True knowledge of the nature of silver
mining came fast enough. We went out “prospecting”
with Mr. Ballou. We climbed the mountain sides,
and clambered among sage-brush, rocks and snow till
we were ready to drop with exhaustion, but found no
silver nor yet any gold. Day after
day we did this. Now and then we came upon holes
burrowed a few feet into the declivities and apparently
abandoned; and now and then we found one or two listless
men still burrowing. But there was no appearance
of silver. These holes were the beginnings of
tunnels, and the purpose was to drive them hundreds
of feet into the mountain, and some day tap the hidden
ledge where the silver was. Some day! It
seemed far enough away, and very hopeless and dreary.
Day after day we toiled, and climbed and searched,
and we younger partners grew sicker and still sicker
of the promiseless toil. At last we halted under
a beetling rampart of rock which projected from the
earth high upon the mountain. Mr. Ballou broke
off some fragments with a hammer, and examined them
long and attentively with a small eye-glass; threw
them away and broke off more; said this rock was quartz,
and quartz was the sort of rock that contained silver.
Contained it! I had thought that at least it
would be caked on the outside of it like a kind of
veneering. He still broke off pieces and critically
examined them, now and then wetting the piece with
his tongue and applying the glass. At last he
exclaimed:
“We’ve got it!”
We were full of anxiety in a moment.
The rock was clean and white, where it was broken,
and across it ran a ragged thread of blue. He
said that that little thread had silver in it, mixed
with base metal, such as lead and antimony, and other
rubbish, and that there was a speck or two of gold
visible. After a great deal of effort we managed
to discern some little fine yellow specks, and judged
that a couple of tons of them massed together might
make a gold dollar, possibly. We were not jubilant,
but Mr. Ballou said there were worse ledges in the
world than that. He saved what he called the
“richest” piece of the rock, in order
to determine its value by the process called the “fire-assay.”
Then we named the mine “Monarch of the Mountains”
(modesty of nomenclature is not a prominent feature
in the mines), and Mr. Ballou wrote out and stuck up
the following “notice,” preserving a copy
to be entered upon the books in the mining recorder’s
office in the town.
“Notice.”
“We the undersigned claim three
claims, of three hundred feet each (and one
for discovery), on this silver-bearing quartz lead
or lode, extending north and south from this
notice, with all its dips, spurs, and angles,
variations and sinuosities, together with fifty feet
of ground on either side for working the same.”
We put our names to it and tried to
feel that our fortunes were made. But when we
talked the matter all over with Mr. Ballou, we felt
depressed and dubious. He said that this surface
quartz was not all there was of our mine; but that
the wall or ledge of rock called the “Monarch
of the Mountains,” extended down hundreds and
hundreds of feet into the earth he illustrated
by saying it was like a curb-stone, and maintained
a nearly uniform thickness-say twenty feet away
down into the bowels of the earth, and was perfectly
distinct from the casing rock on each side of it;
and that it kept to itself, and maintained its distinctive
character always, no matter how deep it extended into
the earth or how far it stretched itself through and
across the hills and valleys. He said it might
be a mile deep and ten miles long, for all we knew;
and that wherever we bored into it above ground or
below, we would find gold and silver in it, but no
gold or silver in the meaner rock it was cased between.
And he said that down in the great depths of the ledge
was its richness, and the deeper it went the richer
it grew. Therefore, instead of working here
on the surface, we must either bore down into the rock
with a shaft till we came to where it was rich say
a hundred feet or so or else we must go
down into the valley and bore a long tunnel into the
mountain side and tap the ledge far under the earth.
To do either was plainly the labor of months; for
we could blast and bore only a few feet a day some
five or six. But this was not all. He said
that after we got the ore out it must be hauled in
wagons to a distant silver-mill, ground up, and the
silver extracted by a tedious and costly process.
Our fortune seemed a century away!
But we went to work. We decided
to sink a shaft. So, for a week we climbed the
mountain, laden with picks, drills, gads, crowbars,
shovels, cans of blasting powder and coils of fuse
and strove with might and main. At first the
rock was broken and loose and we dug it up with picks
and threw it out with shovels, and the hole progressed
very well. But the rock became more compact,
presently, and gads and crowbars came into play.
But shortly nothing could make an impression but blasting
powder.
That was the weariest work!
One of us held the iron drill in its place and another
would strike with an eight-pound sledge it
was like driving nails on a large scale. In
the course of an hour or two the drill would reach
a depth of two or three feet, making a hole a couple
of inches in diameter. We would put in a charge
of powder, insert half a yard of fuse, pour in sand
and gravel and ram it down, then light the fuse and
run. When the explosion came and the rocks and
smoke shot into the air, we would go back and find
about a bushel of that hard, rebellious quartz jolted
out. Nothing more. One week of this satisfied
me. I resigned. Clagget and Oliphant followed.
Our shaft was only twelve feet deep. We decided
that a tunnel was the thing we wanted.
So we went down the mountain side
and worked a week; at the end of which time we had
blasted a tunnel about deep enough to hide a hogshead
in, and judged that about nine hundred feet more of
it would reach the ledge. I resigned again, and
the other boys only held out one day longer.
We decided that a tunnel was not what we wanted.
We wanted a ledge that was already “developed.”
There were none in the camp.
We dropped the “Monarch” for the time
being.
Meantime the camp was filling up with
people, and there was a constantly growing excitement
about our Humboldt mines. We fell victims to
the epidemic and strained every nerve to acquire more
“feet.” We prospected and took up
new claims, put “notices” on them and gave
them grandiloquent names. We traded some of
our “feet” for “feet” in other
people’s claims. In a little while we owned
largely in the “Gray Eagle,” the “Columbiana,”
the “Branch Mint,” the “Maria Jane,”
the “Universe,” the “Root-Hog-or-Die,”
the “Samson and Delilah,” the “Treasure
Trove,” the “Golconda,” the “Sultana,”
the “Boomerang,” the “Great Republic,”
the “Grand Mogul,” and fifty other “mines”
that had never been molested by a shovel or scratched
with a pick. We had not less than thirty thousand
“feet” apiece in the “richest mines
on earth” as the frenzied cant phrased it and
were in debt to the butcher. We were stark mad
with excitement drunk with happiness smothered
under mountains of prospective wealth arrogantly
compassionate toward the plodding millions who knew
not our marvellous canyon but our credit
was not good at the grocer’s.
It was the strangest phase of life
one can imagine. It was a beggars’ revel.
There was nothing doing in the district no
mining no milling no productive
effort no income and not enough
money in the entire camp to buy a corner lot in an
eastern village, hardly; and yet a stranger would
have supposed he was walking among bloated millionaires.
Prospecting parties swarmed out of town with the first
flush of dawn, and swarmed in again at nightfall laden
with spoil rocks. Nothing but rocks.
Every man’s pockets were full of them; the floor
of his cabin was littered with them; they were disposed
in labeled rows on his shelves.