[The PIONEER,
June, 1855]
BIRTH STABBING FOREIGNERS OUSTED REVELS
SYNOPSIS
California mountain flora. A
youthful Kanaka mother. Her feat of pedestrianism.
Stabbing of a Spaniard by an American. The result
of a request to pay a debt. Nothing done and
but little said about the atrocity. Foreigners
barred from working at Rich Bar. Spaniards thereupon
move to Indian Bar. They erect places for the
sale of intoxicants. Many new houses for public
entertainment at Indian Bar. Sunday “swearing,
drinking, gambling, and fighting”. Salubrity
of the climate. No death for months, except by
accidental drowning in floodwater. Capture of
grizzly cubs. “The oddest possible pets”.
“An echo from the outside world once a month.”
From our Log Cabin, INDIAN BAR,
May 1, 1852.
You have no idea, my good little M.,
how reluctantly I have seated myself to write to you.
The truth is, that my last tedious letter about mining
and other tiresome things has completely exhausted
my scribbling powers, and from that hour to this the
epistolary spirit has never moved me forward.
Whether on that important occasion my small brain
received a shock from which it will never recover,
or whether it is pure physical laziness which influenced
me, I know not; but this is certain, that no whipped
schoolboy ever crept to his hated task more unwillingly
than I to my writing-desk on this beautiful morning.
Perhaps my indisposition to soil paper in your behalf
is caused by the bewildering scent of that great,
glorious bouquet of flowers which, gathered in the
crisp mountain air, is throwing off cloud after cloud
("each cloud faint with the fragrance it bears”)
of languid sweetness, filling the dark old room with
incense and making of it a temple of beauty, like
those pure angelic souls which, irradiating a plain
countenance, often render it more lovely than the chiseled
finish of the most perfect features.
O Molly! how I wish that I could send
you this jar of flowers, containing, as it does, many
which, in New England, are rare exotics. Here
you will find in richest profusion the fine-lady elegance
of the syringa; there, glorious white lilies, so pure
and stately; the delicate yet robust beauty of the
exquisite privet; irises of every hue and size; and,
prettiest of all, a sweet snow-tinted flower, looking
like immense clusters of seed-pearl, which the Spaniards
call “libla.” But the marvel of the
group is an orange-colored blossom, of a most rare
and singular fragrance, growing somewhat in the style
of the flox. This, with some branches of pink
bloom of incomparable sweetness, is entirely new to
me. Since I have commenced writing, one of the
Doctor’s patients has brought me a bunch of
wild roses. Oh, how vividly, at the sight of
them, started up before me those wooded valleys of
the Connecticut, with their wondrous depths of foliage,
which, for a few weeks in midsummer, are perhaps unsurpassed
in beauty by any in the world. I have arranged
the dear home blossoms with a handful of flowers
which were given to me this morning by an unknown Spaniard.
They are shaped like an anemone, of the opaque whiteness
of the magnolia, with a large spot of glittering blackness
at the bottom of each petal. But enough of our
mountain earth-stars. It would take me all day
to describe their infinite variety.
Nothing of importance has happened
since I last wrote, except that the Kanaka wife of
a man living at The Junction has made him the happy
father of a son and heir. They say that she is
quite a pretty little woman, only fifteen years old,
and walked all the way from Sacramento to this place.
A few evenings ago a Spaniard was
stabbed by an American. It seems that the presumptuous
foreigner had the impertinence to ask very humbly and
meekly that most noble representative of the Stars
and Stripes if the latter would pay him a few dollars
which he had owed him for some time. His high
mightiness the Yankee was not going to put up with
any such impertinence, and the poor Spaniard received
for answer several inches of cold steel in his breast,
which inflicted a very dangerous wound. Nothing
was done and very little was said about this atrocious
affair.
At Rich Bar they have passed a set
of resolutions for the guidance of the inhabitants
during the summer, one of which is to the effect that
no foreigner shall work in the mines on that bar.
This has caused nearly all the Spaniards to immigrate
upon Indian Bar, and several new houses for the sale
of liquor, etc., are building by these people.
It seems to me that the above law is selfish, cruel,
and narrow-minded in the extreme.
When I came here the Humboldt was
the only public house on the Bar. Now there are
the Oriental, Golden Gate, Don Juan, and four or five
others, the names of which I do not know. On
Sundays the swearing, drinking, gambling, and fighting
which are carried on in some of these houses are truly
horrible.
It is extremely healthy here.
With the exception of two or three men who were drowned
when the river was so high, I have not heard of a
death for months.
Nothing worth wasting ink upon has
occurred for some time, except the capture of two
grizzly-bear cubs by the immortal Yank. He shot
the mother, but she fell over the side of a steep
hill and he lost her. Yank intends to tame one
of the cubs. The other he sold, I believe for
fifty dollars. They are certainly the funniest-looking
things that I ever saw, and the oddest possible pets.
By the way, we receive an echo from the outer world
once a month, and the expressman never fails to bring
three letters from my dear M. wherewith to gladden
the heart of her sister, Dame Shirley.