<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004"></SPAN></p>
<h2> Chapter IV </h2>
<p>Thorpe was awakened a long time before daylight by the ringing of a noisy
bell. He dressed, shivering, and stumbled down stairs to a round stove,
big as a boiler, into which the cripple dumped huge logs of wood from time
to time. After breakfast Thorpe returned to this stove and sat half dozing
for what seemed to him untold ages. The cold of the north country was
initiating him.</p>
<p>Men came in, smoked a brief pipe, and went out. Shearer was one of them.
The woodsman nodded curtly to the young man, his cordiality quite gone.
Thorpe vaguely wondered why. After a time he himself put on his overcoat
and ventured out into the town. It seemed to Thorpe a meager affair, built
of lumber, mostly unpainted, with always the dark, menacing fringe of the
forest behind. The great saw mill, with its tall stacks and its row of
water-barrels—protection against fire—on top, was the dominant
note. Near the mill crouched a little red-painted structure from whose
stovepipe a column of white smoke rose, attesting the cold, a clear
hundred feet straight upward, and to whose door a number of men were
directing their steps through the snow. Over the door Thorpe could
distinguish the word "Office." He followed and entered.</p>
<p>In a narrow aisle railed off from the main part of the room waited
Thorpe's companions of the night before. The remainder of the office gave
accommodation to three clerks. One of these glanced up inquiringly as
Thorpe came in.</p>
<p>"I am looking for work," said Thorpe.</p>
<p>"Wait there," briefly commanded the clerk.</p>
<p>In a few moments the door of the inner room opened, and Shearer came out.
A man's head peered from within.</p>
<p>"Come on, boys," said he.</p>
<p>The five applicants shuffled through. Thorpe found himself in the presence
of a man whom he felt to be the natural leader of these wild, independent
spirits. He was already a little past middle life, and his form had lost
the elastic vigor of youth. But his eye was keen, clear, and wrinkled to a
certain dry facetiousness; and his figure was of that bulk which gives an
impression of a subtler weight and power than the merely physical. This
peculiarity impresses us in the portraits of such men as Daniel Webster
and others of the old jurists. The manner of the man was easy,
good-natured, perhaps a little facetious, but these qualities were worn
rather as garments than exhibited as characteristics. He could afford
them, not because he had fewer difficulties to overcome or battles to
fight than another, but because his strength was so sufficient to them
that mere battles or difficulties could not affect the deliberateness of
his humor. You felt his superiority even when he was most comradely with
you. This man Thorpe was to meet under other conditions, wherein the steel
hand would more plainly clink the metal.</p>
<p>He was now seated in a worn office chair before a littered desk. In the
close air hung the smell of stale cigars and the clear fragrance of pine.</p>
<p>"What is it, Dennis?" he asked the first of the men.</p>
<p>"I've been out," replied the lumberman. "Have you got anything for me, Mr.
Daly?"</p>
<p>The mill-owner laughed.</p>
<p>"I guess so. Report to Shearer. Did you vote for the right man, Denny?"</p>
<p>The lumberman grinned sheepishly. "I don't know, sir. I didn't get that
far."</p>
<p>"Better let it alone. I suppose you and Bill want to come back, too?" he
added, turning to the next two in the line. "All right, report to Tim. Do
you want work?" he inquired of the last of the quartette, a big bashful
man with the shoulders of a Hercules.</p>
<p>"Yes, sir," answered the latter uncomfortably.</p>
<p>"What do you do?"</p>
<p>"I'm a cant-hook man, sir."</p>
<p>"Where have you worked?"</p>
<p>"I had a job with Morgan & Stebbins on the Clear River last winter."</p>
<p>"All right, we need cant-hook men. Report at 'seven,' and if they don't
want you there, go to 'thirteen.'"</p>
<p>Daly looked directly at the man with an air of finality. The lumberman
still lingered uneasily, twisting his cap in his hands.</p>
<p>"Anything you want?" asked Daly at last.</p>
<p>"Yes, sir," blurted the big man. "If I come down here and tell you I want
three days off and fifty dollars to bury my mother, I wish you'd tell me
to go to hell! I buried her three times last winter!"</p>
<p>Daly chuckled a little.</p>
<p>"All right, Bub," said he, "to hell it is."</p>
<p>The man went out. Daly turned to Thorpe with the last flickers of
amusement in his eyes.</p>
<p>"What can I do for you?" he inquired in a little crisper tones. Thorpe
felt that he was not treated with the same careless familiarity, because,
potentially, he might be more of a force to deal with. He underwent, too,
the man's keen scrutiny, and knew that every detail of his appearance had
found its comment in the other's experienced brain.</p>
<p>"I am looking for work," Thorpe replied.</p>
<p>"What kind of work?"</p>
<p>"Any kind, so I can learn something about the lumber business."</p>
<p>The older man studied him keenly for a few moments.</p>
<p>"Have you had any other business experience?"</p>
<p>"None."</p>
<p>"What have you been doing?"</p>
<p>"Nothing."</p>
<p>The lumberman's eyes hardened.</p>
<p>"We are a very busy firm here," he said with a certain deliberation; "we
do not carry a big force of men in any one department, and each of those
men has to fill his place and slop some over the sides. We do not pretend
or attempt to teach here. If you want to be a lumberman, you must learn
the lumber business more directly than through the windows of a
bookkeeper's office. Go into the woods. Learn a few first principles. Find
out the difference between Norway and white pine, anyway."</p>
<p>Daly, being what is termed a self-made man, entertained a prejudice
against youths of the leisure class. He did not believe in their
earnestness of purpose, their capacity for knowledge, nor their
perseverance in anything. That a man of twenty-six should be looking for
his first situation was incomprehensible to him. He made no effort to
conceal his prejudice, because the class to which the young man had
belonged enjoyed his hearty contempt.</p>
<p>The truth is, he had taken Thorpe's ignorance a little too much for
granted. Before leaving his home, and while the project of emigration was
still in the air, the young fellow had, with the quiet enthusiasm of men
of his habit of mind, applied himself to the mastering of whatever the
books could teach. That is not much. The literature on lumbering seems to
be singularly limited. Still he knew the trees, and had sketched an
outline into which to paint experience. He said nothing of this to the man
before him, because of that strange streak in his nature which prompted
him to conceal what he felt most strongly; to leave to others the task of
guessing out his attitude; to stand on appearances without attempting to
justify them, no matter how simple the justification might be. A moment's
frank, straightforward talk might have caught Daly's attention, for the
lumberman was, after all, a shrewd reader of character where his
prejudices were not concerned. Then events would have turned out very
differently.</p>
<p>After his speech the business man had whirled back to his desk.</p>
<p>"Have you anything for me to do in the woods, then?" the other asked
quietly.</p>
<p>"No," said Daly over his shoulder.</p>
<p>Thorpe went out.</p>
<p>Before leaving Detroit he had, on the advice of friends, visited the city
office of Morrison & Daly. There he had been told positively that the
firm were hiring men. Now, without five dollars in his pocket, he made the
elementary discovery that even in chopping wood skilled labor counts. He
did not know where to turn next, and he would not have had the money to go
far in any case. So, although Shearer's brusque greeting that morning had
argued a lack of cordiality, he resolved to remind the riverman of his
promised assistance.</p>
<p>That noon he carried out his resolve. To his surprise Shearer was cordial—in
his way. He came afterward to appreciate the subtle nuances of manner and
treatment by which a boss retains his moral supremacy in a lumber country,—repels
that too great familiarity which breeds contempt, without imperiling the
trust and comradeship which breeds willingness. In the morning Thorpe had
been a prospective employee of the firm, and so a possible subordinate of
Shearer himself. Now he was Shearer's equal.</p>
<p>"Go up and tackle Radway. He's jobbing for us on the Cass Branch. He needs
men for roadin', I know, because he's behind. You'll get a job there."</p>
<p>"Where is it?" asked Thorpe.</p>
<p>"Ten miles from here. She's blazed, but you better wait for th' supply
team, Friday. If you try to make her yourself, you'll get lost on some of
th' old loggin' roads."</p>
<p>Thorpe considered.</p>
<p>"I'm busted," he said at last frankly.</p>
<p>"Oh, that's all right," replied the walking-boss. "Marshall, come here!"</p>
<p>The peg-legged boarding-house keeper stumped in.</p>
<p>"What is it?" he trumpeted snufflingly.</p>
<p>"This boy wants a job till Friday. Then he's going up to Radway's with the
supply team. Now quit your hollerin' for a chore-boy for a few days."</p>
<p>"All right," snorted Marshall, "take that ax and split some dry wood that
you'll find behind the house."</p>
<p>"I'm very much obliged to you," began Thorpe to the walking-boss, "and—"</p>
<p>"That's all right," interrupted the latter, "some day you can give me a
job."</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005"></SPAN></p>
<h2> Chapter V </h2>
<p>For five days Thorpe cut wood, made fires, drew water, swept floors, and
ran errands. Sometimes he would look across the broad stump-dotted plain
to the distant forest. He had imagination. No business man succeeds
without it. With him the great struggle to wrest from an impassive and
aloof nature what she has so long held securely as her own, took on the
proportions of a battle. The distant forest was the front. To it went the
new bands of fighters. From it came the caissons for food, that ammunition
of the frontier; messengers bringing tidings of defeat or victory;
sometimes men groaning on their litters from the twisting and crushing and
breaking inflicted on them by the calm, ruthless enemy; once a dead man
bearing still on his chest the mark of the tree that had killed him. Here
at headquarters sat the general, map in hand, issuing his orders,
directing his forces.</p>
<p>And out of the forest came mystery. Hunters brought deer on sledges.
Indians, observant and grave, swung silently across the reaches on their
snowshoes, and silently back again carrying their meager purchases. In the
daytime ravens wheeled and croaked about the outskirts of the town,
bearing the shadow of the woods on their plumes and of the north-wind in
the somber quality of their voices; rare eagles wheeled gracefully to and
fro; snow squalls coquetted with the landscape. At night the many
creatures of the forest ventured out across the plains in search of food,—weasels;
big white hares; deer, planting daintily their little sharp hoofs where
the frozen turnips were most plentiful; porcupines in quest of anything
they could get their keen teeth into;—and often the big timber
wolves would send shivering across the waste a long whining howl. And in
the morning their tracks would embroider the snow with many stories.</p>
<p>The talk about the great stove in the boarding-house office also possessed
the charm of balsam fragrance. One told the other occult facts about the
"Southeast of the southwest of eight." The second in turn vouchsafed
information about another point of the compass. Thorpe heard of many
curious practical expedients. He learned that one can prevent awkward
air-holes in lakes by "tapping" the ice with an ax,—for the air must
get out, naturally or artificially; that the top log on a load should not
be large because of the probability, when one side has dumped with a rush,
of its falling straight down from its original height, so breaking the
sleigh; that a thin slice of salt pork well peppered is good when tied
about a sore throat; that choking a horse will cause him to swell up and
float on the top of the water, thus rendering it easy to slide him out on
the ice from a hole he may have broken into; that a tree lodged against
another may be brought to the ground by felling a third against it; that
snowshoes made of caribou hide do not become baggy, because caribou
shrinks when wet, whereas other rawhide stretches. These, and many other
things too complicated to elaborate here, he heard discussed by expert
opinion. Gradually he acquired an enthusiasm for the woods, just as a boy
conceives a longing for the out-of-door life of which he hears in the
conversation of his elders about the winter fire. He became eager to get
away to the front, to stand among the pines, to grapple with the
difficulties of thicket, hill, snow, and cold that nature silently
interposes between the man and his task.</p>
<p>At the end of the week he received four dollars from his employer; dumped
his valise into a low bobsleigh driven by a man muffled in a fur coat;
assisted in loading the sleigh with a variety of things, from Spearhead
plug to raisins; and turned his face at last toward the land of his hopes
and desires.</p>
<p>The long drive to camp was at once a delight and a misery to him. Its
miles stretched longer and longer as time went on; and the miles of a
route new to a man are always one and a half at least. The forest, so
mysterious and inviting from afar, drew within itself coldly when Thorpe
entered it. He was as yet a stranger. The snow became the prevailing note.
The white was everywhere, concealing jealously beneath rounded uniformity
the secrets of the woods. And it was cold. First Thorpe's feet became
numb, then his hands, then his nose was nipped, and finally his warm
clothes were lifted from him by invisible hands, and he was left naked to
shivers and tremblings. He found it torture to sit still on the top of the
bale of hay; and yet he could not bear to contemplate the cold shock of
jumping from the sleigh to the ground,—of touching foot to the
chilling snow. The driver pulled up to breathe his horses at the top of a
hill, and to fasten under one runner a heavy chain, which, grinding into
the snow, would act as a brake on the descent.</p>
<p>"You're dressed pretty light," he advised; "better hoof it a ways and get
warm."</p>
<p>The words tipped the balance of Thorpe's decision. He descended stiffly,
conscious of a disagreeable shock from a six-inch jump.</p>
<p>In ten minutes, the wallowing, slipping, and leaping after the tail of the
sled had sent his blood tingling to the last of his protesting members.
Cold withdrew. He saw now that the pines were beautiful and solemn and
still; and that in the temple of their columns dwelt winter enthroned.
Across the carpet of the snow wandered the trails of her creatures,—the
stately regular prints of the partridge; the series of pairs made by the
squirrel; those of the weasel and mink, just like the squirrels' except
that the prints were not quite side by side, and that between every other
pair stretched the mark of the animal's long, slender body; the delicate
tracery of the deer mouse; the fan of the rabbit; the print of a baby's
hand that the raccoon left; the broad pad of a lynx; the dog-like trail of
wolves;—these, and a dozen others, all equally unknown, gave Thorpe
the impression of a great mysterious multitude of living things which
moved about him invisible. In a thicket of cedar and scrub willow near the
bed of a stream, he encountered one of those strangely assorted bands of
woods-creatures which are always cruising it through the country. He heard
the cheerful little chickadee; he saw the grave nuthatch with its
appearance of a total lack of humor; he glimpsed a black-and-white
woodpecker or so, and was reviled by a ribald blue jay. Already the
wilderness was taking its character to him.</p>
<p>After a little while, they arrived by way of a hill, over which they
plunged into the middle of the camp. Thorpe saw three large buildings,
backed end to end, and two smaller ones, all built of heavy logs, roofed
with plank, and lighted sparsely through one or two windows apiece. The
driver pulled up opposite the space between two of the larger buildings,
and began to unload his provisions. Thorpe set about aiding him, and so
found himself for the first time in a "cook camp."</p>
<p>It was a commodious building,—Thorpe had no idea a log structure
ever contained so much room. One end furnished space for two cooking
ranges and two bunks placed one over the other. Along one side ran a broad
table-shelf, with other shelves over it and numerous barrels underneath,
all filled with cans, loaves of bread, cookies, and pies. The center was
occupied by four long bench-flanked tables, down whose middle straggled
utensils containing sugar, apple-butter, condiments, and sauces, and whose
edges were set with tin dishes for about forty men. The cook, a rather
thin-faced man with a mustache, directed where the provisions were to be
stowed; and the "cookee," a hulking youth, assisted Thorpe and the driver
to carry them in. During the course of the work Thorpe made a mistake.</p>
<p>"That stuff doesn't come here," objected the cookee, indicating a box of
tobacco the newcomer was carrying. "She goes to the 'van.'"</p>
<p>Thorpe did not know what the "van" might be, but he replaced the tobacco
on the sleigh. In a few moments the task was finished, with the exception
of a half dozen other cases, which the driver designated as also for the
"van." The horses were unhitched, and stabled in the third of the big log
buildings. The driver indicated the second.</p>
<p>"Better go into the men's camp and sit down 'till th' boss gets in," he
advised.</p>
<p>Thorpe entered a dim, over-heated structure, lined on two sides by a
double tier of large bunks partitioned from one another like cabins of
boats, and centered by a huge stove over which hung slender poles. The
latter were to dry clothes on. Just outside the bunks ran a straight hard
bench. Thorpe stood at the entrance trying to accustom his eyes to the
dimness.</p>
<p>"Set down," said a voice, "on th' floor if you want to; but I'd prefer th'
deacon seat."</p>
<p>Thorpe obediently took position on the bench, or "deacon seat." His eyes,
more used to the light, could make out a thin, tall, bent old man, with
bare cranium, two visible teeth, and a three days' stubble of white beard
over his meager, twisted face.</p>
<p>He caught, perhaps, Thorpe's surprised expression.</p>
<p>"You think th' old man's no good, do you?" he cackled, without the
slightest malice, "looks is deceivin'!" He sprang up swiftly, seized the
toe of his right foot in his left hand, and jumped his left foot through
the loop thus formed. Then he sat down again, and laughed at Thorpe's
astonishment.</p>
<p>"Old Jackson's still purty smart," said he. "I'm barn-boss. They ain't a
man in th' country knows as much about hosses as I do. We ain't had but
two sick this fall, an' between you an' me, they's a skate lot. You're a
greenhorn, ain't you?"</p>
<p>"Yes," confessed Thorpe.</p>
<p>"Well," said Jackson, reflectively but rapidly, "Le Fabian, he's quiet but
bad; and O'Grady, he talks loud but you can bluff him; and Perry, he's
only bad when he gets full of red likker; and Norton he's bad when he gets
mad like, and will use axes."</p>
<p>Thorpe did not know he was getting valuable points on the camp bullies.
The old man hitched nearer and peered in his face.</p>
<p>"They don't bluff you a bit," he said, "unless you likes them, and then
they can back you way off the skidway."</p>
<p>Thorpe smiled at the old fellow's volubility. He did not know how near to
the truth the woodsman's shrewdness had hit; for to himself, as to most
strong characters, his peculiarities were the normal, and therefore the
unnoticed. His habit of thought in respect to other people was rather
objective than subjective. He inquired so impersonally the significance of
whatever was before him, that it lost the human quality both as to itself
and himself. To him men were things. This attitude relieved him of
self-consciousness. He never bothered his head as to what the other man
thought of him, his ignorance, or his awkwardness, simply because to him
the other man was nothing but an element in his problem. So in such
circumstances he learned fast. Once introduce the human element, however,
and his absurdly sensitive self-consciousness asserted itself. He was, as
Jackson expressed it, backed off the skidway.</p>
<p>At dark the old man lit two lamps, which served dimly to gloze the
shadows, and thrust logs of wood into the cast-iron stove. Soon after, the
men came in. They were a queer, mixed lot. Some carried the indisputable
stamp of the frontiersman in their bearing and glance; others looked to be
mere day-laborers, capable of performing whatever task they were set to,
and of finding the trail home again. There were active, clean-built,
precise Frenchmen, with small hands and feet, and a peculiarly trim way of
wearing their rough garments; typical native-born American lumber-jacks
powerful in frame, rakish in air, reckless in manner; big blonde
Scandinavians and Swedes, strong men at the sawing; an Indian or so,
strangely in contrast to the rest; and a variety of Irishmen, Englishmen,
and Canadians. These men tramped in without a word, and set busily to work
at various tasks. Some sat on the "deacon seat" and began to take off
their socks and rubbers; others washed at a little wooden sink; still
others selected and lit lanterns from a pendant row near the window, and
followed old Jackson out of doors. They were the teamsters.</p>
<p>"You'll find the old man in the office," said Jackson.</p>
<p>Thorpe made his way across to the small log cabin indicated as the office,
and pushed open the door. He found himself in a little room containing two
bunks, a stove, a counter and desk, and a number of shelves full of
supplies. About the walls hung firearms, snowshoes, and a variety of
clothes.</p>
<p>A man sat at the desk placing figures on a sheet of paper. He obtained the
figures from statistics pencilled on three thin leaves of beech-wood
riveted together. In a chair by the stove lounged a bulkier figure, which
Thorpe concluded to be that of the "old man."</p>
<p>"I was sent here by Shearer," said Thorpe directly; "he said you might
give me some work."</p>
<p>So long a silence fell that the applicant began to wonder if his question
had been heard.</p>
<p>"I might," replied the man drily at last.</p>
<p>"Well, will you?" Thorpe inquired, the humor of the situation overcoming
him.</p>
<p>"Have you ever worked in the woods?"</p>
<p>"No."</p>
<p>The man smoked silently.</p>
<p>"I'll put you on the road in the morning," he concluded, as though this
were the deciding qualification.</p>
<p>One of the men entered abruptly and approached the counter. The writer at
the desk laid aside his tablets.</p>
<p>"What is it, Albert?" he added.</p>
<p>"Jot of chewin'," was the reply.</p>
<p>The scaler took from the shelf a long plug of tobacco and cut off two
inches.</p>
<p>"Ain't hitting the van much, are you, Albert?" he commented, putting the
man's name and the amount in a little book. Thorpe went out, after leaving
his name for the time book, enlightened as to the method of obtaining
supplies. He promised himself some warm clothing from the van, when he
should have worked out the necessary credit.</p>
<p>At supper he learned something else,—that he must not talk at table.
A moment's reflection taught him the common-sense of the rule. For one
thing, supper was a much briefer affair than it would have been had every
man felt privileged to take his will in conversation; not to speak of the
absence of noise and the presence of peace. Each man asked for what he
wanted.</p>
<p>"Please pass the beans," he said with the deliberate intonation of a man
who does not expect that his request will be granted.</p>
<p>Besides the beans were fried salt pork, boiled potatoes, canned corn,
mince pie, a variety of cookies and doughnuts, and strong green tea.
Thorpe found himself eating ravenously of the crude fare.</p>
<p>That evening he underwent a catechism, a few practical jokes, which he
took good-naturedly, and a vast deal of chaffing. At nine the lights were
all out. By daylight he and a dozen other men were at work, hewing a road
that had to be as smooth and level as a New York boulevard.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006"></SPAN></p>
<h2> Chapter VI </h2>
<p>Thorpe and four others were set to work on this road, which was to be cut
through a creek bottom leading, he was told, to "seventeen." The figures
meant nothing to him. Later, each number came to possess an individuality
of its own. He learned to use a double-bitted ax.</p>
<p>Thorpe's intelligence was of the practical sort that wonderfully helps
experience. He watched closely one of the older men, and analyzed the
relation borne by each one of his movements to the object in view. In a
short time he perceived that one hand and arm are mere continuations of
the helve, attaching the blade of the ax to the shoulder of the wielder;
and that the other hand directs the stroke. He acquired the knack thus of
throwing the bit of steel into the gash as though it were a baseball on
the end of a string; and so accomplished power. By experiment he learned
just when to slide the guiding hand down the helve; and so gained
accuracy. He suffered none of those accidents so common to new choppers.
His ax did not twist itself from his hands, nor glance to cut his foot. He
attained the method of the double bit, and how to knock roots by alternate
employment of the edge and flat. In a few days his hands became hard and
used to the cold.</p>
<p>From shortly after daylight he worked. Four other men bore him company,
and twice Radway himself came by, watched their operations for a moment,
and moved on without comment. After Thorpe had caught his second wind, he
enjoyed his task, proving a certain pleasure in the ease with which he
handled his tool.</p>
<p>At the end of an interminable period, a faint, musical halloo swelled,
echoed, and died through the forest, beautiful as a spirit. It was taken
up by another voice and repeated. Then by another. Now near at hand, now
far away it rang as hollow as a bell. The sawyers, the swampers, the
skidders, and the team men turned and put on their heavy blanket coats.</p>
<p>Down on the road Thorpe heard it too, and wondered what it might be.</p>
<p>"Come on, Bub! she means chew!" explained old man Heath kindly. Old man
Heath was a veteran woodsman who had come to swamping in his old age. He
knew the game thoroughly, but could never save his "stake" when Pat
McGinnis, the saloon man, enticed him in. Throughout the morning he had
kept an eye on the newcomer, and was secretly pleased in his heart of the
professional at the readiness with which the young fellow learned.</p>
<p>Thorpe resumed his coat, and fell in behind the little procession. After a
short time he came upon a horse and sledge. Beyond it the cookee had built
a little camp fire, around and over which he had grouped big fifty-pound
lard-tins, half full of hot things to eat. Each man, as he approached,
picked up a tin plate and cup from a pile near at hand.</p>
<p>The cookee was plainly master of the situation. He issued peremptory
orders. When Erickson, the blonde Swede, attempted surreptitiously to
appropriate a doughnut, the youth turned on him savagely.</p>
<p>"Get out of that, you big tow-head!" he cried with an oath.</p>
<p>A dozen Canada jays, fluffy, impatient, perched near by or made little
short circles over and back. They awaited the remains of the dinner. Bob
Stratton and a devil-may-care giant by the name of Nolan constructed a
joke wherewith to amuse the interim. They cut a long pole, and placed it
across a log and through a bush, so that one extremity projected beyond
the bush. Then diplomacy won a piece of meat from the cookee. This they
nailed to the end of the pole by means of a pine sliver. The Canada jays
gazed on the morsel with covetous eyes. When the men had retired, they
swooped. One big fellow arrived first, and lit in defiance of the rest.</p>
<p>"Give it to 'im!" whispered Nolan, who had been watching.</p>
<p>Bob hit the other end of the pole a mighty whack with his ax. The
astonished jay, projected straight upward by the shock, gave a startled
squawk and cut a hole through the air for the tall timber. Stratton and
Nolan went into convulsions of laughter.</p>
<p>"Get at it!" cried the cookee, as though setting a pack of dogs on their
prey.</p>
<p>The men ate, perched in various attitudes and places. Thorpe found it
difficult to keep warm. The violent exercise had heated him through, and
now the north country cold penetrated to his bones. He huddled close to
the fire, and drank hot tea, but it did not do him very much good. In his
secret mind he resolved to buy one of the blanket mackinaws that very
evening. He began to see that the costumes of each country have their
origin in practicality.</p>
<p>That evening he picked out one of the best. As he was about to inquire the
price, Radway drew the van book toward him, inquiring,</p>
<p>"Let's see; what's the name?"</p>
<p>In an instant Thorpe was charged on the book with three dollars and a
half, although his work that day had earned him less than a dollar. On his
way back to the men's shanty he could not help thinking how easy it would
be for him to leave the next morning two dollars and a half ahead. He
wondered if this method of procedure obtained in all the camps.</p>
<p>The newcomer's first day of hard work had tired him completely. He was
ready for nothing so much as his bunk. But he had forgotten that it was
Saturday night. His status was still to assure.</p>
<p>They began with a few mild tricks. Shuffle the Brogan followed Hot Back.
Thorpe took all of it good-naturedly. Finally a tall individual with a
thin white face, a reptilian forehead, reddish hair, and long baboon arms,
suggested tossing in a blanket. Thorpe looked at the low ceiling, and
declined.</p>
<p>"I'm with the game as long as you say, boys," said he, "and I'll have as
much fun as anybody, but that's going too far for a tired man."</p>
<p>The reptilian gentleman let out a string of oaths whose meaning might be
translated, "We'll see about that!"</p>
<p>Thorpe was a good boxer, but he knew by now the lumber-jack's method of
fighting,—anything to hurt the other fellow. And in a genuine
old-fashioned knock-down-and-drag-out rough-and-tumble your woodsman is
about the toughest customer to handle you will be likely to meet. He is
brought up on fighting. Nothing pleases him better than to get drunk and,
with a few companions, to embark on an earnest effort to "clean out" a
rival town. And he will accept cheerfully punishment enough to kill three
ordinary men. It takes one of his kind really to hurt him.</p>
<p>Thorpe, at the first hostile movement, sprang back to the door, seized one
of the three-foot billets of hardwood intended for the stove, and faced
his opponents.</p>
<p>"I don't know which of you boys is coming first," said he quietly, "but
he's going to get it good and plenty."</p>
<p>If the affair had been serious, these men would never have recoiled before
the mere danger of a stick of hardwood. The American woodsman is afraid of
nothing human. But this was a good-natured bit of foolery, a test of
nerve, and there was no object in getting a broken head for that. The
reptilian gentleman alone grumbled at the abandonment of the attack,
mumbling something profane.</p>
<p>"If you hanker for trouble so much," drawled the unexpected voice of old
Jackson from the corner, "mebbe you could put on th' gloves."</p>
<p>The idea was acclaimed. Somebody tossed out a dirty torn old set of
buckskin boxing gloves.</p>
<p>The rest was farce. Thorpe was built on the true athletic lines, broad,
straight shoulders, narrow flanks, long, clean, smooth muscles. He
possessed, besides, that hereditary toughness and bulk which no gymnasium
training will ever quite supply. The other man, while powerful and ugly in
his rushes, was clumsy and did not use his head. Thorpe planted his hard
straight blows at will. In this game he was as manifestly superior as his
opponent would probably have been had the rules permitted kicking,
gouging, and wrestling. Finally he saw his opening and let out with a
swinging pivot blow. The other picked himself out of a corner, and drew
off the gloves. Thorpe's status was assured.</p>
<p>A Frenchman took down his fiddle and began to squeak. In the course of the
dance old Jackson and old Heath found themselves together, smoking their
pipes of Peerless.</p>
<p>"The young feller's all right," observed Heath; "he cuffed Ben up to a
peak all right."</p>
<p>"Went down like a peck of wet fish-nets," replied Jackson tranquilly.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />