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Ladislav Deczi
The Great Gold Rush (A Tale of The Klondike) [With ATOC]
The Great Gold Rush (A Tale of The Klondike) [With ATOC]
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Preface:
There is a freemasonry among Klondikers which rules that no tales shall be told out of school. If, therefore, this were an historical novel, if I were telling tales and seeking to escape censure by the subterfuge of changing names, I could hardly succeed. Let me take the case of Poo-Bah, for instance. The reader with a knowledge of the early days of Dawson accepting the story as historical, would fix as the original any one of half a dozen men indecently caricatured. But if he is told the character is a composite one, that it is the personification of Dawson graft, or, in other words, that it is the sum of a merger, he will understand and, I think, make no complaint.
Otherwise the story may be accepted as the author's best effort to convey a true account of the different phases of the world's most remarkable stampede. The stories of corruption among the officials in Dawson are those which a visitor would have heard on every hand, and at the present time there are many old-timers in the Yukon who will tell tales similar to the incidents I have introduced in my story.
When one of my characters speaks of the Dawson officials as petty larceny thieves and highway robbers, it is to be understood to be a sample of the phraseology in vogue at the time.
The different types of prospector I have attempted to portray are those I have met, lived with, and mixed with. Should it appear I have given too much space to the humble economies of the miner's life, I shall advance as my excuse the lack of our literature in this particular.
I have also made a humble attempt to establish the respectability of the miner. So much has been written to compromise him, and so many imaginations have drawn lurid pictures of his morals, I feel it his due.
In a general way the reader may accept anything in my story which has none other than an historical interest as being accurate.
I am indebted to the Rev. Archdeacon Macdonald, now of Winnipeg, for the story of his first discovery of gold. For the story of the discovery of Franklin Gulch I am indebted to Mr. William Hartz, who also furnished the accounts of the finding of gold in the Stewart River. These accounts have never before been written.
W. H. P. J.
Toronto, Canada.
January 1913.
CONTENTS
I THE FORTUNE-SEEKERS..
II JOHN BERWICK.
III THE BEGINNING OF YUKON.
IV SOCIETY IN ALASKA.
V SOAPY'S LITTLE GAME.
VI HITTING THE TRAIL.
VII HUGH'S PHILOSOPHY.
VIII OVER THE SUMMIT.
IX STORM AND STRESS.
X AN EMPIRE'S OUTPOST.
XI ANOTHER PASS.
XII A NEW PARTNER.
XIII THE DANCE.
XIV A LONG SHOT.
XV REVELATION.
XVI A STREAM OF HISTORY.
XVII DAWSON.
XVIII POO-BAH!.
XIX GRAFT.
XX A LOTTERY.
XXI THE PEELS' HOSPITAL.
XXII THE LAST STRAW.
XXIII REVOLUTION.
XXIV WITHIN THE BARRACKS.
XXV RECRUITING.
XXVI LOCATED.
XXVII THE WOOD-PILE.
XXVIII A COUNCIL OF WAR.
XXIX STONY GROUND.
XXX ON THE SCENT.
XXXI AN ODIOUS DILEMMA.
XXXII A DERELICT.
XXXIII TRIBUTE.
XXXIV NO SURRENDER.
XXXV THE MAN WITH THE POUCH.
XXXVI AFTER THE CRISIS.
XXXVII OIL ON TROUBLED WATERS.
XXXVIII REUNION.
XXXIX RETROSPECTION.
XL THE HAPPY ENDING.
There is a freemasonry among Klondikers which rules that no tales shall be told out of school. If, therefore, this were an historical novel, if I were telling tales and seeking to escape censure by the subterfuge of changing names, I could hardly succeed. Let me take the case of Poo-Bah, for instance. The reader with a knowledge of the early days of Dawson accepting the story as historical, would fix as the original any one of half a dozen men indecently caricatured. But if he is told the character is a composite one, that it is the personification of Dawson graft, or, in other words, that it is the sum of a merger, he will understand and, I think, make no complaint.
Otherwise the story may be accepted as the author's best effort to convey a true account of the different phases of the world's most remarkable stampede. The stories of corruption among the officials in Dawson are those which a visitor would have heard on every hand, and at the present time there are many old-timers in the Yukon who will tell tales similar to the incidents I have introduced in my story.
When one of my characters speaks of the Dawson officials as petty larceny thieves and highway robbers, it is to be understood to be a sample of the phraseology in vogue at the time.
The different types of prospector I have attempted to portray are those I have met, lived with, and mixed with. Should it appear I have given too much space to the humble economies of the miner's life, I shall advance as my excuse the lack of our literature in this particular.
I have also made a humble attempt to establish the respectability of the miner. So much has been written to compromise him, and so many imaginations have drawn lurid pictures of his morals, I feel it his due.
In a general way the reader may accept anything in my story which has none other than an historical interest as being accurate.
I am indebted to the Rev. Archdeacon Macdonald, now of Winnipeg, for the story of his first discovery of gold. For the story of the discovery of Franklin Gulch I am indebted to Mr. William Hartz, who also furnished the accounts of the finding of gold in the Stewart River. These accounts have never before been written.
W. H. P. J.
Toronto, Canada.
January 1913.
CONTENTS
I THE FORTUNE-SEEKERS..
II JOHN BERWICK.
III THE BEGINNING OF YUKON.
IV SOCIETY IN ALASKA.
V SOAPY'S LITTLE GAME.
VI HITTING THE TRAIL.
VII HUGH'S PHILOSOPHY.
VIII OVER THE SUMMIT.
IX STORM AND STRESS.
X AN EMPIRE'S OUTPOST.
XI ANOTHER PASS.
XII A NEW PARTNER.
XIII THE DANCE.
XIV A LONG SHOT.
XV REVELATION.
XVI A STREAM OF HISTORY.
XVII DAWSON.
XVIII POO-BAH!.
XIX GRAFT.
XX A LOTTERY.
XXI THE PEELS' HOSPITAL.
XXII THE LAST STRAW.
XXIII REVOLUTION.
XXIV WITHIN THE BARRACKS.
XXV RECRUITING.
XXVI LOCATED.
XXVII THE WOOD-PILE.
XXVIII A COUNCIL OF WAR.
XXIX STONY GROUND.
XXX ON THE SCENT.
XXXI AN ODIOUS DILEMMA.
XXXII A DERELICT.
XXXIII TRIBUTE.
XXXIV NO SURRENDER.
XXXV THE MAN WITH THE POUCH.
XXXVI AFTER THE CRISIS.
XXXVII OIL ON TROUBLED WATERS.
XXXVIII REUNION.
XXXIX RETROSPECTION.
XL THE HAPPY ENDING.
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