"From a booming western city came reports of marvellous openings for

business men--of small investments bringing swift and large returns. I

placed my wife in the care of a good, motherly woman and bade her

good-by, while she, brave heart, without a tear, bade me God-speed. I

went there determined to win, to make a home to which I would bring both

wife and child later. For three months I made money, sending half to

her, and investing every cent which I did not absolutely need of the

other half. Then came tales from a mining district still farther west,

of fabulous fortunes made in a month, a week, sometimes a day. What was

the use of dallying where I was? I hastened to the mining camp. In less

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than a week I had 'struck it rich,' and knew that in all probability I

would within a month draw out a fortune.

"Just at this time the letters from home ceased. For seven days I heard

nothing, and half mad with anxiety and suspense I awaited each night the

incoming train to bring me tidings. One night, just as the train was

about to leave, I caught sight of a former acquaintance from a

neighboring village, bound for a camp yet farther west, and, as I

greeted him, he told me in few words and pitying tones of the death of

my wife and child."

For a moment Mr. Britton paused, and Darrell drew instinctively nearer,

though saying nothing.

"I have no distinct recollection of what followed. I was told afterwards

that friendly hands caught me as the train started, to save me from

being crushed beneath the wheels. For three months I wandered from one

mining camp to another, working mechanically, with no thought or care as

to success or failure. An old miner from the first camp who had taken a

liking to me followed me in my wanderings and worked beside me, caring

for me and guarding my savings as though he had been a father. The old

fellow never left me, nor I him, until his death three years later. He

taught me many valuable points in practical mining, and I think his

rough but kindly care was all that saved me from insanity during those

years.

"After his death I brooded over my grief till I became nearly frenzied.

I could not banish the thought that but for my rashness and foolishness

in taking her from her home my wife might still have been living. To

myself I seemed little short of a murderer. I left the camp and

wandered, night and day, afar into the mountains. I came to this

mountain on which we are sitting and climbed nearly to the top. God was

there, but, like Jacob of old, 'I knew it not.' But something seemed to

speak to me out of the infinite silence, calming my frenzied brain and

soothing my troubled soul. I sat there till the stars appeared, and then

I sank into a deep, peaceful sleep--the first in years. When I awoke the

sun was shining in my face, and, though the old pain still throbbed, I

had a sense of new strength with which to bear it. I ate of the food I

carried with me and drank from a mountain stream--the same that trickles

past us now, only nearer its source. The place fascinated me; I dared

not leave it, and I spent the day in wandering up and down the rocks. My

steps were guided to the mine I showed you to-day. I saw the indications

of richness there, and, overturning the earth with my pick, found gold

among the very grassroots. Then followed the life of which I have

already given you an outline.