and fled in dismay to
the gentlemen’s cabin, where his incoherent
ravings were luckily taken for the earlier indications
of delirium tremens.
It was nearly midnight when I reached
my little cottage on the outskirts of Oakland; and
it was with a feeling of relief and security that I
entered, locked the door, and turned him loose in the
hall, satisfied that henceforward his depredations
would be limited to my own property. He was very
quiet that night; and after he had tried to mount the
hatrack, under the mistaken impression that it was
intended for his own gymnastic exercise, and knocked
all the hats off, he went peaceably to sleep on the
rug.
In a week, with the exercise afforded
him by the run of a large, carefully-boarded enclosure,
he recovered his health, strength, spirits, and much
of his former beauty. His presence was unknown
to my neighbors, although it was noticeable that horses
invariably “shied” in passing to the windward
of my house, and that the baker and milkman had great
difficulty in the delivery of their wares in the morning,
and indulged in unseemly and unnecessary profanity
in so doing.
At the end of the week, I determined
to invite a few friends to see the Baby, and to that
purpose wrote a number of formal invitations.
After descanting, at some length, on the great expense
and danger attending his capture and training, I offered
a programme of the performance, of the “Infant
Phenomenon of Sierran Solitudes,” drawn up into
the highest professional profusion of alliteration
and capital letters. A few extracts will give
the reader some idea of his educational progress:
1. He will, rolled up in a Round
Ball, roll down the Wood-Shed Rapidly, illustrating
His manner of Escaping from His Enemy in His Native
Wilds.
2. He will Ascend the Well-Pole,
and remove from the Very Top a Hat, and as much of
the Crown and Brim thereof, as May be Permitted.
3. He will perform in a pantomime,
descriptive of the Conduct of the Big Bear, The Middle-Sized
Bear, and The Little Bear of the Popular Nursery Legend.
4. He will shake his chain Rapidly,
showing his Manner of striking Dismay and Terror in
the Breasts of Wanderers in Ursine Wildernesses.
The morning of the exhibition came;
but an hour before the performance the wretched Baby
was missing. The Chinese cook could not indicate
his whereabouts. I searched the premises thoroughly;
and then, in despair, took my hat, and hurried out
into the narrow lane that led toward the open fields
and the woods beyond. But I found no trace nor
track of Baby Sylvester. I returned, after an
hour’s fruitless search, to find my guests already
assembled on the rear veranda. I briefly recounted
my disappointment, my probable loss, and begged their
assistance.
“Why,” said a Spanish
friend, who prided himself on his accurate knowledge
of English, to Barker, who seemed to be trying vainly
to rise from his reclining position on the veranda,
“why do you not disengage yourself from the
veranda of our friend? And why, in the name of
Heaven, do you attach to yourself so much of this
thing, and make to yourself such unnecessary contortion?
Ah,” he continued, suddenly withdrawing one
of his own feet from the veranda with an evident effort,
“I am myself attached! Surely it is something
here!”
It evidently was. My guests were
all rising with difficulty. The floor of the
veranda was covered with some glutinous substance.
It was sirup!
I saw it all in a flash. I ran
to the barn. The keg of “golden sirup,”
purchased only the day before, lay empty upon the floor.
There were sticky tracks all over the enclosure, but
still no Baby.
“There’s something moving
the ground over there by that pile of dirt,”
said Barker.
He was right. The earth was shaking
in one corner of the enclosure like an earthquake.
I approached cautiously. I saw, what I had not
before noticed, that the ground was thrown up; and
there, in the middle of an immense grave-like cavity,
crouched Baby Sylvester, still digging, and slowly
but surely sinking from sight in a mass of dust and
clay.
What were his intentions? Whether
he was stung by remorse, and wished to hide himself
from my reproachful eyes, or whether he was simply
trying to dry his sirup-besmeared coat, I never shall
know; for that day, alas! was his last with me.
He was pumped upon for two hours,
at the end of which time he still yielded a thin treacle.
He was then taken, and carefully inwrapped in blankets,
and locked up in the store-room. The next morning
he was gone! The lower portion of the window
sash and pane were gone too. His successful experiments
on the fragile texture of glass at the confectioner’s,
on the first day of his entrance to civilization, had
not been lost upon him. His first essay at combining
cause and effect ended in his escape.
Where he went, where he hid, who captured
him, if he did not succeed in reaching the foothills
beyond Oakland, even the offer of a large reward,
backed by the efforts of an intelligent police, could
not discover. I never saw him again from that
day until
Did I see him? I was in a horse-car
on Sixth Avenue, a few days ago, when the horses suddenly
became unmanageable, and left the track for the sidewalk,
amid the oaths and exécrations of the driver.
Immediately in front of the car a crowd had gathered
around two performing bears and a showman. One
of the animals, thin, emaciated, and the mere wreck
of his native strength, attracted my attention.
I endeavored to attract his. He turned a pair
of bleared, sightless eyes in my direction; but there
was no sign of recognition. I leaned from the
car-window, and called softly, “Baby!”
But he did not heed. I closed the window.
The car was just moving on, when he suddenly turned,
and, either by accident or design, thrust a callous
paw through the glass.
“It’s worth a dollar and
half to put in a new pane,” said the conductor,
“if folks will play with bears!”